aads

Seeing the star with nearest rocky planet

Color image of star HD219134 by Efraín Morales of the Sociedad de Astronomía del Caribe

Color image of star HD219134 by Efraín Morales of the Sociedad de Astronomía del Caribe

Last week, NASA confirmed that a nearby star being orbited by at least four planets also hosts the nearest rocky planet outside our solar system. The star is HD219134, located 21 light-years (126 trillion miles, 202 trillions km) away. The Italian 3.6-meter Galileo National Telescope in the Canary Islands discovered the planet with its HARPS spectrograph. Further observations with NASA’s Spitzer Space Telescope confirmed the planet’s existence and showed it must be rocky. Astronomer Lars A. Buchhave of the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics in Cambridge, Massachusetts, said:

Most of the known planets are hundreds of light-years away. This one is practically a next-door neighbor.

Astronomers say that the rocky planet – dubbed HD219134b – orbits too close to its star to sustain life. And the planets around this star are too faint to see, even with big telescopes. Special instrumentation was needed to discover them. However, it’s fascinating to realize that its host star – a faint star (5th magnitude) located in the constellation Cassiopeia – can be seen with the unaided eye!

View larger. | You can see the star HD 219134b you can see its star with your own eyes. It's in the Cassiopeia constellation near the North Star. Image via NASA.

View larger. | You can see the star HD 219134b you can see its star with your own eyes. It’s in the Cassiopeia constellation near the North Star. Image via NASA.

The constellation Cassiopeia is found in the northern part of the sky.

Facing northeast at midnight, as seen from central U.S. and similar latitudes across the world. Location of star HD219134, also known as HIP 114622, is marked by a circle. Illustration by Eddie Irizarry using Stellarium

What’s more, this system is so nearby that even amateur astronomers – who observe carefully and over many years – can capture the star’s proper motion, or sideways motion across the dome of Earth’s sky.

To the unaided eye, the stars appear fixed to the sky, but stars are in constant motion around the center of our Milky Way galaxy. With the eye alone, we can’t see their motion because space is so vast, and the stars’ distances from us are so huge. Their apparent motions across our sky are very small.

But with nearby stars, even advanced amateur astronomers have been able to capture a star’s motion across the sky with respect to more distant stars.

Using a 12-inch diameter telescope, Efraín Morales of the Sociedad de Astronomía del Caribe this week (August 1, 2015) captured a nice picture of star HD219134, host of the nearest rocky planet. To his surprise, when he compared the star photo to a previous picture from the Digitized Sky Survey (DSS), which uses Palomar Observatory and the UK Schmidt Telescope at Anglo-Australian Observatory, he noticed the star had changed its position!

View larger. |

View larger. | Digitized Sky Survey image showing HD219134’s location on 2006 comprared to Efraín Morales’ photo taken on August 1, 2015. Efraín Morales via the Sociedad de Astronomía del Caribe

Morales said:

This is the second time I have found another solar system has changed its position when revising my images.

He also captured images of star Gliese 667, which also host exoplanets, and found that two visible stars of the triple star system have drifted, due to their motion through space.

Another interesting star, HIP 87937, known as Barnard’s star is located at only 6 light-years away. After the Alpha Centauri triple star, Barnard’s is the next closest star to our sun. It has the largest known proper motion of any star. This means that if you take a telescopic picture of Barnard’s star and then compare it to a picture taken 3 to 5 years later (or before), you should be able to see the star has changed its position in the sky.

Bottom line: A week ago, astronomers announced that NASA’s Spitzer Space Telescope had confirmed the nearest known rocky exoplanet, orbiting the star HD219134, about 21 light-years away. Finder charts show the star in your night sky. Plus … a gif image showing the star’s proper motion, captured by an amateur astronomer.



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Color image of star HD219134 by Efraín Morales of the Sociedad de Astronomía del Caribe

Color image of star HD219134 by Efraín Morales of the Sociedad de Astronomía del Caribe

Last week, NASA confirmed that a nearby star being orbited by at least four planets also hosts the nearest rocky planet outside our solar system. The star is HD219134, located 21 light-years (126 trillion miles, 202 trillions km) away. The Italian 3.6-meter Galileo National Telescope in the Canary Islands discovered the planet with its HARPS spectrograph. Further observations with NASA’s Spitzer Space Telescope confirmed the planet’s existence and showed it must be rocky. Astronomer Lars A. Buchhave of the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics in Cambridge, Massachusetts, said:

Most of the known planets are hundreds of light-years away. This one is practically a next-door neighbor.

Astronomers say that the rocky planet – dubbed HD219134b – orbits too close to its star to sustain life. And the planets around this star are too faint to see, even with big telescopes. Special instrumentation was needed to discover them. However, it’s fascinating to realize that its host star – a faint star (5th magnitude) located in the constellation Cassiopeia – can be seen with the unaided eye!

View larger. | You can see the star HD 219134b you can see its star with your own eyes. It's in the Cassiopeia constellation near the North Star. Image via NASA.

View larger. | You can see the star HD 219134b you can see its star with your own eyes. It’s in the Cassiopeia constellation near the North Star. Image via NASA.

The constellation Cassiopeia is found in the northern part of the sky.

Facing northeast at midnight, as seen from central U.S. and similar latitudes across the world. Location of star HD219134, also known as HIP 114622, is marked by a circle. Illustration by Eddie Irizarry using Stellarium

What’s more, this system is so nearby that even amateur astronomers – who observe carefully and over many years – can capture the star’s proper motion, or sideways motion across the dome of Earth’s sky.

To the unaided eye, the stars appear fixed to the sky, but stars are in constant motion around the center of our Milky Way galaxy. With the eye alone, we can’t see their motion because space is so vast, and the stars’ distances from us are so huge. Their apparent motions across our sky are very small.

But with nearby stars, even advanced amateur astronomers have been able to capture a star’s motion across the sky with respect to more distant stars.

Using a 12-inch diameter telescope, Efraín Morales of the Sociedad de Astronomía del Caribe this week (August 1, 2015) captured a nice picture of star HD219134, host of the nearest rocky planet. To his surprise, when he compared the star photo to a previous picture from the Digitized Sky Survey (DSS), which uses Palomar Observatory and the UK Schmidt Telescope at Anglo-Australian Observatory, he noticed the star had changed its position!

View larger. |

View larger. | Digitized Sky Survey image showing HD219134’s location on 2006 comprared to Efraín Morales’ photo taken on August 1, 2015. Efraín Morales via the Sociedad de Astronomía del Caribe

Morales said:

This is the second time I have found another solar system has changed its position when revising my images.

He also captured images of star Gliese 667, which also host exoplanets, and found that two visible stars of the triple star system have drifted, due to their motion through space.

Another interesting star, HIP 87937, known as Barnard’s star is located at only 6 light-years away. After the Alpha Centauri triple star, Barnard’s is the next closest star to our sun. It has the largest known proper motion of any star. This means that if you take a telescopic picture of Barnard’s star and then compare it to a picture taken 3 to 5 years later (or before), you should be able to see the star has changed its position in the sky.

Bottom line: A week ago, astronomers announced that NASA’s Spitzer Space Telescope had confirmed the nearest known rocky exoplanet, orbiting the star HD219134, about 21 light-years away. Finder charts show the star in your night sky. Plus … a gif image showing the star’s proper motion, captured by an amateur astronomer.



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US deserts wet until 8,200 years ago

Death Valley. Near Lone Pine, California. Photo credit: Loïc Lagarde

Death Valley. Near Lone Pine, California. Photo credit: Loïc Lagarde

New research suggests that a desert region in the western U.S. – including Nevada, Utah, Oregon, and parts of California — was a rather damp setting until approximately 8,200 years ago, when the region began to dry out, eventually assuming the arid environments we see today. The study was published in the journal Quaternary Science Reviews in June, 2015.

All around the deserts of Utah, Nevada, southern Oregon, and eastern California, ancient shorelines line the hillsides above dry valley floors, like bathtub rings, remnants of the lakes once found throughout the region. Even as the ice sheets retreated at the end of the last ice age, 12,000 years ago, the region remained much wetter than it is today. The earliest settlers of the region are likely to have encountered a verdant landscape of springs and wetlands.

When and why did today’s desert West dry out?

The research team identified the climatic turning point after analyzing stalagmites from a cave in Great Basin National Park in Nevada. Stalagmites are pillars of deposited cave drippings that form over hundreds of thousands of years, as water slowly seeps down through the ground, and into caves. A stalagmite’s layers are essentially a record of a region’s moisture over time.

Graduate student Elena Steponaitis takes notes while collecting stalagmite and drip water samples in Lehman Caves, Nevada. Photo credit: Christine Y. Chen

Graduate student Elena Steponaitis takes notes while collecting stalagmite and drip water samples in Lehman Caves, Nevada. Photo credit: Christine Y. Chen

The researchers used a dating technique to determine the ages of certain layers within two stalagmites, then analyzed these layers for chemical signatures of moisture. They dated stalagmite layers ranging from 4,000 to 16,000 years old, observing that moisture content appears to drop dramatically in samples that are less than 8,200 years old.

Researcher David McGee, Assistant Professor in MIT’s Department of Earth, Atmospheric and Planetary Sciences, says the results suggest that around 8,200 years ago, the climate of the American West began transitioning from a lush landscape to the desert terrain that we know today.

On a geological timescale, McGee says the region’s moisture content appears to have dropped rather suddenly — “like falling off a shelf,” he says. This steep drop likely had a dramatic impact on humans living in the region. McGee said:

Based upon these data, I would hypothesize that you should see some pretty big changes in how people were living just before and right after 8,000 years ago. What sort of game were they hunting, what plants were they eating, and where were they choosing to live? Montana’s going to start looking pretty good if the Great Basin is drying out.

What that significant drying event might be is up for debate, although McGee hazards a guess.

One of the big things that was happening at this time worldwide was the collapse of the last vestiges of this big ice sheet in Canada. An ice sheet is thought to have important effects on where the jet stream goes. By having this ice sheet here, it made it so the jet stream was more likely to bring storms into the American West, and when it collapsed, the region became more like it is today.

The team found that lake records from Nevada, Utah, Oregon, and eastern California suggest a similar drying-out period. McGee said:

Further work will help us figure out exactly what that fingerprint is.

Enjoying EarthSky? Sign up for our free daily newsletter today!

Bottom line: New researcher, published in Quaternary Science Reviews in June, 2015, suggests that a desert region in the western U.S. – including Nevada, Utah, Oregon, and parts of California — was a rather damp setting until approximately 8,200 years ago, when the region began to dry out, eventually assuming the arid environments we see today.

Read more about the study from MIT



from EarthSky http://ift.tt/1hf6DLJ
Death Valley. Near Lone Pine, California. Photo credit: Loïc Lagarde

Death Valley. Near Lone Pine, California. Photo credit: Loïc Lagarde

New research suggests that a desert region in the western U.S. – including Nevada, Utah, Oregon, and parts of California — was a rather damp setting until approximately 8,200 years ago, when the region began to dry out, eventually assuming the arid environments we see today. The study was published in the journal Quaternary Science Reviews in June, 2015.

All around the deserts of Utah, Nevada, southern Oregon, and eastern California, ancient shorelines line the hillsides above dry valley floors, like bathtub rings, remnants of the lakes once found throughout the region. Even as the ice sheets retreated at the end of the last ice age, 12,000 years ago, the region remained much wetter than it is today. The earliest settlers of the region are likely to have encountered a verdant landscape of springs and wetlands.

When and why did today’s desert West dry out?

The research team identified the climatic turning point after analyzing stalagmites from a cave in Great Basin National Park in Nevada. Stalagmites are pillars of deposited cave drippings that form over hundreds of thousands of years, as water slowly seeps down through the ground, and into caves. A stalagmite’s layers are essentially a record of a region’s moisture over time.

Graduate student Elena Steponaitis takes notes while collecting stalagmite and drip water samples in Lehman Caves, Nevada. Photo credit: Christine Y. Chen

Graduate student Elena Steponaitis takes notes while collecting stalagmite and drip water samples in Lehman Caves, Nevada. Photo credit: Christine Y. Chen

The researchers used a dating technique to determine the ages of certain layers within two stalagmites, then analyzed these layers for chemical signatures of moisture. They dated stalagmite layers ranging from 4,000 to 16,000 years old, observing that moisture content appears to drop dramatically in samples that are less than 8,200 years old.

Researcher David McGee, Assistant Professor in MIT’s Department of Earth, Atmospheric and Planetary Sciences, says the results suggest that around 8,200 years ago, the climate of the American West began transitioning from a lush landscape to the desert terrain that we know today.

On a geological timescale, McGee says the region’s moisture content appears to have dropped rather suddenly — “like falling off a shelf,” he says. This steep drop likely had a dramatic impact on humans living in the region. McGee said:

Based upon these data, I would hypothesize that you should see some pretty big changes in how people were living just before and right after 8,000 years ago. What sort of game were they hunting, what plants were they eating, and where were they choosing to live? Montana’s going to start looking pretty good if the Great Basin is drying out.

What that significant drying event might be is up for debate, although McGee hazards a guess.

One of the big things that was happening at this time worldwide was the collapse of the last vestiges of this big ice sheet in Canada. An ice sheet is thought to have important effects on where the jet stream goes. By having this ice sheet here, it made it so the jet stream was more likely to bring storms into the American West, and when it collapsed, the region became more like it is today.

The team found that lake records from Nevada, Utah, Oregon, and eastern California suggest a similar drying-out period. McGee said:

Further work will help us figure out exactly what that fingerprint is.

Enjoying EarthSky? Sign up for our free daily newsletter today!

Bottom line: New researcher, published in Quaternary Science Reviews in June, 2015, suggests that a desert region in the western U.S. – including Nevada, Utah, Oregon, and parts of California — was a rather damp setting until approximately 8,200 years ago, when the region began to dry out, eventually assuming the arid environments we see today.

Read more about the study from MIT



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Every visible star is within Milky Way

Meteor season is here! Everything you need to know: Perseid meteor shower

The image at the top of this post, showing a campfire under the Milky Way, is by Ben Coffman Photography in Oregon. He wrote:

These good folks – co-workers from one of the resorts on Mt Hood, if I remember correctly – let me take their photo on the beach near Cape Kiwanda [a state natural area near in Pacific City, Oregon]. They looked like they were having fun.

And so they do. What could be better than a beautiful night under the Milky Way? But did you know that every night of your life is a night under the Milky Way? By that we mean … every individual star you can see with the unaided eye, in all parts of the sky, lies within the confines of our Milky Way galaxy.

Our galaxy – seen in Ben’s photo above as a bright and hazy band of stars – is estimated to be some 100,000 light-years wide and only about 1,000 light-years thick. That’s why the starlit band of the Milky Way, which is visible in the evening this month, appears so well defined in our sky. Gazing into it, we’re really looking edgewise into the thin plane of our own galaxy.

A planisphere is virtually indispensable for beginning stargazers. Order your EarthSky planisphere from our store.

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Image Credit: Digital Sky LLC

The image above gives you an idea of the awesome beauty of our Milky Way galaxy in the night sky. It’s mosaic of multiple shots on large-format film. It comprises all 360 degrees of the galaxy from our vantage point. Photography was done in Ft. Davis, Texas for the northern hemisphere shots and from Broken Hill, New South Wales, Australia, for the southern portions. Note the dust lanes, which obscure our view of some features beyond them. Note that the galaxy is brightest at its center, where most of the stars – and a possible hidden giant black hole – reside. This image shows stars down to 11th magnitude – fainter than the eye alone can see. Still, if you’re standing under a clear, dark night sky, you’ll see the Milky Way clearly as a band of stars stretched across the sky on late summer evenings.

The band of the Milky Way is tough to see unless you’re far from the artificial lights of the city and unless you’re looking on a night when the moon is down, as it is in early evening tonight.

If you do look in a dark country sky, you’ll easily spot the Milky Way. And, assuming you’re looking from the Northern Hemisphere, you’ll notice that it gets broader and richer in the southern part of the sky, in the direction of the constellations Scorpius and Sagittarius. This is the direction toward the galaxy’s center. If you’re in the Southern Hemisphere, the galactic center is still in the direction of Sagittarius. But from the southern part of Earth’s globe this month, this constellation is closer to overhead.

A special thank you to Ben Coffman Photography for the photo at the top of this post. Visit Ben Coffman on G+.

Bottom line: If you look in a dark country sky, you’ll easily spot the starlit band of our huge, flat Milky Way galaxy. Every star in our night sky lies inside this galaxy.

Help support EarthSky! Check out the EarthSky store for fun astronomy gifts and tools for all ages!

Donate: Your support means the world to us



from EarthSky http://ift.tt/1maRmYp

Meteor season is here! Everything you need to know: Perseid meteor shower

The image at the top of this post, showing a campfire under the Milky Way, is by Ben Coffman Photography in Oregon. He wrote:

These good folks – co-workers from one of the resorts on Mt Hood, if I remember correctly – let me take their photo on the beach near Cape Kiwanda [a state natural area near in Pacific City, Oregon]. They looked like they were having fun.

And so they do. What could be better than a beautiful night under the Milky Way? But did you know that every night of your life is a night under the Milky Way? By that we mean … every individual star you can see with the unaided eye, in all parts of the sky, lies within the confines of our Milky Way galaxy.

Our galaxy – seen in Ben’s photo above as a bright and hazy band of stars – is estimated to be some 100,000 light-years wide and only about 1,000 light-years thick. That’s why the starlit band of the Milky Way, which is visible in the evening this month, appears so well defined in our sky. Gazing into it, we’re really looking edgewise into the thin plane of our own galaxy.

A planisphere is virtually indispensable for beginning stargazers. Order your EarthSky planisphere from our store.

Enjoying EarthSky so far? Sign up for our free daily newsletter today!

Image Credit: Digital Sky LLC

The image above gives you an idea of the awesome beauty of our Milky Way galaxy in the night sky. It’s mosaic of multiple shots on large-format film. It comprises all 360 degrees of the galaxy from our vantage point. Photography was done in Ft. Davis, Texas for the northern hemisphere shots and from Broken Hill, New South Wales, Australia, for the southern portions. Note the dust lanes, which obscure our view of some features beyond them. Note that the galaxy is brightest at its center, where most of the stars – and a possible hidden giant black hole – reside. This image shows stars down to 11th magnitude – fainter than the eye alone can see. Still, if you’re standing under a clear, dark night sky, you’ll see the Milky Way clearly as a band of stars stretched across the sky on late summer evenings.

The band of the Milky Way is tough to see unless you’re far from the artificial lights of the city and unless you’re looking on a night when the moon is down, as it is in early evening tonight.

If you do look in a dark country sky, you’ll easily spot the Milky Way. And, assuming you’re looking from the Northern Hemisphere, you’ll notice that it gets broader and richer in the southern part of the sky, in the direction of the constellations Scorpius and Sagittarius. This is the direction toward the galaxy’s center. If you’re in the Southern Hemisphere, the galactic center is still in the direction of Sagittarius. But from the southern part of Earth’s globe this month, this constellation is closer to overhead.

A special thank you to Ben Coffman Photography for the photo at the top of this post. Visit Ben Coffman on G+.

Bottom line: If you look in a dark country sky, you’ll easily spot the starlit band of our huge, flat Milky Way galaxy. Every star in our night sky lies inside this galaxy.

Help support EarthSky! Check out the EarthSky store for fun astronomy gifts and tools for all ages!

Donate: Your support means the world to us



from EarthSky http://ift.tt/1maRmYp

Is there a role for homeopathy in cancer care? I think you know the answer to that question… [Respectful Insolence]

Homeopathy is The One Quackery To Rule Them All.

There, I’ve started off this post the way I start off most posts about homeopathy, with a statement of just how enormous a pile of pseudoscientific (or rather prescientific) quackery that it is. You’d think that in 2015 no one would believe that diluting a substance (with vigorous shaking between each serial dilution step, of course, in order to “potentize” it) makes its effects stronger or that water has some sort of mystical “memory” that remembers the therapeutic substance but forgets all the other impurities, chemicals, and urine with which the water has been in contact over the millennia. Still, homeopaths and naturopaths (all of whom are trained in homeopathy) continue to prescribe little magic sugar pills that have been soaked in the water remaining after a homeopathic remedy has been serially diluted to the point where there’s almost no chance (other than perhaps through contamination of the surfaces of the flasks used to do the dilutions) that there’s even a single molecule of the original remedy left. Such is unreason in 2015, the same as it was over 200 years ago when Samuel Hahnemann dreamt up homeopathy.

What is even more depressing is that there are actual people in medical academia, real doctors, who think there might be something to homeopathy even though its precepts violate multiple well-established laws of physics and chemistry and its other law declaring that “like cures like” has no basis in physiology or medicine. Every so often, I come across articles by such Very Serious People that make their way into actual reputable medical journals. So it was that Mark Crislip (Crissslippppp!) sent me just such an article by Moshe Frenkel, Clinical Associate Professor at the University of Texas Medical Branch, former chair of the Clinical Practice Committee of the Society of Integrative Oncology, former medical director of the Integrative Medicine Program at M.D. Anderson Cancer Center, director of an integrative oncology service in The Institute of Oncology in Meir Medical Center in Israel, and founder and director of Integrative Oncology Consultants. In other words, he’s a former academic who formed his own consulting practice but is still a heavy hitter in the world of academic “integrative oncology.” We’ve met Dr. Frenkel a few times before here, including in posts about his recommendation based on anecdotes of the Feldenkrais method and, perhaps most memorably (at least I like to think so) his study in which he and his colleagues sprinkled the magic water on breast cancer cell lines and misinterpreted probably ethanol toxicity as selective toxicity of homeopathic remedies on breast cancer cell lines. It was a study that Rachael Dunlop also deconstructed in a most excellent fashion. Perhaps the most depressing thing about the study is that it came out of a lab at M.D. Anderson. My deconstruction of that particular study also provoked some of the most hilariously dumb responses I’ve ever had to any post of mine.

So Dr. Frenkel is a believer in homeopathy. This much is clear. Indeed, he’s even “earned” his very own entry in the American Encyclopedia of Loons. Yet, somehow, he managed to publish a brand spankin’ new article justifying the potential use of homeopathy in oncology. His commentary appears in Current Oncology Reports, which, while by no means top tier, is a relatively decent journal (Impact Factor 2.891) not generally known for woo. Yet, here Frenkel publishes an article entitled Is There a Role for Homeopathy in Cancer Care? Questions and Challenges.

Whenever an article’s title is a question, a general rule of thumb is that the answer to the question is no. In that tradition, I was half tempted to let Frenkel ask this question and then answer simply, “No.” Unfortunately, there’s a lot more quackery to deal with; so let’s dig in.

Frenkel starts his article out, as is mandatory for articles by believers about “complementary and alternative medicine” (CAM) or, as it’s now more commonly called “integrative medicine,” with an appeal to popularity, touting how patients with cancer commonly use CAM to “improve their quality of life, to gain a sense of control, and to participate actively in their care.” (One notes that he doesn’t say anything about “to treat their cancers” or “to get better.” Among these, he notes meditation, acupuncture, homeopathy, yoga, and diet. Of course, two of these things are not like the others. For instance, yoga is a system of exercise. Diet and exercise can be science-based methods to assist treating cancer patients. Similarly, meditation might potentially be science-based, although it’s difficult to study. In marked contrast, acupuncture and especially homeopathy are pure quackery. This is a common strategy among CAM apologists, to mix science-based and potentially science-based modalities that have been “rebranded” as being somehow “alternative” and therefore CAM with modalities that are pure quackery, as though they are both equally legitimate. Frenkel thinks this is just damned unfair:

Homeopathy has grown in popularity with the public but is viewed with skepticism by medical academia and is still excluded from current conventional recommendations. Homeopathy is practiced extensively in Europe, Asia, Middle East, and South America to treat functional disorders and minor ailments.

And:

In Europe, homeopathy is used during and after cancer treatments. A survey of close to 1000 cancer patients in 14 European countries revealed that 36%of cancer patients were using some form of complementary medicine. In the surveyed countries, cancer patients often used homeopathy with herbal remedies as the main CIM therapy [6].

In the UK, a questionnaire-based study revealed that homeopathy was one of the mainly used CIM therapies by cancer patients [7].

Approximately 34 % of patients treated in a French cancer department reported using CIM; of these patients, the majority (42 %) used homeopathy [8].

In Germany, cancer patients (both adults and children) tend to use homeopathy in addition to conventional treatments. Homeopathy, as a matter of fact, is the most frequently used CIM treatment among German adults and children with cancer [9, 10].

To which my response is a big yawn. As I like to say, large numbers of people belief in ghosts and hauntings. It doesn’t make ghosts and hauntings real, nor does the popularity of homeopathy in some parts of the world mean that homeopathy is an efficacious treatment for anything.

Even so, having established (or attempted to establish) the popularity of homeopathy, Frenkel next moves on to try to argue that it is also efficacious. A lot of what he writes are the same tired old defenses of homeopathy that I’ve deconstructed ad nauseam right here on this very blog and on my not-so-super secret other blog. It’s still worth discussing some of them again plus one that I somehow missed having discussed in detail, namely a Swiss report on homeopathy released in 2011, which Frenkel exults about:

The Swiss report carefully reviewed the evidence from randomized double-blind and placebo controlled clinical trials testing homeopathic medicines, they also evaluated the Breal world effectiveness^ as well as safety and cost-effectiveness [15]. The report also conducted a comprehensive review of preclinical research such as botanical studies, animal studies, and in vitro studies with human cells. After assessing the evidence from basic science research and high-quality clinical studies, the Swiss concluded that homeopathic remedies seem to induce cellular effects as well as changes in living organisms. The report also mentioned that 20 of the 22 systematic reviews of clinical research, testing homeopathic medicines, detected a trend in favor of homeopathy. The authors concluded that homeopathic treatments should be reimbursed by Switzerland’s national health insurance program, and the Swiss government followed this recommendation [15].

There’s just one problem. It’s a terrible report. Critics almost immediately pointed out (as well they should have) that the Swiss report consisted of a poorly done analysis of the existing evidence. Indeed, David Martin Shaw even characterized it as research misconduct, noting that the writers of the report didn’t even do an online review of the literature because “just searching online would not have been sufficient to supply a representative overview of homeopathic research.” They also included “expert contacts and scanning of bibliographic references.” As Shaw discussed, this is a highly suspect research strategy because any high quality research would be available online via the usual databases such as PubMed.gov and other online sources. More importantly, the “expert contacts” almost certainly suggest biased sources (i.e., homeopaths and naturopaths, the latter of whom also use homeopathy, with perhaps other believers in homeopathy).

Shaw also notes that the authors based “their conclusion that homeopathy is effective on four trials that are all more than a decade old and have been comprehensively exposed as weak, flawed studies (see reference 3 for details of the trials) [3]. The authors also tried to redefine how one determines whether a treatment is safe and efficacious by emphasizing “real world effectiveness,” which, as I’ve pointed out time and time again, is putting the cart before the horse. You can’t look at real world effectiveness until you’ve established efficacy in clinical trials, because design and interpretation of pragmatic studies designed to look at real world effectiveness assume that efficacy has already been established in randomized clinical trials. Both David Shaw and Steve Novella quote a damning passage from the Swiss report:

If homeopathy is highly likely to be effective but this cannot be consistently proven in clinical trials, the question arises of what conditions are needed for homeopathy to show its effectiveness and realise its potential, and what conditions threaten to obscure this?

Shaw expressed surprise that the authors of the Swiss report would be so bold as to come out and say that they are seeking to prove that homeopathy works and looking for conditions under which they can achieve that. As Novella notes, they are assuming that homeopathy works, but are frustrated by the fact that high quality clinical trials uniformly fail to detect efficacy. In any case, Frenkel fails to note that an Australian and British report found exactly the opposite conclusion as the Swiss report. They both concluded that homeopathy doesn’t work detectably greater than placebo. So has a Cochrane review on homeopathy used to treat the adverse effects of cancer treatment, concluding that there is “no convincing evidence for the efficacy of homeopathic medicines for other adverse effects of cancer treatments.” It did note that there were small studies that suggested that topical calendula and Traumeel S mouthwash might have efficacy preventing acute dermatitis during radiation therapy and chemotherapy-induced stomatitis, respectively, but this is weak at best. For one thing, calendula is not truly homeopathic, as it’s not diluted at all, and the tiny Traumeel S study has never been replicated with a larger number of patients.

Frankel also cites poorly done animal studies of homeopathic remedies, including a study of his own that I’ve discussed before, namely the one that demonstrated that the alcohol diluent in homeopathic remedies is toxic to breast cancer cell lines. It was a study so flawed that it took a tag team of Rachael Dunlop and myself to take it down. The rest of the evidence presented consisted of the usual panoply of favored studies of homeopathic remedies, such as best case series of the sort Nicholas Gonzalez used to con the NIH into funding a study of his protocol for pancreatic cancer and survival data in case series with no controls other than historical data.

Frenkel concludes erroneously:

Limited research has suggested that homeopathic remedies appear to cause cellular changes in some cancerous cells. In animal models, specific homeopathic remedies have had an inhibitory effect on tumor development. Studies of homeopathic remedies combined with conventional cancer care show that these remedies improve quality of life, reduce symptom burden, and possibly improve survival in patients with fatal disease. In vitro studies, animal studies, and clinical interventions that combine homeopathy with conventional cancer care suggest that homeopathy might improve the well-being of patients and might affect the progression of cancer and patient survival. These findings warrant comprehensive clinical studies to determine the effects of homeopathy on cancer and patient survival. Although additional studies are needed to confirm these findings, given the low cost and minimal risks and the potential magnitude of homeopathy’s effects, in certain situations, one might consider the use of homeopathic remedies as an additional tool to integrate into cancer care.

Let’s just say that the studies enumerated by Frenkel in his review, as is the case of pretty much every “positive” study touted by homeopaths, do not show what he thinks they show. Certainly, when coupled with the utter implausibility of homeopathy from a scientific standpoint, these studies do not show that homeopathy “works.” As I like to say, equivocal results + an incredibly high degree of scientific implausibility = negative results.

I could have saved Frenkel a lot of time and effort right after the title of his paper by telling him the answer is no. The sad thing is, this is a doctor who was once the chief of “integrative medicine” at one of the two most respected cancer centers in the US and is still well-regarded within academia—I mean quackademia. This should tell you much of what you need to know with respect to what we are up against in fighting the infiltration of pseudoscience into medicine.



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Homeopathy is The One Quackery To Rule Them All.

There, I’ve started off this post the way I start off most posts about homeopathy, with a statement of just how enormous a pile of pseudoscientific (or rather prescientific) quackery that it is. You’d think that in 2015 no one would believe that diluting a substance (with vigorous shaking between each serial dilution step, of course, in order to “potentize” it) makes its effects stronger or that water has some sort of mystical “memory” that remembers the therapeutic substance but forgets all the other impurities, chemicals, and urine with which the water has been in contact over the millennia. Still, homeopaths and naturopaths (all of whom are trained in homeopathy) continue to prescribe little magic sugar pills that have been soaked in the water remaining after a homeopathic remedy has been serially diluted to the point where there’s almost no chance (other than perhaps through contamination of the surfaces of the flasks used to do the dilutions) that there’s even a single molecule of the original remedy left. Such is unreason in 2015, the same as it was over 200 years ago when Samuel Hahnemann dreamt up homeopathy.

What is even more depressing is that there are actual people in medical academia, real doctors, who think there might be something to homeopathy even though its precepts violate multiple well-established laws of physics and chemistry and its other law declaring that “like cures like” has no basis in physiology or medicine. Every so often, I come across articles by such Very Serious People that make their way into actual reputable medical journals. So it was that Mark Crislip (Crissslippppp!) sent me just such an article by Moshe Frenkel, Clinical Associate Professor at the University of Texas Medical Branch, former chair of the Clinical Practice Committee of the Society of Integrative Oncology, former medical director of the Integrative Medicine Program at M.D. Anderson Cancer Center, director of an integrative oncology service in The Institute of Oncology in Meir Medical Center in Israel, and founder and director of Integrative Oncology Consultants. In other words, he’s a former academic who formed his own consulting practice but is still a heavy hitter in the world of academic “integrative oncology.” We’ve met Dr. Frenkel a few times before here, including in posts about his recommendation based on anecdotes of the Feldenkrais method and, perhaps most memorably (at least I like to think so) his study in which he and his colleagues sprinkled the magic water on breast cancer cell lines and misinterpreted probably ethanol toxicity as selective toxicity of homeopathic remedies on breast cancer cell lines. It was a study that Rachael Dunlop also deconstructed in a most excellent fashion. Perhaps the most depressing thing about the study is that it came out of a lab at M.D. Anderson. My deconstruction of that particular study also provoked some of the most hilariously dumb responses I’ve ever had to any post of mine.

So Dr. Frenkel is a believer in homeopathy. This much is clear. Indeed, he’s even “earned” his very own entry in the American Encyclopedia of Loons. Yet, somehow, he managed to publish a brand spankin’ new article justifying the potential use of homeopathy in oncology. His commentary appears in Current Oncology Reports, which, while by no means top tier, is a relatively decent journal (Impact Factor 2.891) not generally known for woo. Yet, here Frenkel publishes an article entitled Is There a Role for Homeopathy in Cancer Care? Questions and Challenges.

Whenever an article’s title is a question, a general rule of thumb is that the answer to the question is no. In that tradition, I was half tempted to let Frenkel ask this question and then answer simply, “No.” Unfortunately, there’s a lot more quackery to deal with; so let’s dig in.

Frenkel starts his article out, as is mandatory for articles by believers about “complementary and alternative medicine” (CAM) or, as it’s now more commonly called “integrative medicine,” with an appeal to popularity, touting how patients with cancer commonly use CAM to “improve their quality of life, to gain a sense of control, and to participate actively in their care.” (One notes that he doesn’t say anything about “to treat their cancers” or “to get better.” Among these, he notes meditation, acupuncture, homeopathy, yoga, and diet. Of course, two of these things are not like the others. For instance, yoga is a system of exercise. Diet and exercise can be science-based methods to assist treating cancer patients. Similarly, meditation might potentially be science-based, although it’s difficult to study. In marked contrast, acupuncture and especially homeopathy are pure quackery. This is a common strategy among CAM apologists, to mix science-based and potentially science-based modalities that have been “rebranded” as being somehow “alternative” and therefore CAM with modalities that are pure quackery, as though they are both equally legitimate. Frenkel thinks this is just damned unfair:

Homeopathy has grown in popularity with the public but is viewed with skepticism by medical academia and is still excluded from current conventional recommendations. Homeopathy is practiced extensively in Europe, Asia, Middle East, and South America to treat functional disorders and minor ailments.

And:

In Europe, homeopathy is used during and after cancer treatments. A survey of close to 1000 cancer patients in 14 European countries revealed that 36%of cancer patients were using some form of complementary medicine. In the surveyed countries, cancer patients often used homeopathy with herbal remedies as the main CIM therapy [6].

In the UK, a questionnaire-based study revealed that homeopathy was one of the mainly used CIM therapies by cancer patients [7].

Approximately 34 % of patients treated in a French cancer department reported using CIM; of these patients, the majority (42 %) used homeopathy [8].

In Germany, cancer patients (both adults and children) tend to use homeopathy in addition to conventional treatments. Homeopathy, as a matter of fact, is the most frequently used CIM treatment among German adults and children with cancer [9, 10].

To which my response is a big yawn. As I like to say, large numbers of people belief in ghosts and hauntings. It doesn’t make ghosts and hauntings real, nor does the popularity of homeopathy in some parts of the world mean that homeopathy is an efficacious treatment for anything.

Even so, having established (or attempted to establish) the popularity of homeopathy, Frenkel next moves on to try to argue that it is also efficacious. A lot of what he writes are the same tired old defenses of homeopathy that I’ve deconstructed ad nauseam right here on this very blog and on my not-so-super secret other blog. It’s still worth discussing some of them again plus one that I somehow missed having discussed in detail, namely a Swiss report on homeopathy released in 2011, which Frenkel exults about:

The Swiss report carefully reviewed the evidence from randomized double-blind and placebo controlled clinical trials testing homeopathic medicines, they also evaluated the Breal world effectiveness^ as well as safety and cost-effectiveness [15]. The report also conducted a comprehensive review of preclinical research such as botanical studies, animal studies, and in vitro studies with human cells. After assessing the evidence from basic science research and high-quality clinical studies, the Swiss concluded that homeopathic remedies seem to induce cellular effects as well as changes in living organisms. The report also mentioned that 20 of the 22 systematic reviews of clinical research, testing homeopathic medicines, detected a trend in favor of homeopathy. The authors concluded that homeopathic treatments should be reimbursed by Switzerland’s national health insurance program, and the Swiss government followed this recommendation [15].

There’s just one problem. It’s a terrible report. Critics almost immediately pointed out (as well they should have) that the Swiss report consisted of a poorly done analysis of the existing evidence. Indeed, David Martin Shaw even characterized it as research misconduct, noting that the writers of the report didn’t even do an online review of the literature because “just searching online would not have been sufficient to supply a representative overview of homeopathic research.” They also included “expert contacts and scanning of bibliographic references.” As Shaw discussed, this is a highly suspect research strategy because any high quality research would be available online via the usual databases such as PubMed.gov and other online sources. More importantly, the “expert contacts” almost certainly suggest biased sources (i.e., homeopaths and naturopaths, the latter of whom also use homeopathy, with perhaps other believers in homeopathy).

Shaw also notes that the authors based “their conclusion that homeopathy is effective on four trials that are all more than a decade old and have been comprehensively exposed as weak, flawed studies (see reference 3 for details of the trials) [3]. The authors also tried to redefine how one determines whether a treatment is safe and efficacious by emphasizing “real world effectiveness,” which, as I’ve pointed out time and time again, is putting the cart before the horse. You can’t look at real world effectiveness until you’ve established efficacy in clinical trials, because design and interpretation of pragmatic studies designed to look at real world effectiveness assume that efficacy has already been established in randomized clinical trials. Both David Shaw and Steve Novella quote a damning passage from the Swiss report:

If homeopathy is highly likely to be effective but this cannot be consistently proven in clinical trials, the question arises of what conditions are needed for homeopathy to show its effectiveness and realise its potential, and what conditions threaten to obscure this?

Shaw expressed surprise that the authors of the Swiss report would be so bold as to come out and say that they are seeking to prove that homeopathy works and looking for conditions under which they can achieve that. As Novella notes, they are assuming that homeopathy works, but are frustrated by the fact that high quality clinical trials uniformly fail to detect efficacy. In any case, Frenkel fails to note that an Australian and British report found exactly the opposite conclusion as the Swiss report. They both concluded that homeopathy doesn’t work detectably greater than placebo. So has a Cochrane review on homeopathy used to treat the adverse effects of cancer treatment, concluding that there is “no convincing evidence for the efficacy of homeopathic medicines for other adverse effects of cancer treatments.” It did note that there were small studies that suggested that topical calendula and Traumeel S mouthwash might have efficacy preventing acute dermatitis during radiation therapy and chemotherapy-induced stomatitis, respectively, but this is weak at best. For one thing, calendula is not truly homeopathic, as it’s not diluted at all, and the tiny Traumeel S study has never been replicated with a larger number of patients.

Frankel also cites poorly done animal studies of homeopathic remedies, including a study of his own that I’ve discussed before, namely the one that demonstrated that the alcohol diluent in homeopathic remedies is toxic to breast cancer cell lines. It was a study so flawed that it took a tag team of Rachael Dunlop and myself to take it down. The rest of the evidence presented consisted of the usual panoply of favored studies of homeopathic remedies, such as best case series of the sort Nicholas Gonzalez used to con the NIH into funding a study of his protocol for pancreatic cancer and survival data in case series with no controls other than historical data.

Frenkel concludes erroneously:

Limited research has suggested that homeopathic remedies appear to cause cellular changes in some cancerous cells. In animal models, specific homeopathic remedies have had an inhibitory effect on tumor development. Studies of homeopathic remedies combined with conventional cancer care show that these remedies improve quality of life, reduce symptom burden, and possibly improve survival in patients with fatal disease. In vitro studies, animal studies, and clinical interventions that combine homeopathy with conventional cancer care suggest that homeopathy might improve the well-being of patients and might affect the progression of cancer and patient survival. These findings warrant comprehensive clinical studies to determine the effects of homeopathy on cancer and patient survival. Although additional studies are needed to confirm these findings, given the low cost and minimal risks and the potential magnitude of homeopathy’s effects, in certain situations, one might consider the use of homeopathic remedies as an additional tool to integrate into cancer care.

Let’s just say that the studies enumerated by Frenkel in his review, as is the case of pretty much every “positive” study touted by homeopaths, do not show what he thinks they show. Certainly, when coupled with the utter implausibility of homeopathy from a scientific standpoint, these studies do not show that homeopathy “works.” As I like to say, equivocal results + an incredibly high degree of scientific implausibility = negative results.

I could have saved Frenkel a lot of time and effort right after the title of his paper by telling him the answer is no. The sad thing is, this is a doctor who was once the chief of “integrative medicine” at one of the two most respected cancer centers in the US and is still well-regarded within academia—I mean quackademia. This should tell you much of what you need to know with respect to what we are up against in fighting the infiltration of pseudoscience into medicine.



from ScienceBlogs http://ift.tt/1eMOJyi

Dolphins are raising their voices just to be heard [Life Lines]

Research published in the Journal of Experimental Biology shows that noisy humans are impacting the physiology and behaviors of dolphins and whales. To compete against man-made noises, these animals are altering the amplitude, frequency or length of their vocalizations or repeat what they need to say with the hope of being heard. Dr. Maria Holt and colleagues studied a par of bottlenose dophins vocalizing and discovered that the oxygen intake of the animals increased as they raised their voices. The team then calculated the number of additional calories the dolphins would need to ingest to make up for the extra energy used to communicate in a noisy environment. The results of these calculations showed that two additional calories were needed to make up for every two minutes the animals spent communicating over noises. According to a quote from Dr. Holt published in Scientific American: “To survive and breed, you have to make sure you have enough calories every day to support those activities.” Therefore, animals that live in a noisy environment which may have limited food availability might have a more difficult time supporting their metabolic needs. For juvenile or nursing dolphins, that already require additional nutrition, the costs may be more detrimental to the health of the animals.

Sources:

Holt MM, Noren D, Dunkin RC, Williams TM. Vocal performance affects metabolic rate in dolphins: implications for animals communicating in noisy environments. Journal of Experimental Biology. 218: 1647-1654, 2015.

Scientific American



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Research published in the Journal of Experimental Biology shows that noisy humans are impacting the physiology and behaviors of dolphins and whales. To compete against man-made noises, these animals are altering the amplitude, frequency or length of their vocalizations or repeat what they need to say with the hope of being heard. Dr. Maria Holt and colleagues studied a par of bottlenose dophins vocalizing and discovered that the oxygen intake of the animals increased as they raised their voices. The team then calculated the number of additional calories the dolphins would need to ingest to make up for the extra energy used to communicate in a noisy environment. The results of these calculations showed that two additional calories were needed to make up for every two minutes the animals spent communicating over noises. According to a quote from Dr. Holt published in Scientific American: “To survive and breed, you have to make sure you have enough calories every day to support those activities.” Therefore, animals that live in a noisy environment which may have limited food availability might have a more difficult time supporting their metabolic needs. For juvenile or nursing dolphins, that already require additional nutrition, the costs may be more detrimental to the health of the animals.

Sources:

Holt MM, Noren D, Dunkin RC, Williams TM. Vocal performance affects metabolic rate in dolphins: implications for animals communicating in noisy environments. Journal of Experimental Biology. 218: 1647-1654, 2015.

Scientific American



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Astronaut Scott Kelly shoots amazing Earth photos from International Space Station

A couple of years ago astronaut Chris Hadfield began wowing us with photos of Earth taken during his time on the International Space Station. (You can see some of the more than 40,000 photos he shot in the gallery at the bottom of this story.)

Now comes Scott Kelly, the U.S. astronaut who is spending a year on the ISS. He’s been shooting and tweeting some amazing photos of our dear planet as well. He has shot so many, we’ve selected some of the standouts from July only. Check them out:

Kelly is in on the ISS for a year as part of Human Research Program. Here’s what the agency says about it:

The One-Year Mission will focus on seven categories of research. In March 2015, American Astronaut Scott Kelly and Russian Cosmonaut Mikhail Kornienko will begin collaborative investigations on the International Space Station (ISS). They will reside on the ISS for a year, which is twice as long as typical U.S. missions. These investigations are expected to yield beneficial knowledge on the medical, psychological and biomedical challenges faced by astronauts during long-duration spaceflight.

So the two have been on the station for more than 128 days (since publication). You can learn all you want to about the mission and astronauts on the agency’s one-year mission page.

 

Jake Ellison can be reached at 206-448-8334 or jakeellison@seattlepi.com. Follow Jake on Twitter at http://twitter.com/Jake_News. Also, swing by and *LIKE* his page on Facebook.
If Google Plus is your thing, check out our science coverage here.



from The Big Science Blog http://ift.tt/1heho0U

A couple of years ago astronaut Chris Hadfield began wowing us with photos of Earth taken during his time on the International Space Station. (You can see some of the more than 40,000 photos he shot in the gallery at the bottom of this story.)

Now comes Scott Kelly, the U.S. astronaut who is spending a year on the ISS. He’s been shooting and tweeting some amazing photos of our dear planet as well. He has shot so many, we’ve selected some of the standouts from July only. Check them out:

Kelly is in on the ISS for a year as part of Human Research Program. Here’s what the agency says about it:

The One-Year Mission will focus on seven categories of research. In March 2015, American Astronaut Scott Kelly and Russian Cosmonaut Mikhail Kornienko will begin collaborative investigations on the International Space Station (ISS). They will reside on the ISS for a year, which is twice as long as typical U.S. missions. These investigations are expected to yield beneficial knowledge on the medical, psychological and biomedical challenges faced by astronauts during long-duration spaceflight.

So the two have been on the station for more than 128 days (since publication). You can learn all you want to about the mission and astronauts on the agency’s one-year mission page.

 

Jake Ellison can be reached at 206-448-8334 or jakeellison@seattlepi.com. Follow Jake on Twitter at http://twitter.com/Jake_News. Also, swing by and *LIKE* his page on Facebook.
If Google Plus is your thing, check out our science coverage here.



from The Big Science Blog http://ift.tt/1heho0U

2015 SkS Weekly Digest #31

Contents: SkS Highlights, Improving the Weekly Digest, Toon of the Week, Quote of the Week, They Said What?: GOP Presidential Hopefuls, SkS in the News, SkS Spotlights: Asset Owners Disclosure Project, Poster of the Week, Coming Soon on SkS, and 97 Hours of Consensus: Dr. Pietr Sans

SkS Highlights

Conspiracy theories about Skeptical Science by John Cook drew the highest number of comments of the aarticles posted on SkS during the past week. Coming in second and thrid respectively were: 

Improving the Weekly Digest

The all-volunteer SkS author team is engaged in finding ways to improve the Wekly Digest in order to make it more attractive and useful to all of our readers. We would like your input and continuing particpation in this effort. In this context:

  • If you were responsible for producing the Weekly Digest, what changes would you make to its syle and content? 

Toon of the Week

 2015 Toon 31

Quote of the Week

Savio Carvalho of Amnesty International (AI), which is part of the UNMG, told IPS the post-2015 agenda has become an aspirational text sans clear independent mechanisms for people to hold governments to account for implementation and follow-up.

“Under the garb of national ownership, realities and capacities, member states can get away doing absolutely nothing. We would like them to ensure national priorities are set in conformity with human rights principles and standards so that we are not in the same place in 2030,” he added.

U.N.’s Post-2015 Development Agenda Under Fire Thalif Deen, Inter Press Service (iPS), July 29, 2015

They Said What?

GOP hopefuls not embracing climate change: Skepticism could prove costly in general election by by Matt Viser, Boston Globe, Aug 1, 2015

SkS in the News

In his op-ed, No Agnostics in the Climate Foxhole, published in Project Syndicate, John Hewson* states:

As Howard and Krauthammer should know, the subject of climate change is not a matter of religion, but of science. According to a 2013 survey of peer-reviewed publications on the subject, some 97% of scientists endorse the position that humans are causing global warming. Anyone familiar with the scientific process is aware that researchers are trained to disagree, to contest one another’s hypotheses and conclusions. A consensus of such magnitude is as close as we ever get to a recognized scientific fact.

*John Hewson, a former leader of Australia’s Liberal Party, is Chair of the Asset Owners Disclosure Project.

SkS Spotlights 

The Asset Owners Disclosure Project is an independent not-for-profit global organisation whose objective is to protect asset owners from the risks posed by climate change. 

It does this by working with pension funds, insurance companies, sovereign wealth funds, foundations and universities to improve the level of disclosure and industry best practice. 

We encourage these investors to redress the huge imbalance in their investments between high- and low-carbon assets, while realigning the investment chain to adopt long-term investment practices. 

Key elements of the initiative are:

  • Conducting an annual survey and assessment of the world’s 1000 largest asset owners pertaining to their management of climate change risks and opportunities.
  • Publishing rankings of the world’s 1000 largest asset owners to allow members, stakeholders and industry to see which funds are better than others at managing climate risk.
  • Providing and promoting climate change best practice to drive and improve climate change management and capability of asset owners.
  • Developing consumer-facing programs to educate asset owner members or stakeholders of the financial risks associated with climate change.
  • Researching trends in climate risk, member behaviour and institutional investment.
  • Creating frameworks to encourage active ownership.

Coming Soon on SkS

  • Statistics says the long-term global warming trend continues (John Abraham)
  • The most influential climate change papers of all time (Roz Pidcock)
  • Potentially the largest die-off of coral reefs ever observed (Rob Painting)
  • How This El Niño Is And Isn’t Like 1997 (Andrea Thompson)
  • The pope as philosopher: faith, climate change and public reason (Lawrence Torcello)
  • 2015 SkS Weekly News Roundup #32 (John Hartz)
  • 2015 Sks Weekly Digest #32 (John Hartz) 

Poster of the Week

2015 Poster 31 

SkS Week in Review

97 Hours of Consensus: Dr. Pietr Sans

 Pietr Sans

 

Pieter Tans' bio page and Quote source

 



from Skeptical Science http://ift.tt/1Iiz5mO

Contents: SkS Highlights, Improving the Weekly Digest, Toon of the Week, Quote of the Week, They Said What?: GOP Presidential Hopefuls, SkS in the News, SkS Spotlights: Asset Owners Disclosure Project, Poster of the Week, Coming Soon on SkS, and 97 Hours of Consensus: Dr. Pietr Sans

SkS Highlights

Conspiracy theories about Skeptical Science by John Cook drew the highest number of comments of the aarticles posted on SkS during the past week. Coming in second and thrid respectively were: 

Improving the Weekly Digest

The all-volunteer SkS author team is engaged in finding ways to improve the Wekly Digest in order to make it more attractive and useful to all of our readers. We would like your input and continuing particpation in this effort. In this context:

  • If you were responsible for producing the Weekly Digest, what changes would you make to its syle and content? 

Toon of the Week

 2015 Toon 31

Quote of the Week

Savio Carvalho of Amnesty International (AI), which is part of the UNMG, told IPS the post-2015 agenda has become an aspirational text sans clear independent mechanisms for people to hold governments to account for implementation and follow-up.

“Under the garb of national ownership, realities and capacities, member states can get away doing absolutely nothing. We would like them to ensure national priorities are set in conformity with human rights principles and standards so that we are not in the same place in 2030,” he added.

U.N.’s Post-2015 Development Agenda Under Fire Thalif Deen, Inter Press Service (iPS), July 29, 2015

They Said What?

GOP hopefuls not embracing climate change: Skepticism could prove costly in general election by by Matt Viser, Boston Globe, Aug 1, 2015

SkS in the News

In his op-ed, No Agnostics in the Climate Foxhole, published in Project Syndicate, John Hewson* states:

As Howard and Krauthammer should know, the subject of climate change is not a matter of religion, but of science. According to a 2013 survey of peer-reviewed publications on the subject, some 97% of scientists endorse the position that humans are causing global warming. Anyone familiar with the scientific process is aware that researchers are trained to disagree, to contest one another’s hypotheses and conclusions. A consensus of such magnitude is as close as we ever get to a recognized scientific fact.

*John Hewson, a former leader of Australia’s Liberal Party, is Chair of the Asset Owners Disclosure Project.

SkS Spotlights 

The Asset Owners Disclosure Project is an independent not-for-profit global organisation whose objective is to protect asset owners from the risks posed by climate change. 

It does this by working with pension funds, insurance companies, sovereign wealth funds, foundations and universities to improve the level of disclosure and industry best practice. 

We encourage these investors to redress the huge imbalance in their investments between high- and low-carbon assets, while realigning the investment chain to adopt long-term investment practices. 

Key elements of the initiative are:

  • Conducting an annual survey and assessment of the world’s 1000 largest asset owners pertaining to their management of climate change risks and opportunities.
  • Publishing rankings of the world’s 1000 largest asset owners to allow members, stakeholders and industry to see which funds are better than others at managing climate risk.
  • Providing and promoting climate change best practice to drive and improve climate change management and capability of asset owners.
  • Developing consumer-facing programs to educate asset owner members or stakeholders of the financial risks associated with climate change.
  • Researching trends in climate risk, member behaviour and institutional investment.
  • Creating frameworks to encourage active ownership.

Coming Soon on SkS

  • Statistics says the long-term global warming trend continues (John Abraham)
  • The most influential climate change papers of all time (Roz Pidcock)
  • Potentially the largest die-off of coral reefs ever observed (Rob Painting)
  • How This El Niño Is And Isn’t Like 1997 (Andrea Thompson)
  • The pope as philosopher: faith, climate change and public reason (Lawrence Torcello)
  • 2015 SkS Weekly News Roundup #32 (John Hartz)
  • 2015 Sks Weekly Digest #32 (John Hartz) 

Poster of the Week

2015 Poster 31 

SkS Week in Review

97 Hours of Consensus: Dr. Pietr Sans

 Pietr Sans

 

Pieter Tans' bio page and Quote source

 



from Skeptical Science http://ift.tt/1Iiz5mO

adds 2