aads

Absolutely insane airglow

Airglow is the light of excited atoms, high in Earth’s atmosphere. Yuri Beletsky captured this image on May 10, 2018 at Carnegie Las Campanas Observatory in Chile. You can see the telescope domes in the foreground. He wrote:

Absolutely insane airglow from last night Yes, what you see on this image are not clouds! That yellow/orangish light comes from the upper atmosphere. I couldn’t believe what I saw on the screen of my camera when I took the first image. It seems the atmosphere is pretty active now and it allows us to witness some incredible views. The Milky Way at parts was barely visible. I hope you’ll enjoy the view!



from EarthSky https://ift.tt/2G6flYZ

Airglow is the light of excited atoms, high in Earth’s atmosphere. Yuri Beletsky captured this image on May 10, 2018 at Carnegie Las Campanas Observatory in Chile. You can see the telescope domes in the foreground. He wrote:

Absolutely insane airglow from last night Yes, what you see on this image are not clouds! That yellow/orangish light comes from the upper atmosphere. I couldn’t believe what I saw on the screen of my camera when I took the first image. It seems the atmosphere is pretty active now and it allows us to witness some incredible views. The Milky Way at parts was barely visible. I hope you’ll enjoy the view!



from EarthSky https://ift.tt/2G6flYZ

Look for the beautiful Northern Crown

Photo at top: Corona Borealis, the Northern Crown, with its brightest star Alphecca, via Fred Espenak and AstroPixels. Used with permission.

Tonight, look for a constellation that’s easy to see on the sky’s dome, if your sky is dark enough. Corona Borealis – aka the Northern Crown – is exciting to find. It’s an almost-perfect semi-circle of stars. You’ll find this beautiful pattern in the evening sky from now until October.

The constellation Corona Borealis is located more or less along a line between two bright stars, Arcturus in the constellation Bootes the Herdsman and Vega in the constellation Lyra the Harp.

You’ll need a fairly dark sky to see Corona Borealis between Vega and Arcturus.

At nightfall and early evening, you’ll see Arcturus fairly high in the east to northeast, noticeable for its brightness and yellow-orange color. Vega will be rather low in northeast – bright and blue-white in color. The Northern Crown is more or less between these two bright stars. It’s a semi-circle of stars – very noticeable in a dark sky.

The brightest star in Corona Borealis is Alphecca, also known as Gemma, sometimes called the Pearl of the Crown. The name Alphecca originated with a description of Corona Borealis as the “broken one,” in reference to the fact that these stars appear in a semi-circle, rather than a full circle. Alphecca is a blue-white star, with an intrinsic luminosity some 60 times that of our sun. It’s located about 75 light-years from Earth.

The C-shaped constellation Corona Borealis shines between the constellations Bootes and Hercules. Constellation chart via IAU.

Corona Borealis

Corona Borealis, the Northern Crown, as pointed out with a green laser pointer by Jan Wojcik, director of Reynolds Observatory. Image Credit: Kyle Foley

Bottom line: Look for Corona Borealis – the Northern Crown – between the brilliant stars Arcturus and Vega tonight! This constellation is very noticeable, if you have a dark sky.

EarthSky astronomy kits are perfect for beginners. Order today from the EarthSky store

Donate: Your support means the world to us



from EarthSky https://ift.tt/1HhcwQE

Photo at top: Corona Borealis, the Northern Crown, with its brightest star Alphecca, via Fred Espenak and AstroPixels. Used with permission.

Tonight, look for a constellation that’s easy to see on the sky’s dome, if your sky is dark enough. Corona Borealis – aka the Northern Crown – is exciting to find. It’s an almost-perfect semi-circle of stars. You’ll find this beautiful pattern in the evening sky from now until October.

The constellation Corona Borealis is located more or less along a line between two bright stars, Arcturus in the constellation Bootes the Herdsman and Vega in the constellation Lyra the Harp.

You’ll need a fairly dark sky to see Corona Borealis between Vega and Arcturus.

At nightfall and early evening, you’ll see Arcturus fairly high in the east to northeast, noticeable for its brightness and yellow-orange color. Vega will be rather low in northeast – bright and blue-white in color. The Northern Crown is more or less between these two bright stars. It’s a semi-circle of stars – very noticeable in a dark sky.

The brightest star in Corona Borealis is Alphecca, also known as Gemma, sometimes called the Pearl of the Crown. The name Alphecca originated with a description of Corona Borealis as the “broken one,” in reference to the fact that these stars appear in a semi-circle, rather than a full circle. Alphecca is a blue-white star, with an intrinsic luminosity some 60 times that of our sun. It’s located about 75 light-years from Earth.

The C-shaped constellation Corona Borealis shines between the constellations Bootes and Hercules. Constellation chart via IAU.

Corona Borealis

Corona Borealis, the Northern Crown, as pointed out with a green laser pointer by Jan Wojcik, director of Reynolds Observatory. Image Credit: Kyle Foley

Bottom line: Look for Corona Borealis – the Northern Crown – between the brilliant stars Arcturus and Vega tonight! This constellation is very noticeable, if you have a dark sky.

EarthSky astronomy kits are perfect for beginners. Order today from the EarthSky store

Donate: Your support means the world to us



from EarthSky https://ift.tt/1HhcwQE

News digest – HPV vaccine, exercise, alcohol labels and ‘tanning genes’

Human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine

HPV vaccine is ‘safe and effective’

A vaccine designed to prevent cervical cancer is safe and reduces cell changes that can lead to cancer, report BBC News and NHS Choices. The vaccine was most effective when given to women under the age of 26, as our news report also explains.

Impact of breast screening error has been overrated

News of a breast screening error broke last week, with an estimated 450,000 women in England missing out on their final routine screening appointment. Headlines were quick to report the potential impact of this error, but follow-up commentaries have said the figures used were unhelpful and misleading. We also blogged about how women now need reassurance, not misleading statistics.

Exercise can reduce tiredness after testicular cancer treatment

High intensity interval training reduces tiredness and improves self-esteem in men with testicular cancer. Men with the lowest fitness levels benefitted most from the 12-week exercise programme, which involved walking on a treadmill at varying speeds and inclines. Our press release has the details.

Exercise also hit the headlines in Australia, after leading cancer experts recommended prescribing exercise to all cancer patients. The Guardian and Independent have this one.

London mayor to ban junk food ads on public transport

London’s mayor, Sadiq Khan, plans to ban junk food adverts on London’s tube and bus network. Khan said the ban was designed to help reduce childhood obesity. The Guardian and our news report have the details.

NHS England chief calls for junk food advert clampdown on Facebook

Facebook should be forced to restrict junk food adverts to tackle childhood obesity, says the head of NHS England, Simon Stevens. The remarks were made at a conference hosted by The King’s Fund and covered by the Telegraph.

Health Campaigner, Dan Parker, also called for stricter regulation of junk food ads online. The Sun and the Telegraph have the details.

Promote health benefits of Mediterranean and Nordic diets, says WHO

Following a Mediterranean or Nordic-style diet could reduce risk of cancer, diabetes and cardiovascular disease, says a World Health Organisation report. Aspects of both diets match widely-held recommendations for a healthy balanced diet, so it isn’t surprising. The Times and The Guardian covered the healthy eating review, which revealed that despite the evidence, only 15 of 53 European countries actively promoted the diets.

Warning labels on alcohol could cut drinking

Labels warning of the health risks of drinking alcohol could make some people cut back, according to an international survey. Labels warning that alcohol increases the risk of seven cancers appeared to be the most effective, with 4 in 10 people saying it would or might affect how much they drank. The Guardian has the full story.

And finally

Scientists have identified genes that appear to play a role in controlling how skin reacts to sunlight. Speaking to the Independent, lead researcher Dr Mario Falci said the results shed light on why some people with similar complexions react so differently in the sun. The discovery could help researchers to understand how skin cancer develops.

Katie  



from Cancer Research UK – Science blog https://ift.tt/2rBN4Ff
Human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine

HPV vaccine is ‘safe and effective’

A vaccine designed to prevent cervical cancer is safe and reduces cell changes that can lead to cancer, report BBC News and NHS Choices. The vaccine was most effective when given to women under the age of 26, as our news report also explains.

Impact of breast screening error has been overrated

News of a breast screening error broke last week, with an estimated 450,000 women in England missing out on their final routine screening appointment. Headlines were quick to report the potential impact of this error, but follow-up commentaries have said the figures used were unhelpful and misleading. We also blogged about how women now need reassurance, not misleading statistics.

Exercise can reduce tiredness after testicular cancer treatment

High intensity interval training reduces tiredness and improves self-esteem in men with testicular cancer. Men with the lowest fitness levels benefitted most from the 12-week exercise programme, which involved walking on a treadmill at varying speeds and inclines. Our press release has the details.

Exercise also hit the headlines in Australia, after leading cancer experts recommended prescribing exercise to all cancer patients. The Guardian and Independent have this one.

London mayor to ban junk food ads on public transport

London’s mayor, Sadiq Khan, plans to ban junk food adverts on London’s tube and bus network. Khan said the ban was designed to help reduce childhood obesity. The Guardian and our news report have the details.

NHS England chief calls for junk food advert clampdown on Facebook

Facebook should be forced to restrict junk food adverts to tackle childhood obesity, says the head of NHS England, Simon Stevens. The remarks were made at a conference hosted by The King’s Fund and covered by the Telegraph.

Health Campaigner, Dan Parker, also called for stricter regulation of junk food ads online. The Sun and the Telegraph have the details.

Promote health benefits of Mediterranean and Nordic diets, says WHO

Following a Mediterranean or Nordic-style diet could reduce risk of cancer, diabetes and cardiovascular disease, says a World Health Organisation report. Aspects of both diets match widely-held recommendations for a healthy balanced diet, so it isn’t surprising. The Times and The Guardian covered the healthy eating review, which revealed that despite the evidence, only 15 of 53 European countries actively promoted the diets.

Warning labels on alcohol could cut drinking

Labels warning of the health risks of drinking alcohol could make some people cut back, according to an international survey. Labels warning that alcohol increases the risk of seven cancers appeared to be the most effective, with 4 in 10 people saying it would or might affect how much they drank. The Guardian has the full story.

And finally

Scientists have identified genes that appear to play a role in controlling how skin reacts to sunlight. Speaking to the Independent, lead researcher Dr Mario Falci said the results shed light on why some people with similar complexions react so differently in the sun. The discovery could help researchers to understand how skin cancer develops.

Katie  



from Cancer Research UK – Science blog https://ift.tt/2rBN4Ff

Dengue 'hot spots' provide map to chikungunya and Zika outbreaks

A stock image shows a street scene in Merida, Mexico, a city of about one million in the Yucatan Peninsula where the study was based. Merida had a little over 40,000 reported dengue cases during 2008 to 2015 and nearly half of them were clustered in 27 percent of the city.

By Carol Clark

Identifying dengue fever “hot spots” can provide a predictive map for outbreaks of chikungunya and Zika — two other viral diseases that, along with dengue, are spread by the Aedes aegypti mosquito.

PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases published the findings, the first confirmation of the spatial-temporal overlap for outbreaks of the three diseases, led by Emory University.

“We had hypothesized that we would see some overlap between these diseases, but we were surprised at the strength of that overlap,” says Gonzalo Vazquez-Prokopec, a disease ecologist in Emory’s Department of Environmental Sciences and lead author of the study. “The results open a window for public health officials to do targeted, proactive interventions for emerging Aedes-borne diseases. We’ve provided them with a statistical framework in the form of a map to guide their actions.”

The analysis drew from eight years of data from Merida, Mexico, on symptomatic cases. A city of one million located in the Yucatan Peninsula, Merida had about 40,000 reported dengue cases during 2008 to 2015, and nearly half of them were clustered in 27 percent of the city. The neighborhoods comprising these dengue hot spots contained 75 percent of the first chikungunya cases reported during the outbreak of that disease in 2015 and 100 percent of the first Zika cases reported during the Zika outbreak in 2016.

“Currently, most mosquito control efforts are not done until cases of mosquito-borne diseases are detected,” Vazquez-Prokopec says. “But by the time you detect a virus in an area, it has likely already begun to spread beyond that area.”

Mosquito control efforts generally involve outdoor spraying that covers broad swaths of a city, further reducing efficacy, he adds. Outdoor spraying is particularly ineffective for the Aedes aegypti mosquito. “This mosquito is highly adapted to urban environments,” Vazquez-Prokopec says. “It likes to live inside houses and to feed on people.”

A targeted approach would make it more feasible to implement time-consuming and costly interventions such as indoor residual spraying.

A technician sprays the ceiling and walls of a home in Merida. Indoor residual spraying is effective, but is not practical for large areas of a city, due to the time and expense involved. Photo by Nsa Dada.

“The statistical framework that we have developed allows public health officials to harness the power of big data to do more effective and efficient mosquito control by focusing on high-risk areas — even before an epidemic begins,” Vazquez-Prokopec says.

The study used disease case reports at the household level and then scaled them up to neighborhoods to protect individuals’ privacy in the final map. The hot spots for reported dengue cases were confirmed by data from laboratory blood tests of a cohort of 5,000 people. The analysis showed that people living in a dengue hot spot had twice the rate of infection of those outside of the hot spots.

The research team included scientists from the Autonomous University of Yucatan and health officials from the state and federal level in Mexico. Other members of the team were scientists from seven other universities and health research institutions, including the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

The researchers are now working with the Pan American Health Organization (PAHO) to develop a manual and training materials, based on open-access software, for mapping risks of Aedes-borne diseases to guide proactive interventions throughout urban areas of the developing world.

More than one third of the world’s population lives in areas at high risk for infection with the dengue virus, a leading cause of illness and death in the tropics and subtropics, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Dengue fever is sometimes called “break bone fever” due to the excruciating pain that is among its symptoms.

The chikungunya virus emerged in the Americas in 2013, sweeping through many countries where dengue is endemic. Common symptoms of chikungunya infection may include headache, muscle pain, joint swelling and rash.

Zika virus followed in 2016, causing little alarm at first due to its relatively mild symptoms. It soon became apparent, however, that the Zika virus could cause birth defects in the babies of pregnant women who were infected.

“You tend to see transmission go down right after large numbers of a population are infected with these Aedes-borne viruses, leading to herd immunity,” Vazquez-Prokopec says. “But these viruses do not disappear. They keep circulating and can reappear later.”

Meanwhile, new Aedes-borne viruses are likely to emerge, he adds, as rapid urbanization and a warming climate help the mosquito thrive.

Vaccines are not yet available for chikungunya or Zika, and efforts to roll out a vaccine for dengue are complicated by the fact that the virus comes in different serotypes.

“Although effective vaccines would be the ultimate line of defense against these diseases, we cannot give up on mosquito control,” Vazquez-Prokopec says.

Related:
Contact tracing, with indoor spraying, can curb dengue outbreak
Zeroing in on 'super spreaders' and other hidden patterns of epidemics
Human mobility data may help curb epidemics

from eScienceCommons https://ift.tt/2G44wXn
A stock image shows a street scene in Merida, Mexico, a city of about one million in the Yucatan Peninsula where the study was based. Merida had a little over 40,000 reported dengue cases during 2008 to 2015 and nearly half of them were clustered in 27 percent of the city.

By Carol Clark

Identifying dengue fever “hot spots” can provide a predictive map for outbreaks of chikungunya and Zika — two other viral diseases that, along with dengue, are spread by the Aedes aegypti mosquito.

PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases published the findings, the first confirmation of the spatial-temporal overlap for outbreaks of the three diseases, led by Emory University.

“We had hypothesized that we would see some overlap between these diseases, but we were surprised at the strength of that overlap,” says Gonzalo Vazquez-Prokopec, a disease ecologist in Emory’s Department of Environmental Sciences and lead author of the study. “The results open a window for public health officials to do targeted, proactive interventions for emerging Aedes-borne diseases. We’ve provided them with a statistical framework in the form of a map to guide their actions.”

The analysis drew from eight years of data from Merida, Mexico, on symptomatic cases. A city of one million located in the Yucatan Peninsula, Merida had about 40,000 reported dengue cases during 2008 to 2015, and nearly half of them were clustered in 27 percent of the city. The neighborhoods comprising these dengue hot spots contained 75 percent of the first chikungunya cases reported during the outbreak of that disease in 2015 and 100 percent of the first Zika cases reported during the Zika outbreak in 2016.

“Currently, most mosquito control efforts are not done until cases of mosquito-borne diseases are detected,” Vazquez-Prokopec says. “But by the time you detect a virus in an area, it has likely already begun to spread beyond that area.”

Mosquito control efforts generally involve outdoor spraying that covers broad swaths of a city, further reducing efficacy, he adds. Outdoor spraying is particularly ineffective for the Aedes aegypti mosquito. “This mosquito is highly adapted to urban environments,” Vazquez-Prokopec says. “It likes to live inside houses and to feed on people.”

A targeted approach would make it more feasible to implement time-consuming and costly interventions such as indoor residual spraying.

A technician sprays the ceiling and walls of a home in Merida. Indoor residual spraying is effective, but is not practical for large areas of a city, due to the time and expense involved. Photo by Nsa Dada.

“The statistical framework that we have developed allows public health officials to harness the power of big data to do more effective and efficient mosquito control by focusing on high-risk areas — even before an epidemic begins,” Vazquez-Prokopec says.

The study used disease case reports at the household level and then scaled them up to neighborhoods to protect individuals’ privacy in the final map. The hot spots for reported dengue cases were confirmed by data from laboratory blood tests of a cohort of 5,000 people. The analysis showed that people living in a dengue hot spot had twice the rate of infection of those outside of the hot spots.

The research team included scientists from the Autonomous University of Yucatan and health officials from the state and federal level in Mexico. Other members of the team were scientists from seven other universities and health research institutions, including the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

The researchers are now working with the Pan American Health Organization (PAHO) to develop a manual and training materials, based on open-access software, for mapping risks of Aedes-borne diseases to guide proactive interventions throughout urban areas of the developing world.

More than one third of the world’s population lives in areas at high risk for infection with the dengue virus, a leading cause of illness and death in the tropics and subtropics, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Dengue fever is sometimes called “break bone fever” due to the excruciating pain that is among its symptoms.

The chikungunya virus emerged in the Americas in 2013, sweeping through many countries where dengue is endemic. Common symptoms of chikungunya infection may include headache, muscle pain, joint swelling and rash.

Zika virus followed in 2016, causing little alarm at first due to its relatively mild symptoms. It soon became apparent, however, that the Zika virus could cause birth defects in the babies of pregnant women who were infected.

“You tend to see transmission go down right after large numbers of a population are infected with these Aedes-borne viruses, leading to herd immunity,” Vazquez-Prokopec says. “But these viruses do not disappear. They keep circulating and can reappear later.”

Meanwhile, new Aedes-borne viruses are likely to emerge, he adds, as rapid urbanization and a warming climate help the mosquito thrive.

Vaccines are not yet available for chikungunya or Zika, and efforts to roll out a vaccine for dengue are complicated by the fact that the virus comes in different serotypes.

“Although effective vaccines would be the ultimate line of defense against these diseases, we cannot give up on mosquito control,” Vazquez-Prokopec says.

Related:
Contact tracing, with indoor spraying, can curb dengue outbreak
Zeroing in on 'super spreaders' and other hidden patterns of epidemics
Human mobility data may help curb epidemics

from eScienceCommons https://ift.tt/2G44wXn

New research, April 30 - May 6, 2018

A selection of new climate related research articles is shown below.

Climate change mitigation

Climate change communication

Bringing the Heat Home: Television Spots about Local Impacts Reduce Global Warming Denialism

"Respondents exposed to the campaign were more likely to believe that global warming is happening, to accept the scientific consensus, to be more concerned about impacts and more supportive of policy solutions."

Teaching environmental policy in an era of polarization and misrepresentation

Climate Change and Energy Technologies in Undergraduate Introductory Science Textbooks

Climate-related Community Knowledge Networks as a Tool to Increase Learning in the Context of Environmental Change (open access)

Between Guilt and Obligation: Debating the Responsibility for Climate Change and Climate Politics in the Media

Perceptions of seasonal weather are linked to beliefs about global climate change: evidence from Norway

"Respondents’ perceptions are sensitive to observed differences in both temperature and precipitation, but respondents are more likely to accurately perceive local precipitation than local temperature. Controlling for observed conditions, beliefs about global climate change had a large effect on perceptions of seasonal temperature, and smaller effects on perceptions of seasonal precipitation."

Emission savings

Dynamic change in energy and CO2 performance of China's commercial sector: A regional comparative study

An integrated analysis of households' electricity consumption in Israel

Revisiting the contribution of land transport and shipping emissions to tropospheric ozone (open access)

Standards and policies for very high energy efficiency in the urban building sector towards reaching the 1.5°C target

The potential and economics of EV smart charging: A case study in Shanghai

Engagement of scientific community and transparency in C accounting: the Brazilian case for anthropogenic greenhouse gas emissions from land use, land-use change and forestry (open access)

Carbon and material footprints of a welfare state: Why and how governments should enhance green investments (open access)

An analysis of the association among carbon dioxide emissions, energy consumption and economic performance: an econometric model

CO2 emission from container glass in China, and emission reduction strategy analysis

A review of land-based greenhouse gas flux estimates in Indonesia (open access)

Energy production

Global carbon budgets and the viability of new fossil fuel projects

"In our case study of Canada’s oil sands, we find a less than 5% probability that oil sands investments, and therefore new oil pipelines, would be economically viable over the next three decades under the 2 °C carbon budget."

Adoption of solar and wind energy: The roles of carbon pricing and aggregate policy support

Wind energy exploration over the Atacama Desert: a numerical model-guided observational program (open access)

Mitigating the impact of personal vehicle electrification: A power generation perspective

Assessment of the potential implications of a 1.5 °C versus higher global temperature rise for the Afobaka hydropower scheme in Suriname

The early retirement challenge for fossil fuel power plants in deep decarbonisation scenarios

"Regional analysis exposed disproportionate impacts in China and India, shouldering the vast majority of the costs and amplifying concerns over energy access and affordability. Policies such as burden-sharing for equitable mitigation, investment into CCS technology, and international financial compensation are discussed as potential avenues for mitigating this impact."

Committed emissions from existing and planned power plants and asset stranding required to meet the Paris Agreement (open access)

A weather regime characterisation of Irish wind generation and electricity demand in winters 2009–11 (open access)

Climate Policy

Border Adjustments Supplementing Nationally Determined Carbon Pricing

Is the 1.5°C target possible? Exploring the three spheres of transformation (open access)

Renewable energy subsidies versus carbon capture and sequestration support

Integrating carbon dioxide removal into EU climate policy: Prospects for a paradigm shift

Governing China’s Coal Challenge: Changing Public Policy, Debate and Advocacy

Effective incentives for reforestation: lessons from Australia's carbon farming policies

Geoengineering

Climate response to aerosol geoengineering: a multi-method comparison

Thermal removal of carbon dioxide from the atmosphere: energy requirements and scaling issues

Climate change

Temperature, precipitation, wind

Global Monsoon Precipitation: Trends, Leading Modes and Associated Drought and Heat Wave in the Northern Hemisphere

Observed changes in precipitation in China-Pakistan economic corridor during 1980–2016

Agriculturally Relevant Climate Extremes and Their Trends in the World's Major Growing Regions (open access)

Potential impacts of 1.5 °C and 2 °C global warming on rainfall onset, cessation and length of rainy season in West Africa (open access)

Mechanisms Governing the Development of the North Atlantic Warming Hole in the CESM-LE Future Climate Simulations

Extreme events

Quantitative attribution of climate effects on Hurricane Harvey's extreme rainfall in Texas (open access)

Statistical analyses of extreme rainfall events in Thessaloniki, Greece

Global predictability of temperature extremes (open access)

Influence of blocking on Northern European and Western Russian heatwaves in large climate model ensembles (open access)

Forcings and feedbacks

On the choice of ensemble mean for estimating the forced signal in the presence of internal variability

"In line with previous results, we find that on average the surface air temperature variability decreases at higher latitudes, particularly over the ocean along the sea ice margins, while variability in precipitation increases on average, particularly at high latitudes. Variability in sea level pressure decreases on average in the Southern Hemisphere, while in the Northern Hemisphere there are regional differences."

A study of atmospheric mixing of trace gases by aerial sampling with a multi-rotor drone (open access)

Simple estimates of polar amplification in moist diffusive energy balance models

Key drivers of ozone change and its radiative forcing over the 21st century (open access)

Long-term monitoring of black carbon across Germany (open access)

The role of individual surface flux components in the passive and active ocean heat uptake

Cryosphere

Combined Geophysical Measurements Provide Evidence for Unfrozen Water in Permafrost in the Adventdalen Valley in Svalbard

A new digital elevation model of Antarctica derived from CryoSat-2 altimetry (open access)

How dynamic are ice-stream beds? (open access)

The coldest places in Hawaii: The ice-preserving microclimates of high-altitude craters and caves on tropical island volcanoes (open access)

Hydrosphere

Increased Winter‐Mean Wave Height, Variability, and Periodicity in the Northeast Atlantic Over 1949–2017

Contribution of environmental forcings to US runoff changes for the period 1950–2010 (open access)

The competing impacts of climate change and nutrient reductions on dissolved oxygen in Chesapeake Bay (open access)

"We find that climate change will move the onset of hypoxia ~7 days earlier, while also decreasing oxygen in the bay primarily due to increased temperature. While this effect is smaller than the increase in oxygen due to nutrient reduction, it is enough to limit the regulation's future effectiveness."

Atmospheric and oceanic circulation

Coupling of the Quasi‐Biweekly Oscillation of the Tibetan Plateau Summer Monsoon With the Arctic Oscillation

Carbon cycle

A global map of mangrove forest soil carbon at 30 m spatial resolution (open access)

"Projecting this model across the global mangrove forest distribution for the year 2000 yielded an estimate of 6.4 Pg C for the top meter of soil with an 86–729 Mg C ha−1 range across all pixels. By utilizing remotely-sensed mangrove forest cover change data, loss of soil carbon due to mangrove habitat loss between 2000 and 2015 was 30–122 Tg C with >75% of this loss attributable to Indonesia, Malaysia and Myanmar."

The importance of forest structure for carbon fluxes of the Amazon rainforest (open access)

Spatially Resolved Isotopic Source Signatures of Wetland Methane Emissions (open access)

Year-round simulated methane emissions from a permafrost ecosystem in Northeast Siberia (open access)

Large and active CO2 uptake by coupled carbonate weathering

ForC: a global database of forest carbon stocks and fluxes (open access)

Climate change impacts

Mankind

Dynamic response of airborne infections to climate change: predictions for varicella

Assessing climate risks across different business sectors and industries: an investigation of methodological challenges at national scale for the UK (open access)

Climate change, population, and poverty: vulnerability and exposure to heat stress in countries bordering the Great Lakes of Africa

Vulnerability assessment of future flood impacts for populations on private wells: utilizing climate projection data for public health adaptation planning

Biosphere

A global climate niche for giant trees

Chronosequences of ant nest mounds from glacier forelands of Jostedalsbreen, southern Norway: Insights into the distribution, succession and geo-ecology of red wood ants (Formica lugubris and F. aquilonia)

Modeling the dynamic vegetation-climate system over China using a coupled regional model

Global assessment of the effect of climate change on ammonia emissions from seabirds

Spatial scale dependence of factors driving climate regulation services in the Americas

The duality of ocean acidification as a resource and a stressor (open access)

Interactive effects of climate change and biodiversity loss on ecosystem functioning

Vulnerability of Amazon forests to storm-driven tree mortality (open access)

Contrasting drivers and trends of coniferous and deciduous tree growth in interior Alaska

Adaptation strategies of yak to seasonally driven environmental temperatures in its natural habitat

Pacific Decadal and El Niño oscillations shape survival of a seabird

Other impacts

Analyzing climate change and surface-subsurface interactions using the Postojna Planina Cave System (Slovenia) as a model system

Other papers

Palaeoclimatology

Aerosol-Climate Interactions During the Last Glacial Maximum (open access)

Open-paleo-data implementation pilot – the PAGES 2k special issue (open access)

Reconstruction of the regional summer ground surface temperature in the permafrost region of Northeast China from 1587 to 2008

 



from Skeptical Science https://ift.tt/2rzP5BF

A selection of new climate related research articles is shown below.

Climate change mitigation

Climate change communication

Bringing the Heat Home: Television Spots about Local Impacts Reduce Global Warming Denialism

"Respondents exposed to the campaign were more likely to believe that global warming is happening, to accept the scientific consensus, to be more concerned about impacts and more supportive of policy solutions."

Teaching environmental policy in an era of polarization and misrepresentation

Climate Change and Energy Technologies in Undergraduate Introductory Science Textbooks

Climate-related Community Knowledge Networks as a Tool to Increase Learning in the Context of Environmental Change (open access)

Between Guilt and Obligation: Debating the Responsibility for Climate Change and Climate Politics in the Media

Perceptions of seasonal weather are linked to beliefs about global climate change: evidence from Norway

"Respondents’ perceptions are sensitive to observed differences in both temperature and precipitation, but respondents are more likely to accurately perceive local precipitation than local temperature. Controlling for observed conditions, beliefs about global climate change had a large effect on perceptions of seasonal temperature, and smaller effects on perceptions of seasonal precipitation."

Emission savings

Dynamic change in energy and CO2 performance of China's commercial sector: A regional comparative study

An integrated analysis of households' electricity consumption in Israel

Revisiting the contribution of land transport and shipping emissions to tropospheric ozone (open access)

Standards and policies for very high energy efficiency in the urban building sector towards reaching the 1.5°C target

The potential and economics of EV smart charging: A case study in Shanghai

Engagement of scientific community and transparency in C accounting: the Brazilian case for anthropogenic greenhouse gas emissions from land use, land-use change and forestry (open access)

Carbon and material footprints of a welfare state: Why and how governments should enhance green investments (open access)

An analysis of the association among carbon dioxide emissions, energy consumption and economic performance: an econometric model

CO2 emission from container glass in China, and emission reduction strategy analysis

A review of land-based greenhouse gas flux estimates in Indonesia (open access)

Energy production

Global carbon budgets and the viability of new fossil fuel projects

"In our case study of Canada’s oil sands, we find a less than 5% probability that oil sands investments, and therefore new oil pipelines, would be economically viable over the next three decades under the 2 °C carbon budget."

Adoption of solar and wind energy: The roles of carbon pricing and aggregate policy support

Wind energy exploration over the Atacama Desert: a numerical model-guided observational program (open access)

Mitigating the impact of personal vehicle electrification: A power generation perspective

Assessment of the potential implications of a 1.5 °C versus higher global temperature rise for the Afobaka hydropower scheme in Suriname

The early retirement challenge for fossil fuel power plants in deep decarbonisation scenarios

"Regional analysis exposed disproportionate impacts in China and India, shouldering the vast majority of the costs and amplifying concerns over energy access and affordability. Policies such as burden-sharing for equitable mitigation, investment into CCS technology, and international financial compensation are discussed as potential avenues for mitigating this impact."

Committed emissions from existing and planned power plants and asset stranding required to meet the Paris Agreement (open access)

A weather regime characterisation of Irish wind generation and electricity demand in winters 2009–11 (open access)

Climate Policy

Border Adjustments Supplementing Nationally Determined Carbon Pricing

Is the 1.5°C target possible? Exploring the three spheres of transformation (open access)

Renewable energy subsidies versus carbon capture and sequestration support

Integrating carbon dioxide removal into EU climate policy: Prospects for a paradigm shift

Governing China’s Coal Challenge: Changing Public Policy, Debate and Advocacy

Effective incentives for reforestation: lessons from Australia's carbon farming policies

Geoengineering

Climate response to aerosol geoengineering: a multi-method comparison

Thermal removal of carbon dioxide from the atmosphere: energy requirements and scaling issues

Climate change

Temperature, precipitation, wind

Global Monsoon Precipitation: Trends, Leading Modes and Associated Drought and Heat Wave in the Northern Hemisphere

Observed changes in precipitation in China-Pakistan economic corridor during 1980–2016

Agriculturally Relevant Climate Extremes and Their Trends in the World's Major Growing Regions (open access)

Potential impacts of 1.5 °C and 2 °C global warming on rainfall onset, cessation and length of rainy season in West Africa (open access)

Mechanisms Governing the Development of the North Atlantic Warming Hole in the CESM-LE Future Climate Simulations

Extreme events

Quantitative attribution of climate effects on Hurricane Harvey's extreme rainfall in Texas (open access)

Statistical analyses of extreme rainfall events in Thessaloniki, Greece

Global predictability of temperature extremes (open access)

Influence of blocking on Northern European and Western Russian heatwaves in large climate model ensembles (open access)

Forcings and feedbacks

On the choice of ensemble mean for estimating the forced signal in the presence of internal variability

"In line with previous results, we find that on average the surface air temperature variability decreases at higher latitudes, particularly over the ocean along the sea ice margins, while variability in precipitation increases on average, particularly at high latitudes. Variability in sea level pressure decreases on average in the Southern Hemisphere, while in the Northern Hemisphere there are regional differences."

A study of atmospheric mixing of trace gases by aerial sampling with a multi-rotor drone (open access)

Simple estimates of polar amplification in moist diffusive energy balance models

Key drivers of ozone change and its radiative forcing over the 21st century (open access)

Long-term monitoring of black carbon across Germany (open access)

The role of individual surface flux components in the passive and active ocean heat uptake

Cryosphere

Combined Geophysical Measurements Provide Evidence for Unfrozen Water in Permafrost in the Adventdalen Valley in Svalbard

A new digital elevation model of Antarctica derived from CryoSat-2 altimetry (open access)

How dynamic are ice-stream beds? (open access)

The coldest places in Hawaii: The ice-preserving microclimates of high-altitude craters and caves on tropical island volcanoes (open access)

Hydrosphere

Increased Winter‐Mean Wave Height, Variability, and Periodicity in the Northeast Atlantic Over 1949–2017

Contribution of environmental forcings to US runoff changes for the period 1950–2010 (open access)

The competing impacts of climate change and nutrient reductions on dissolved oxygen in Chesapeake Bay (open access)

"We find that climate change will move the onset of hypoxia ~7 days earlier, while also decreasing oxygen in the bay primarily due to increased temperature. While this effect is smaller than the increase in oxygen due to nutrient reduction, it is enough to limit the regulation's future effectiveness."

Atmospheric and oceanic circulation

Coupling of the Quasi‐Biweekly Oscillation of the Tibetan Plateau Summer Monsoon With the Arctic Oscillation

Carbon cycle

A global map of mangrove forest soil carbon at 30 m spatial resolution (open access)

"Projecting this model across the global mangrove forest distribution for the year 2000 yielded an estimate of 6.4 Pg C for the top meter of soil with an 86–729 Mg C ha−1 range across all pixels. By utilizing remotely-sensed mangrove forest cover change data, loss of soil carbon due to mangrove habitat loss between 2000 and 2015 was 30–122 Tg C with >75% of this loss attributable to Indonesia, Malaysia and Myanmar."

The importance of forest structure for carbon fluxes of the Amazon rainforest (open access)

Spatially Resolved Isotopic Source Signatures of Wetland Methane Emissions (open access)

Year-round simulated methane emissions from a permafrost ecosystem in Northeast Siberia (open access)

Large and active CO2 uptake by coupled carbonate weathering

ForC: a global database of forest carbon stocks and fluxes (open access)

Climate change impacts

Mankind

Dynamic response of airborne infections to climate change: predictions for varicella

Assessing climate risks across different business sectors and industries: an investigation of methodological challenges at national scale for the UK (open access)

Climate change, population, and poverty: vulnerability and exposure to heat stress in countries bordering the Great Lakes of Africa

Vulnerability assessment of future flood impacts for populations on private wells: utilizing climate projection data for public health adaptation planning

Biosphere

A global climate niche for giant trees

Chronosequences of ant nest mounds from glacier forelands of Jostedalsbreen, southern Norway: Insights into the distribution, succession and geo-ecology of red wood ants (Formica lugubris and F. aquilonia)

Modeling the dynamic vegetation-climate system over China using a coupled regional model

Global assessment of the effect of climate change on ammonia emissions from seabirds

Spatial scale dependence of factors driving climate regulation services in the Americas

The duality of ocean acidification as a resource and a stressor (open access)

Interactive effects of climate change and biodiversity loss on ecosystem functioning

Vulnerability of Amazon forests to storm-driven tree mortality (open access)

Contrasting drivers and trends of coniferous and deciduous tree growth in interior Alaska

Adaptation strategies of yak to seasonally driven environmental temperatures in its natural habitat

Pacific Decadal and El Niño oscillations shape survival of a seabird

Other impacts

Analyzing climate change and surface-subsurface interactions using the Postojna Planina Cave System (Slovenia) as a model system

Other papers

Palaeoclimatology

Aerosol-Climate Interactions During the Last Glacial Maximum (open access)

Open-paleo-data implementation pilot – the PAGES 2k special issue (open access)

Reconstruction of the regional summer ground surface temperature in the permafrost region of Northeast China from 1587 to 2008

 



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What will happen when our sun dies?

An example of a planetary nebula, Abell 39. Five billion years from now, our own sun will look like this, when it goes through the planetary nebula stage of star death. Image via WIYN/NOAO/NSF/University of Manchester.

First … don’t worry. Astronomers say our sun won’t die for another 5 billion years. What does death mean, for the sun? It means our sun will run out of fuel in its interior. It’ll cease the internal thermonuclear reactions that enable stars to shine. It’ll swell into a red giant, whose outer layers will engulf Mercury and Venus and likely reach the Earth. Life on Earth will end. If the sun were more massive – estimates vary, but at least several times more massive – it would explode as a supernova. So … no supernova. But what? What happens next? An international team of astronomers recently used a new stellar data-model that predicts the life cycle of stars to answer this question.

Their research is published in the peer-reviewed journal Nature Astronomy. It suggests that the sun is almost exactly the lowest mass star that – at the end of its life – produces a visible, though faint, planetary nebula.

Artist’s concept of our sun as a red giant. Image via Chandra X-ray Observatory.

The name planetary nebula has nothing to do with planets. It describes a massive sphere of luminous gas and dust, material sloughed off an aging star. In the 1780s, William Herschel called these spherical clouds planetary nebulae because, through his early telescope, planetary nebulae looked round, like the planets in our solar system.

Astronomers already knew that 90 percent of all stars end their active lives as planetary nebulae. They were reasonably sure our sun would meet this fate. The key word here is visible. For years, scientists thought the sun has too low mass to create a visible planetary nebula.

Albert Zijlstra of the University of Manchester in England is a co-author of the study. He said in a statement:

When a star dies it ejects a mass of gas and dust – known as its envelope – into space. The envelope can be as much as half the star’s mass. This reveals the star’s core, which by this point in the star’s life is running out of fuel, eventually turning off and before finally dying.

It is only then the hot core makes the ejected envelope shine brightly for around 10,000 years – a brief period in astronomy. This is what makes the planetary nebula visible. Some are so bright that they can be seen from extremely large distances measuring tens of millions of light-years, where the star itself would have been much too faint to see.

Will that be the fate of our sun? Will it – at the end of its life – become briefly visible to alien astronomers on planets millions of light-years away? These astronomers say no. They say their new models predict our sun at the end of its life, though forming a planetary nebula, will remain faint.

Read more about this study from University of Manchester

By the way … what next? Eventually, the planetary nebula will disperse and fade. With its thermonuclear fuel gone, the sun will no longer be able to shine. The immensely high pressures and temperatures in its interior will slacken. The sun will shrink down to become a dying ember of a star, known as a white dwarf, only a little larger than Earth.

Artist’s concept of our sun as a white dwarf. Image via Chandra X-ray Observatory.

Bottom line: A study suggests our sun is about the lowest mass star that – at the end of its life – produces a visible, though faint, planetary nebula. What that is … and more on the fate of our sun, here.

Source: The mysterious age invariance of the cut-off the Planetary Nebula Luminosity Function



from EarthSky https://ift.tt/2I9bIHF

An example of a planetary nebula, Abell 39. Five billion years from now, our own sun will look like this, when it goes through the planetary nebula stage of star death. Image via WIYN/NOAO/NSF/University of Manchester.

First … don’t worry. Astronomers say our sun won’t die for another 5 billion years. What does death mean, for the sun? It means our sun will run out of fuel in its interior. It’ll cease the internal thermonuclear reactions that enable stars to shine. It’ll swell into a red giant, whose outer layers will engulf Mercury and Venus and likely reach the Earth. Life on Earth will end. If the sun were more massive – estimates vary, but at least several times more massive – it would explode as a supernova. So … no supernova. But what? What happens next? An international team of astronomers recently used a new stellar data-model that predicts the life cycle of stars to answer this question.

Their research is published in the peer-reviewed journal Nature Astronomy. It suggests that the sun is almost exactly the lowest mass star that – at the end of its life – produces a visible, though faint, planetary nebula.

Artist’s concept of our sun as a red giant. Image via Chandra X-ray Observatory.

The name planetary nebula has nothing to do with planets. It describes a massive sphere of luminous gas and dust, material sloughed off an aging star. In the 1780s, William Herschel called these spherical clouds planetary nebulae because, through his early telescope, planetary nebulae looked round, like the planets in our solar system.

Astronomers already knew that 90 percent of all stars end their active lives as planetary nebulae. They were reasonably sure our sun would meet this fate. The key word here is visible. For years, scientists thought the sun has too low mass to create a visible planetary nebula.

Albert Zijlstra of the University of Manchester in England is a co-author of the study. He said in a statement:

When a star dies it ejects a mass of gas and dust – known as its envelope – into space. The envelope can be as much as half the star’s mass. This reveals the star’s core, which by this point in the star’s life is running out of fuel, eventually turning off and before finally dying.

It is only then the hot core makes the ejected envelope shine brightly for around 10,000 years – a brief period in astronomy. This is what makes the planetary nebula visible. Some are so bright that they can be seen from extremely large distances measuring tens of millions of light-years, where the star itself would have been much too faint to see.

Will that be the fate of our sun? Will it – at the end of its life – become briefly visible to alien astronomers on planets millions of light-years away? These astronomers say no. They say their new models predict our sun at the end of its life, though forming a planetary nebula, will remain faint.

Read more about this study from University of Manchester

By the way … what next? Eventually, the planetary nebula will disperse and fade. With its thermonuclear fuel gone, the sun will no longer be able to shine. The immensely high pressures and temperatures in its interior will slacken. The sun will shrink down to become a dying ember of a star, known as a white dwarf, only a little larger than Earth.

Artist’s concept of our sun as a white dwarf. Image via Chandra X-ray Observatory.

Bottom line: A study suggests our sun is about the lowest mass star that – at the end of its life – produces a visible, though faint, planetary nebula. What that is … and more on the fate of our sun, here.

Source: The mysterious age invariance of the cut-off the Planetary Nebula Luminosity Function



from EarthSky https://ift.tt/2I9bIHF

The Female Bird Song Project

Singing song sparrow. Image iva derva/Flickr.

There is notable dearth of archived recordings that capture female bird song, yet female bird song is quite common in nature. Scientists are now trying to rectify the situation and have established the Female Bird Song Project, a citizen science initiative, to help with this work. A paper describing their efforts was published in The Auk on March 14, 2018.

How to participate in the study

Many, but not all, female birds sing similar to male birds. Bird song, which differs from bird calls or general vocalizations, tends to have a structured rhythm to it. Birds mainly use song to attract mates, bond with other birds, and defend their territories.

Information on whether female bird song is present or absent in a species is currently available for only about one-fourth of all songbirds (suborder Passeri). In one recent survey of birds for which sex-specific singing behaviors were known, scientists found that a high proportion (64%) of the species had females that sing. This contradicts the erroneous and somewhat oft repeated phrase that only male birds sing. Indeed, female bird song seems to be quite prevalent, especially in tropical species.

Female canyon wren. Image via Female Bird Song Project.

Some familiar temperate species in North America that exhibit female bird song include the black-capped chickadee, tufted titmouse, house wren, northern cardinal, song sparrow, dark-eyed junco, and yellow warbler. A more extensive, though still incomplete, listing of these North American birds can be found in the appendix published along with the new paper in The Auk, which if freely available online at the link here.

Female birdsong appears to have been a common ancestral trait that has been lost in several modern day species, but scientists are unsure of why this happened. Thus, new data on female birdsong could help to advance our evolutionary knowledge of birds. Such data would also be important from a conservation perspective, as birdsong is often used to assess the health of bird populations.

The lack of female bird song in archived recordings may be due in part to geographical bias. Specifically, more intensive bird studies have been carried out in temperate regions than in tropical regions. Because female bird song appears to be more common in the tropics, the heavy research focus in temperate regions has served to perpetuate the false notion that female birdsong is less common than it actually is in nature. New data on female bird song in African, Asian, and Pacific Island species would be especially valuable, according to the scientists.

Karan Odom and Lauryn Benedict, co-authors of the new paper in The Auk, have recently established the Female Bird Song Project to help with the collection of new recordings. They explain the project’s purpose on their website:

Our goal is to increase awareness and documentation of female bird song for biodiversity collections so that we and other scientists can study this fascinatingly complex behavior. This citizen science project is part of an international research project involving researchers at the Cornell Lab of Ornithology (USA) and Leiden University (The Netherlands).

The website of the Female Bird Song Project gives tips on how you can participate in these efforts, and there are even recordings of female birdsongs that you can listen to.

Screenshot of the songs of female (red) and male (blue) northern cardinals available to listen to at the link here for the Female Bird Song Project’s website.

Collection of new female birdsong data is likely to yield many interesting findings in the years to come.

Bottom line: A new project aims to collect more recordings of female birdsong.



from EarthSky https://ift.tt/2wwUvlZ

Singing song sparrow. Image iva derva/Flickr.

There is notable dearth of archived recordings that capture female bird song, yet female bird song is quite common in nature. Scientists are now trying to rectify the situation and have established the Female Bird Song Project, a citizen science initiative, to help with this work. A paper describing their efforts was published in The Auk on March 14, 2018.

How to participate in the study

Many, but not all, female birds sing similar to male birds. Bird song, which differs from bird calls or general vocalizations, tends to have a structured rhythm to it. Birds mainly use song to attract mates, bond with other birds, and defend their territories.

Information on whether female bird song is present or absent in a species is currently available for only about one-fourth of all songbirds (suborder Passeri). In one recent survey of birds for which sex-specific singing behaviors were known, scientists found that a high proportion (64%) of the species had females that sing. This contradicts the erroneous and somewhat oft repeated phrase that only male birds sing. Indeed, female bird song seems to be quite prevalent, especially in tropical species.

Female canyon wren. Image via Female Bird Song Project.

Some familiar temperate species in North America that exhibit female bird song include the black-capped chickadee, tufted titmouse, house wren, northern cardinal, song sparrow, dark-eyed junco, and yellow warbler. A more extensive, though still incomplete, listing of these North American birds can be found in the appendix published along with the new paper in The Auk, which if freely available online at the link here.

Female birdsong appears to have been a common ancestral trait that has been lost in several modern day species, but scientists are unsure of why this happened. Thus, new data on female birdsong could help to advance our evolutionary knowledge of birds. Such data would also be important from a conservation perspective, as birdsong is often used to assess the health of bird populations.

The lack of female bird song in archived recordings may be due in part to geographical bias. Specifically, more intensive bird studies have been carried out in temperate regions than in tropical regions. Because female bird song appears to be more common in the tropics, the heavy research focus in temperate regions has served to perpetuate the false notion that female birdsong is less common than it actually is in nature. New data on female bird song in African, Asian, and Pacific Island species would be especially valuable, according to the scientists.

Karan Odom and Lauryn Benedict, co-authors of the new paper in The Auk, have recently established the Female Bird Song Project to help with the collection of new recordings. They explain the project’s purpose on their website:

Our goal is to increase awareness and documentation of female bird song for biodiversity collections so that we and other scientists can study this fascinatingly complex behavior. This citizen science project is part of an international research project involving researchers at the Cornell Lab of Ornithology (USA) and Leiden University (The Netherlands).

The website of the Female Bird Song Project gives tips on how you can participate in these efforts, and there are even recordings of female birdsongs that you can listen to.

Screenshot of the songs of female (red) and male (blue) northern cardinals available to listen to at the link here for the Female Bird Song Project’s website.

Collection of new female birdsong data is likely to yield many interesting findings in the years to come.

Bottom line: A new project aims to collect more recordings of female birdsong.



from EarthSky https://ift.tt/2wwUvlZ

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