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2018 Atlantic hurricane season outlook

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The 2018 Atlantic hurricane season starts today (June 1) and runs through November 30. Last week (May 24, 2018) NOAA released its annual hurricane season outlook. Scientists at NOAA’s Climate Prediction Center are forecasting a 75-percent chance that the 2018 Atlantic hurricane season will be near- or above-normal.

Two of the factors driving this outlook are the possibility of a weak El Niño developing, along with near-average sea surface temperatures across the tropical Atlantic Ocean and Caribbean Sea. These factors, says the report,

.. are set upon a backdrop of atmospheric and oceanic conditions that are conducive to hurricane development and have been producing stronger Atlantic hurricane seasons since 1995.

NOAA will update the 2018 Atlantic seasonal outlook in early August, just prior to the peak of the season.

Infrared satellite image of Hurricane Harvey on August 25, 2017. Image via NOAA.

More specifically, the NOA forecasters predict a 35 percent chance of an above-normal season, a 40 percent chance of a near-normal season, and a 25 percent chance of a below-normal season for this hurricane season.

Hurricane season probability and numbers of named storms: NOAA’s forecasters predict a 70 percent likelihood of 10 to 16 named storms (winds of 39 mph or higher), of which 5 to 9 could become hurricanes (winds of 74 mph or higher), including 1 to 4 major hurricanes (category 3, 4 or 5; with winds of 111 mph or higher). An average hurricane season produces 12 named storms, of which 6 become hurricanes, including 3 major hurricanes. Image via NOAA.

Image via NOAA.

Bottom line: NOAA’s outlook for the 2018 Atlantic hurricane season.

Read more from NOAA.

Help EarthSky keep going! Please donate what you can to our annual crowd-funding campaign.



from EarthSky https://ift.tt/2J9Z5bS

Help EarthSky keep going! Please donate what you can to our annual crowd-funding campaign.

The 2018 Atlantic hurricane season starts today (June 1) and runs through November 30. Last week (May 24, 2018) NOAA released its annual hurricane season outlook. Scientists at NOAA’s Climate Prediction Center are forecasting a 75-percent chance that the 2018 Atlantic hurricane season will be near- or above-normal.

Two of the factors driving this outlook are the possibility of a weak El Niño developing, along with near-average sea surface temperatures across the tropical Atlantic Ocean and Caribbean Sea. These factors, says the report,

.. are set upon a backdrop of atmospheric and oceanic conditions that are conducive to hurricane development and have been producing stronger Atlantic hurricane seasons since 1995.

NOAA will update the 2018 Atlantic seasonal outlook in early August, just prior to the peak of the season.

Infrared satellite image of Hurricane Harvey on August 25, 2017. Image via NOAA.

More specifically, the NOA forecasters predict a 35 percent chance of an above-normal season, a 40 percent chance of a near-normal season, and a 25 percent chance of a below-normal season for this hurricane season.

Hurricane season probability and numbers of named storms: NOAA’s forecasters predict a 70 percent likelihood of 10 to 16 named storms (winds of 39 mph or higher), of which 5 to 9 could become hurricanes (winds of 74 mph or higher), including 1 to 4 major hurricanes (category 3, 4 or 5; with winds of 111 mph or higher). An average hurricane season produces 12 named storms, of which 6 become hurricanes, including 3 major hurricanes. Image via NOAA.

Image via NOAA.

Bottom line: NOAA’s outlook for the 2018 Atlantic hurricane season.

Read more from NOAA.

Help EarthSky keep going! Please donate what you can to our annual crowd-funding campaign.



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2017’s costliest hurricanes

Hurricane Harvey at peak intensity – August 25, 2017 – near the coast of Texas. Image via RAMMB-slider.

Meteorologists describe 2017’s hurricane season as hyperactive. It was the costliest Atlantic hurricane season on record, displacing the former record holder, 2005. Nearly all the damage was due to 3 storms – Harvey, Irma, and Maria – which together caused at least $282.16 billion (USD) in damages.

The first of these three monster storms was Hurricane Harvey. It was the eighth named storm, third hurricane, and the first major hurricane of the extremely active 2017 Atlantic hurricane season. Harvey is tied with Hurricane Katrina as the costliest tropical cyclone on record. Much of its damage came from flooding triggered by rainfall in the Houston metropolitan area. According to Popular Science on December 14, 2017, between 24 trillion and 34 trillion gallons of water fell on the Gulf Coast during Harvey, equivalent to the amount of water melted off the West Antarctic Ice Shelf in a single year. Harvey’s floods displaced more than 30,000 people and prompted more than 17,000 rescues. The Texas Tribune said on October 13, 2017, that there were 88 deaths from Harvey, 62 caused by wind, rain and floods (which led to drownings or trees falling on people) and 26 deaths from “unsafe or unhealthy conditions” related to the loss or disruption of services such as utilities, transportation and medical care.

Hurricane Irma at peak intensity – September 5, 2017 – approaching the Leeward Islands. Image via EOSDIS Worldview.

Coming directly after Harvey, Hurricane Irma was the ninth named storm, fourth hurricane, second major hurricane and first Category 5 hurricane of the 2017 Atlantic hurricane season. According to Google, Hurricane Irma was the No. 1 top trending search term of 2017. That’s because Irma had incredibly strong winds, the strongest maximum sustained winds seen in the Atlantic since 2005’s Wilma (which was the most intense tropical cyclone ever recorded in the Atlantic). Irma was the first Category 5 hurricane on record to strike the Leeward Islands in the Caribbean Sea. It became the second-costliest Caribbean hurricane on record, after Maria (see below). It was also the most intense hurricane to strike the continental U.S. since Katrina in 2005, the first major hurricane to make landfall in Florida since Wilma in 2005, and the first Category 4 hurricane to strike the state since Charley in 2004. Wikipedia lists 134 deaths (49 direct, 85 indirect) from Irma.

Hurricane Maria near peak intensity – September 19, 2017 – moving north towards Puerto Rico. Image via The Naval Research Lab/ NOAA.

Coming two weeks after Irma, Hurricane Maria was the thirteenth named storm, eighth consecutive hurricane, fourth major hurricane, second Category 5 hurricane, and the deadliest storm of the hyperactive 2017 Atlantic hurricane season. It’s now regarded as the worst natural disaster on record for Dominica and Puerto Rico. In Puerto Rico, electricity was cut off to 100 percent of the island, and access to clean water and food became limited for most. For months, most families and businesses remained without power, cell phone service was limited, and clean water, food, medicine and fuel were all in very short supply. Less than half of residents had their power restored two months after the storm had passed, and, even today, some communities still have a “boil water” advisory in place. Official estimates originally placed the number of dead at 64. But a new Harvard study – published in late May 2018 in the peer-reviewed New England Journal of Medicine – estimates that at least 4,645 deaths can be linked to the hurricane and its immediate aftermath, making the storm far deadlier than previously thought. Read about the new study in the Washington Post.

In all, 2017 had 17 named storms, 10 hurricanes and 6 major hurricanes. The 2017 season ranks alongside 1936 as the fifth-most active season. 2017 is also one of only six years on record to feature multiple Category 5 hurricanes. It’s the second after 2007 to feature two hurricanes making landfall at that intensity.

Hurricane season for 2018 begins June 1 and ends November 30.

Bottom line: 2017’s hurricane season was the costliest on record, with nearly all the damage due to 3 storms – Harvey, Irma, and Maria.



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Hurricane Harvey at peak intensity – August 25, 2017 – near the coast of Texas. Image via RAMMB-slider.

Meteorologists describe 2017’s hurricane season as hyperactive. It was the costliest Atlantic hurricane season on record, displacing the former record holder, 2005. Nearly all the damage was due to 3 storms – Harvey, Irma, and Maria – which together caused at least $282.16 billion (USD) in damages.

The first of these three monster storms was Hurricane Harvey. It was the eighth named storm, third hurricane, and the first major hurricane of the extremely active 2017 Atlantic hurricane season. Harvey is tied with Hurricane Katrina as the costliest tropical cyclone on record. Much of its damage came from flooding triggered by rainfall in the Houston metropolitan area. According to Popular Science on December 14, 2017, between 24 trillion and 34 trillion gallons of water fell on the Gulf Coast during Harvey, equivalent to the amount of water melted off the West Antarctic Ice Shelf in a single year. Harvey’s floods displaced more than 30,000 people and prompted more than 17,000 rescues. The Texas Tribune said on October 13, 2017, that there were 88 deaths from Harvey, 62 caused by wind, rain and floods (which led to drownings or trees falling on people) and 26 deaths from “unsafe or unhealthy conditions” related to the loss or disruption of services such as utilities, transportation and medical care.

Hurricane Irma at peak intensity – September 5, 2017 – approaching the Leeward Islands. Image via EOSDIS Worldview.

Coming directly after Harvey, Hurricane Irma was the ninth named storm, fourth hurricane, second major hurricane and first Category 5 hurricane of the 2017 Atlantic hurricane season. According to Google, Hurricane Irma was the No. 1 top trending search term of 2017. That’s because Irma had incredibly strong winds, the strongest maximum sustained winds seen in the Atlantic since 2005’s Wilma (which was the most intense tropical cyclone ever recorded in the Atlantic). Irma was the first Category 5 hurricane on record to strike the Leeward Islands in the Caribbean Sea. It became the second-costliest Caribbean hurricane on record, after Maria (see below). It was also the most intense hurricane to strike the continental U.S. since Katrina in 2005, the first major hurricane to make landfall in Florida since Wilma in 2005, and the first Category 4 hurricane to strike the state since Charley in 2004. Wikipedia lists 134 deaths (49 direct, 85 indirect) from Irma.

Hurricane Maria near peak intensity – September 19, 2017 – moving north towards Puerto Rico. Image via The Naval Research Lab/ NOAA.

Coming two weeks after Irma, Hurricane Maria was the thirteenth named storm, eighth consecutive hurricane, fourth major hurricane, second Category 5 hurricane, and the deadliest storm of the hyperactive 2017 Atlantic hurricane season. It’s now regarded as the worst natural disaster on record for Dominica and Puerto Rico. In Puerto Rico, electricity was cut off to 100 percent of the island, and access to clean water and food became limited for most. For months, most families and businesses remained without power, cell phone service was limited, and clean water, food, medicine and fuel were all in very short supply. Less than half of residents had their power restored two months after the storm had passed, and, even today, some communities still have a “boil water” advisory in place. Official estimates originally placed the number of dead at 64. But a new Harvard study – published in late May 2018 in the peer-reviewed New England Journal of Medicine – estimates that at least 4,645 deaths can be linked to the hurricane and its immediate aftermath, making the storm far deadlier than previously thought. Read about the new study in the Washington Post.

In all, 2017 had 17 named storms, 10 hurricanes and 6 major hurricanes. The 2017 season ranks alongside 1936 as the fifth-most active season. 2017 is also one of only six years on record to feature multiple Category 5 hurricanes. It’s the second after 2007 to feature two hurricanes making landfall at that intensity.

Hurricane season for 2018 begins June 1 and ends November 30.

Bottom line: 2017’s hurricane season was the costliest on record, with nearly all the damage due to 3 storms – Harvey, Irma, and Maria.



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Are you prepared for a hurricane?

In 2012, Hurricane Sandy destroyed this house in Jersey Shore, New Jersey. Image via Shayna Marie Meyer

In 2012, Hurricane Sandy destroyed this house in Jersey Shore, New Jersey. Sandy was the 2nd-costliest hurricane on record in the U.S. until 2017, when both Harvey and Maria surpassed it. Image via Shayna Marie Meyer.

June 1 is the start of the Atlantic hurricane season each year. The season ends on November 30. No one can predict exactly how many hurricanes we’ll get in a season, or how powerful they’ll be. Last year’s hurricane season was unusually intense. In 2018, scientists at NOAA’s Climate Prediction Center are forecasting a 75-percent chance for an Atlantic hurricane season that’s near- or above-normal, thanks in part to a weak El Niño. In the Eastern Caribbean and along the U.S. East Coast, the season tends to be busiest between mid-August and mid-September. Now, early in the season, is the time to make a plan to stay safe if a hurricane approaches your area. 

If you live along the U.S. East Coast or Gulf of Mexico – and don’t have a plan – I hope this post will prepare you. Sit down with your family and figure something out, now. 

This week’s fund-raising has been awesome. We’re so grateful. Please donate what you can to our annual crowd-funding campaign.

Be prepared. Image via National Hurricane Center.

How to create a supply kit. According to the National Hurricane Center, your family should have a supply kit. The kit includes:

  • One gallon of water per person daily for up to a week.
  • Food for a week.  Canned food and juices work really well.  Make sure you have a manual can opener and other utensils needed for cooking food.
  • Blankets and pillows
  • Clothing (including clothing that is water resistant)
  • First aid kit, medications, prescription drugs
  • Toiletries, hygiene items, moisture wipes, hand sanitizer and soap
  • Flashlight and batteries
  • NOAA weather radio
  • Cash, because debit and credit cards might not work
  • Full tank of gas/extra gasoline
  • Pet care items such as food, water, muzzle, leash, and a cage.
  • Charged cellphone
  • Matches or lighter
  • If you have babies, make sure you have a decent supply of baby food, diapers, etc.

Also, if you live along the coast, make sure you have the supplies (such as plywood) to board up windows to protect your house. Get plywood now instead of 2-3 days before a storm hits.

Figure out what needs to be taken inside in case floods or strong winds pick up any of your belongings.

Develop an evacuation plan now.

If a hurricane is imminent … First, understand the difference between watches and warnings. Hurricane watches mean hurricane conditions (74 mile per hour winds or greater) are possible within 48 hours. Hurricane warnings means hurricane conditions are expected. If a hurricane is imminent …

Turn down your freezer and refrigerator to the coldest settings possible. If you lose electricity, your perishable foods will last longer.

Turn off propane tanks and small electrical appliances.

Consider whether you really want to stay at your house. The worst damage from hurricanes usually comes from storm surge and flooding. However, stronger hurricanes can produce violent winds that can cause damage to buildings and structures. Also, tropical systems are capable of producing small tornadoes. Do you want all of these possible impacts to threaten you and your family?

Pay careful attention to hurricane forecasts.  Sometimes, Mother Nature can be unpredictable.  A forecast Category One hurricane could end up being a strong Category Two, causing more damage than predicted.  If you see hurricane watches or warnings for your area, that should be enough to influence you to leave.  Do you have relatives that you can visit?  Don’t be a brave soul and weather out the storm.

Galveston, Texas. Hurricane of 1900. Image via NOAA

More links and other things to consider. Is your house in an area prone to flooding? If so, do you have flood insurance for your house?  Check out Floodsmart.gov if you do not have flood insurance.

How does your community prepare for a hurricane? Is there a certain procedure the city follows in case of an evacuation?

The Red Cross has more information about being prepared for a hurricane.

The National Hurricane Center also has excellent information about hurricane preparedness and safety.

Meteorologists’ main goal is to not only accurately forecast the weather, but to protect lives. They offer watches and warnings to prepare the public for life-threatening storms. Please do not ignore watches or warnings! Take every storm seriously. Hope for the best, but expect the worst.

Bottom line: June 1 is the start of the 2018 hurricane season. Are you prepared for a hurricane if one approaches your area? If you live along the Gulf of Mexico or East Coast and don’t have a plan, this post can help you prepare.

Hurricane Survival Tips: How to Stay Safe During a Hurricane

9 Affordable Ways to Prep Your Home for Hurricane Season

Disaster Preparedness for Pets

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



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In 2012, Hurricane Sandy destroyed this house in Jersey Shore, New Jersey. Image via Shayna Marie Meyer

In 2012, Hurricane Sandy destroyed this house in Jersey Shore, New Jersey. Sandy was the 2nd-costliest hurricane on record in the U.S. until 2017, when both Harvey and Maria surpassed it. Image via Shayna Marie Meyer.

June 1 is the start of the Atlantic hurricane season each year. The season ends on November 30. No one can predict exactly how many hurricanes we’ll get in a season, or how powerful they’ll be. Last year’s hurricane season was unusually intense. In 2018, scientists at NOAA’s Climate Prediction Center are forecasting a 75-percent chance for an Atlantic hurricane season that’s near- or above-normal, thanks in part to a weak El Niño. In the Eastern Caribbean and along the U.S. East Coast, the season tends to be busiest between mid-August and mid-September. Now, early in the season, is the time to make a plan to stay safe if a hurricane approaches your area. 

If you live along the U.S. East Coast or Gulf of Mexico – and don’t have a plan – I hope this post will prepare you. Sit down with your family and figure something out, now. 

This week’s fund-raising has been awesome. We’re so grateful. Please donate what you can to our annual crowd-funding campaign.

Be prepared. Image via National Hurricane Center.

How to create a supply kit. According to the National Hurricane Center, your family should have a supply kit. The kit includes:

  • One gallon of water per person daily for up to a week.
  • Food for a week.  Canned food and juices work really well.  Make sure you have a manual can opener and other utensils needed for cooking food.
  • Blankets and pillows
  • Clothing (including clothing that is water resistant)
  • First aid kit, medications, prescription drugs
  • Toiletries, hygiene items, moisture wipes, hand sanitizer and soap
  • Flashlight and batteries
  • NOAA weather radio
  • Cash, because debit and credit cards might not work
  • Full tank of gas/extra gasoline
  • Pet care items such as food, water, muzzle, leash, and a cage.
  • Charged cellphone
  • Matches or lighter
  • If you have babies, make sure you have a decent supply of baby food, diapers, etc.

Also, if you live along the coast, make sure you have the supplies (such as plywood) to board up windows to protect your house. Get plywood now instead of 2-3 days before a storm hits.

Figure out what needs to be taken inside in case floods or strong winds pick up any of your belongings.

Develop an evacuation plan now.

If a hurricane is imminent … First, understand the difference between watches and warnings. Hurricane watches mean hurricane conditions (74 mile per hour winds or greater) are possible within 48 hours. Hurricane warnings means hurricane conditions are expected. If a hurricane is imminent …

Turn down your freezer and refrigerator to the coldest settings possible. If you lose electricity, your perishable foods will last longer.

Turn off propane tanks and small electrical appliances.

Consider whether you really want to stay at your house. The worst damage from hurricanes usually comes from storm surge and flooding. However, stronger hurricanes can produce violent winds that can cause damage to buildings and structures. Also, tropical systems are capable of producing small tornadoes. Do you want all of these possible impacts to threaten you and your family?

Pay careful attention to hurricane forecasts.  Sometimes, Mother Nature can be unpredictable.  A forecast Category One hurricane could end up being a strong Category Two, causing more damage than predicted.  If you see hurricane watches or warnings for your area, that should be enough to influence you to leave.  Do you have relatives that you can visit?  Don’t be a brave soul and weather out the storm.

Galveston, Texas. Hurricane of 1900. Image via NOAA

More links and other things to consider. Is your house in an area prone to flooding? If so, do you have flood insurance for your house?  Check out Floodsmart.gov if you do not have flood insurance.

How does your community prepare for a hurricane? Is there a certain procedure the city follows in case of an evacuation?

The Red Cross has more information about being prepared for a hurricane.

The National Hurricane Center also has excellent information about hurricane preparedness and safety.

Meteorologists’ main goal is to not only accurately forecast the weather, but to protect lives. They offer watches and warnings to prepare the public for life-threatening storms. Please do not ignore watches or warnings! Take every storm seriously. Hope for the best, but expect the worst.

Bottom line: June 1 is the start of the 2018 hurricane season. Are you prepared for a hurricane if one approaches your area? If you live along the Gulf of Mexico or East Coast and don’t have a plan, this post can help you prepare.

Hurricane Survival Tips: How to Stay Safe During a Hurricane

9 Affordable Ways to Prep Your Home for Hurricane Season

Disaster Preparedness for Pets

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



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Moon, Saturn, Mars before dawn June 1-3

Before daybreak on June 1 to 3, watch for the moon near Mars and Saturn. Because the moon moves eastward in front of the constellations of the zodiac at the rate of about 1/2 degree (one moon-diameter) per hour, or about 13 degrees per day, look for the moon to change its position from day to day. It’ll be closest to Saturn on the morning of June 1, approximately between Saturn and Mars on June 2, and closest to Mars on June 3.

Help EarthSky keep going! Please donate what you can to our annual crowd-funding campaign.

If you’re a night owl, staying up past the midnight hour, you might also catch Mars beneath the moon and Saturn before your bedtime. However, Mars is still rising late at night. It’s low in the east as seen from around the globe in the wee hours. The predawn hours present a better view of the moon, Saturn and Mars, at which time all these worlds will shine higher in the sky.

At present, Saturn lodges in front of the constellation Sagittarius the Archer. Meanwhile, Mars beams in front of the constellation Capricornus the Seagoat. Although Saturn will remain in front of Sagittarius for the rest of the year, Mars will stay in front of Capricornus only until November 2018. Because these two worlds will shine so brightly and beautifully in our sky for many months to come, you can use them to locate these two constellations of the zodiac.

This year, in 2018, you can use the planet Saturn, which shines as brilliantly as a 1st-magnitude star, to locate “The Teapot” and the constellation Scutum the Shield. The Teapot makes up the western half of the constellation Sagittarius the Archer.

The constellation Capricornus has the shape of an arrowhead. Image via AlltheSky.

There are a couple ways to distinguish Saturn from Mars. A telescope – even a modest backyard variety – will show you that Saturn has glorious rings whereas Mars does not. Want to see Saturn’s rings? Read this first.

No telescope? No problem. Notice with your unaided eye that Saturn appears golden in color while Mars exhibits a reddish hue. Also, Mars is now the brighter planet, and it’s soon to be much, much brighter. Mars will remain brighter than Saturn for the rest of 2018.

Opposition happens when Earth flies between an outer planet, like Jupiter, and the sun. This happens yearly for most of the outer planets (except Mars). Illustration via Heavens Above.

In the relatively near future, Saturn and Mars will be at their brightest for 2018, and in Mars’ case its brightest for some years. Saturn will reach opposition – when Earth will fly between this outer planet and the sun – on June 27, 2018. Opposition marks the middle of the best time of year to see an outer planet, like Saturn or Mars. That’s when these planets shine at their brightest best for the year and stay out all night long.

Mars will reach its opposition one month later, on July 27, 2018. This is a very special opposition of Mars. The planet will be brighter around late July than it’s been since 2003, when it was brighter than it had been in some 60,000 years!

Mars is closest to Earth about every 2 years, when Earth passes between this planet and the sun. That event is called Mars’ opposition because, at such times, Mars appears opposite the sun in our sky. There’s also a 15-year cycle of close and far Mars oppositions, and that’s what this chart is showing. Notice that, in 2018, Mars will be especially close. The reason is that Mars’ opposition is July 27 and its perihelion – when it’s closest to the sun is relatively soon afterwards, on September 16. In 2018, Mars will be closer and brighter than it’s been since 2003. Diagram by Roy L. Bishop. Copyright Royal Astronomical Society of Canada. Used with permission. Visit the RASC estore to purchase the Observer’s Handbook, a necessary tool for all skywatchers.

Bottom line: Use the waning gibbous moon to locate the planets Saturn and Mars before daybreak on the mornings of June 1 to 3, 2018.

Help EarthSky keep going! Please donate what you can to our annual crowd-funding campaign.



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Before daybreak on June 1 to 3, watch for the moon near Mars and Saturn. Because the moon moves eastward in front of the constellations of the zodiac at the rate of about 1/2 degree (one moon-diameter) per hour, or about 13 degrees per day, look for the moon to change its position from day to day. It’ll be closest to Saturn on the morning of June 1, approximately between Saturn and Mars on June 2, and closest to Mars on June 3.

Help EarthSky keep going! Please donate what you can to our annual crowd-funding campaign.

If you’re a night owl, staying up past the midnight hour, you might also catch Mars beneath the moon and Saturn before your bedtime. However, Mars is still rising late at night. It’s low in the east as seen from around the globe in the wee hours. The predawn hours present a better view of the moon, Saturn and Mars, at which time all these worlds will shine higher in the sky.

At present, Saturn lodges in front of the constellation Sagittarius the Archer. Meanwhile, Mars beams in front of the constellation Capricornus the Seagoat. Although Saturn will remain in front of Sagittarius for the rest of the year, Mars will stay in front of Capricornus only until November 2018. Because these two worlds will shine so brightly and beautifully in our sky for many months to come, you can use them to locate these two constellations of the zodiac.

This year, in 2018, you can use the planet Saturn, which shines as brilliantly as a 1st-magnitude star, to locate “The Teapot” and the constellation Scutum the Shield. The Teapot makes up the western half of the constellation Sagittarius the Archer.

The constellation Capricornus has the shape of an arrowhead. Image via AlltheSky.

There are a couple ways to distinguish Saturn from Mars. A telescope – even a modest backyard variety – will show you that Saturn has glorious rings whereas Mars does not. Want to see Saturn’s rings? Read this first.

No telescope? No problem. Notice with your unaided eye that Saturn appears golden in color while Mars exhibits a reddish hue. Also, Mars is now the brighter planet, and it’s soon to be much, much brighter. Mars will remain brighter than Saturn for the rest of 2018.

Opposition happens when Earth flies between an outer planet, like Jupiter, and the sun. This happens yearly for most of the outer planets (except Mars). Illustration via Heavens Above.

In the relatively near future, Saturn and Mars will be at their brightest for 2018, and in Mars’ case its brightest for some years. Saturn will reach opposition – when Earth will fly between this outer planet and the sun – on June 27, 2018. Opposition marks the middle of the best time of year to see an outer planet, like Saturn or Mars. That’s when these planets shine at their brightest best for the year and stay out all night long.

Mars will reach its opposition one month later, on July 27, 2018. This is a very special opposition of Mars. The planet will be brighter around late July than it’s been since 2003, when it was brighter than it had been in some 60,000 years!

Mars is closest to Earth about every 2 years, when Earth passes between this planet and the sun. That event is called Mars’ opposition because, at such times, Mars appears opposite the sun in our sky. There’s also a 15-year cycle of close and far Mars oppositions, and that’s what this chart is showing. Notice that, in 2018, Mars will be especially close. The reason is that Mars’ opposition is July 27 and its perihelion – when it’s closest to the sun is relatively soon afterwards, on September 16. In 2018, Mars will be closer and brighter than it’s been since 2003. Diagram by Roy L. Bishop. Copyright Royal Astronomical Society of Canada. Used with permission. Visit the RASC estore to purchase the Observer’s Handbook, a necessary tool for all skywatchers.

Bottom line: Use the waning gibbous moon to locate the planets Saturn and Mars before daybreak on the mornings of June 1 to 3, 2018.

Help EarthSky keep going! Please donate what you can to our annual crowd-funding campaign.



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Viewing Saturn’s rings soon? Read me 1st

James Martin in Albuquerque, New Mexico, caught this wonderful photo of Saturn at last year’s opposition on June 15, 2017. Opposition marks the middle of the best time of year to see a planet. The 2018 opposition will happen on June 27.

It’s that magical time of year again, when the solar system’s favorite planet – Saturn – is well placed for viewing in our sky. Shining with a distinct golden color, Saturn is a lovely object to view with the eye alone. Binoculars will enhance its color … but to see Saturn’s rings you need a small telescope. And we do mean small. Veteran observer Alan MacRobert at SkyandTelescope.com has written:

The rings of Saturn should be visible in even the smallest telescope at 25x [magnified by 25 times]. A good 3-inch ‘scope at 50x [magnified by 50 times] can show them as a separate structure detached on all sides from the ball of the planet.

Help EarthSky keep going! Please donate what you can to our annual crowd-funding campaign.

You want to see Saturn’s rings. We know you do! Here are some basics:

1. Telescope. Don’t expect to see the rings in binoculars. You really do need a telescope. Don’t have one? Maybe there’s an astronomy club near you that will hold a star party in the near future. The links below might help you find one.

Astronomy Clubs Near Me & Organizations

2018 Astronomy Club Directory

NASA’s Night Sky Network

Astronomy Clubs Near Me

These images suggest how the ringed planet Saturn might look when seen through a telescope with an aperture 4 inches (100 mm) in diameter (top) and through a larger instrument with an 8-inch aperture (bottom). Image via SkyandTelescope.com/NASA/Hubble Space Telescope.

2. Tilt. The big night has come. You’re going to look through a telescope and see Saturn’s rings! Note the tilt of the rings. As with so much in space (and on Earth), the appearance of Saturn’s rings from Earth is cyclical. In 2017, the north side of the rings opened up most widely (27 degrees), as seen from Earth. That’s the most open this face of the rings has been since since 1988. In 2018, we’re past the peak of the north ring face opening, but Saturn’s rings are still inclined at about 26 degrees from edge-on, still exhibiting their northern face. By the year 2025, by the way, the rings will appear edge-on as seen from Earth. After that, we’ll begin to see the south side of Saturn’s rings and their openness will gradually increase to a maximum inclination of 27 degrees by May 2032.

The tilt of Saturn’s rings has a great impact on the planet’s overall brightness as seen from Earth. That’s why – although 2018’s opposition is distant – the planet isn’t particularly dim this year. In years when Saturn’s rings are edge-on as seen from Earth (2009 and 2025), Saturn does appear considerably dimmer than in years when Saturn’s rings are maximally tilted toward Earth (2017 and 2032). Image via Wikimedia Commons.

3. 3-D. Ask yourself … do Saturn’s rings look 3-dimensional? Again quoting Alan MacRobert at SkyandTelescope.com:

Saturn has a more three-dimensional appearance than any other object in the sky — at least that’s how it looks to me with a 6-inch scope on a night of fine seeing.

4. Seeing. What was Alan talking about in that quote above when he mentioned seeing? Both amateur and professional astronomers talk about the night’s seeing, which affects how clearly and sharply you can see a telescopic image. Seeing isn’t a quality of the telescope; it’s a quality of the air above you. It’s the reason the stars twinkle more on some nights than others. When the air is particularly turbulent, astronomers say there’s bad seeing. The images at the telescope shimmy and dance. When the air is particularly still, astronomers say there’s good seeing. Seeing can shift from moment to moment, as parcels of air move above you. So, as you’re gazing at Saturn, stand as quietly as you can – for as long as you can – and just look. You’ll notice moments when the image suddenly comes into sharper focus.

Turbulent air makes for poor seeing. But the air above you can also “settle” suddenly. When viewing Saturn, wait for those moments. Image via AstronomyNotes.com.

5. Other things to think about. Once you get comfortable viewing Saturn – assuming you’re able to view it again and again, with a telescope of your own – you’ll begin to notice details in the rings. Today, thanks to spacecraft, we know that Saturn’s rings are incredibly detailed. But, as you stand at your telescope gazing upward, you might be thrilled to witness just one primary division in the rings, the Cassini Division between the A and B rings, named for its French discoverer Jean D. Cassini. Seeing this dark division is a good test of the night’s seeing and your telescope’s optical quality, and also of your own eyes’ ability to simply look and notice what you see. By the way, if you’re looking at the rings – which means you’re viewing Saturn through a telescope – look also for one or more of Saturn’s many moons, most notably Titan.

Have fun!

Alas, you won’t see Saturn look like this through a telescope. This is a spacecraft view, from Cassini in 2016, showing Saturn’s northern hemisphere. Image via NASA/JPL-Caltech/Space Science Institute.

Bottom line: In 2018, Saturn’s opposition – marking the middle of the best time of year to see it – comes on June 27. Here are some tips for beginners, either those with new telescopes or those attending star parties, for things to look for and think about when you are planning to see Saturn’s rings.

Read more … Viewing Saturn: Rings, Planet and Moons

Help EarthSky keep going! Please donate what you can to our annual crowd-funding campaign.



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James Martin in Albuquerque, New Mexico, caught this wonderful photo of Saturn at last year’s opposition on June 15, 2017. Opposition marks the middle of the best time of year to see a planet. The 2018 opposition will happen on June 27.

It’s that magical time of year again, when the solar system’s favorite planet – Saturn – is well placed for viewing in our sky. Shining with a distinct golden color, Saturn is a lovely object to view with the eye alone. Binoculars will enhance its color … but to see Saturn’s rings you need a small telescope. And we do mean small. Veteran observer Alan MacRobert at SkyandTelescope.com has written:

The rings of Saturn should be visible in even the smallest telescope at 25x [magnified by 25 times]. A good 3-inch ‘scope at 50x [magnified by 50 times] can show them as a separate structure detached on all sides from the ball of the planet.

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You want to see Saturn’s rings. We know you do! Here are some basics:

1. Telescope. Don’t expect to see the rings in binoculars. You really do need a telescope. Don’t have one? Maybe there’s an astronomy club near you that will hold a star party in the near future. The links below might help you find one.

Astronomy Clubs Near Me & Organizations

2018 Astronomy Club Directory

NASA’s Night Sky Network

Astronomy Clubs Near Me

These images suggest how the ringed planet Saturn might look when seen through a telescope with an aperture 4 inches (100 mm) in diameter (top) and through a larger instrument with an 8-inch aperture (bottom). Image via SkyandTelescope.com/NASA/Hubble Space Telescope.

2. Tilt. The big night has come. You’re going to look through a telescope and see Saturn’s rings! Note the tilt of the rings. As with so much in space (and on Earth), the appearance of Saturn’s rings from Earth is cyclical. In 2017, the north side of the rings opened up most widely (27 degrees), as seen from Earth. That’s the most open this face of the rings has been since since 1988. In 2018, we’re past the peak of the north ring face opening, but Saturn’s rings are still inclined at about 26 degrees from edge-on, still exhibiting their northern face. By the year 2025, by the way, the rings will appear edge-on as seen from Earth. After that, we’ll begin to see the south side of Saturn’s rings and their openness will gradually increase to a maximum inclination of 27 degrees by May 2032.

The tilt of Saturn’s rings has a great impact on the planet’s overall brightness as seen from Earth. That’s why – although 2018’s opposition is distant – the planet isn’t particularly dim this year. In years when Saturn’s rings are edge-on as seen from Earth (2009 and 2025), Saturn does appear considerably dimmer than in years when Saturn’s rings are maximally tilted toward Earth (2017 and 2032). Image via Wikimedia Commons.

3. 3-D. Ask yourself … do Saturn’s rings look 3-dimensional? Again quoting Alan MacRobert at SkyandTelescope.com:

Saturn has a more three-dimensional appearance than any other object in the sky — at least that’s how it looks to me with a 6-inch scope on a night of fine seeing.

4. Seeing. What was Alan talking about in that quote above when he mentioned seeing? Both amateur and professional astronomers talk about the night’s seeing, which affects how clearly and sharply you can see a telescopic image. Seeing isn’t a quality of the telescope; it’s a quality of the air above you. It’s the reason the stars twinkle more on some nights than others. When the air is particularly turbulent, astronomers say there’s bad seeing. The images at the telescope shimmy and dance. When the air is particularly still, astronomers say there’s good seeing. Seeing can shift from moment to moment, as parcels of air move above you. So, as you’re gazing at Saturn, stand as quietly as you can – for as long as you can – and just look. You’ll notice moments when the image suddenly comes into sharper focus.

Turbulent air makes for poor seeing. But the air above you can also “settle” suddenly. When viewing Saturn, wait for those moments. Image via AstronomyNotes.com.

5. Other things to think about. Once you get comfortable viewing Saturn – assuming you’re able to view it again and again, with a telescope of your own – you’ll begin to notice details in the rings. Today, thanks to spacecraft, we know that Saturn’s rings are incredibly detailed. But, as you stand at your telescope gazing upward, you might be thrilled to witness just one primary division in the rings, the Cassini Division between the A and B rings, named for its French discoverer Jean D. Cassini. Seeing this dark division is a good test of the night’s seeing and your telescope’s optical quality, and also of your own eyes’ ability to simply look and notice what you see. By the way, if you’re looking at the rings – which means you’re viewing Saturn through a telescope – look also for one or more of Saturn’s many moons, most notably Titan.

Have fun!

Alas, you won’t see Saturn look like this through a telescope. This is a spacecraft view, from Cassini in 2016, showing Saturn’s northern hemisphere. Image via NASA/JPL-Caltech/Space Science Institute.

Bottom line: In 2018, Saturn’s opposition – marking the middle of the best time of year to see it – comes on June 27. Here are some tips for beginners, either those with new telescopes or those attending star parties, for things to look for and think about when you are planning to see Saturn’s rings.

Read more … Viewing Saturn: Rings, Planet and Moons

Help EarthSky keep going! Please donate what you can to our annual crowd-funding campaign.



from EarthSky https://ift.tt/2J50r7B

The Standard Model theory of particle physics

How does our world work on a subatomic level? Image via Varsha Y S.

By Glenn Starkman, Case Western Reserve University

The Standard Model. What dull name for the most accurate scientific theory known to human beings.

More than a quarter of the Nobel Prizes in physics of the last century are direct inputs to or direct results of the Standard Model. Yet its name suggests that if you can afford a few extra dollars a month you should buy the upgrade. As a theoretical physicist, I’d prefer The Absolutely Amazing Theory of Almost Everything. That’s what the Standard Model really is.

Many recall the excitement among scientists and media over the 2012 discovery of the Higgs boson. But that much-ballyhooed event didn’t come out of the blue – it capped a five-decade undefeated streak for the Standard Model. Every fundamental force but gravity is included in it. Every attempt to overturn it to demonstrate in the laboratory that it must be substantially reworked – and there have been many over the past 50 years – has failed.

In short, the Standard Model answers this question: What is everything made of, and how does it hold together?

The smallest building blocks

You know, of course, that the world around us is made of molecules, and molecules are made of atoms. Chemist Dmitri Mendeleev figured that out in the 1860s and organized all atoms – that is, the elements – into the periodic table that you probably studied in middle school. But there are 118 different chemical elements. There’s antimony, arsenic, aluminum, selenium … and 114 more.

Our annual crowd-funding campaign has started. Please donate what you can to help EarthSky keep going!

But these elements can be broken down further. Image via Rubén Vera Koster.

Physicists like things simple. We want to boil things down to their essence, a few basic building blocks. Over a hundred chemical elements is not simple. The ancients believed that everything is made of just five elements – earth, water, fire, air and aether. Five is much simpler than 118. It’s also wrong.

By 1932, scientists knew that all those atoms are made of just three particles – neutrons, protons and electrons. The neutrons and protons are bound together tightly into the nucleus. The electrons, thousands of times lighter, whirl around the nucleus at speeds approaching that of light. Physicists Planck, Bohr, Schroedinger, Heisenberg and friends had invented a new science – quantum mechanics – to explain this motion.

That would have been a satisfying place to stop. Just three particles. Three is even simpler than five. But held together how? The negatively charged electrons and positively charged protons are bound together by electromagnetism. But the protons are all huddled together in the nucleus and their positive charges should be pushing them powerfully apart. The neutral neutrons can’t help.

What binds these protons and neutrons together? “Divine intervention” a man on a Toronto street corner told me; he had a pamphlet, I could read all about it. But this scenario seemed like a lot of trouble even for a divine being – keeping tabs on every single one of the universe’s 10?? protons and neutrons and bending them to its will.

Expanding the zoo of particles

Meanwhile, nature cruelly declined to keep its zoo of particles to just three. Really four, because we should count the photon, the particle of light that Einstein described. Four grew to five when Anderson measured electrons with positive charge – positrons – striking the Earth from outer space. At least Dirac had predicted these first anti-matter particles. Five became six when the pion, which Yukawa predicted would hold the nucleus together, was found.

Then came the muon – 200 times heavier than the electron, but otherwise a twin. “Who ordered that?” I.I. Rabi quipped. That sums it up. Number seven. Not only not simple, redundant.

By the 1960s there were hundreds of “fundamental” particles. In place of the well-organized periodic table, there were just long lists of baryons (heavy particles like protons and neutrons), mesons (like Yukawa’s pions) and leptons (light particles like the electron, and the elusive neutrinos) – with no organization and no guiding principles.

Into this breach sidled the Standard Model. It was not an overnight flash of brilliance. No Archimedes leapt out of a bathtub shouting “eureka.” Instead, there was a series of crucial insights by a few key individuals in the mid-1960s that transformed this quagmire into a simple theory, and then five decades of experimental verification and theoretical elaboration.

Quarks. They come in six varieties we call flavors. Like ice cream, except not as tasty. Instead of vanilla, chocolate and so on, we have up, down, strange, charm, bottom and top. In 1964, Gell-Mann and Zweig taught us the recipes: Mix and match any three quarks to get a baryon. Protons are two ups and a down quark bound together; neutrons are two downs and an up. Choose one quark and one antiquark to get a meson. A pion is an up or a down quark bound to an anti-up or an anti-down. All the material of our daily lives is made of just up and down quarks and anti-quarks and electrons.

The Standard Model of elementary particles provides an ingredients list for everything around us. Image via Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory.

Simple. Well, simple-ish, because keeping those quarks bound is a feat. They are tied to one another so tightly that you never ever find a quark or anti-quark on its own. The theory of that binding, and the particles called gluons (chuckle) that are responsible, is called quantum chromodynamics. It’s a vital piece of the Standard Model, but mathematically difficult, even posing an unsolved problem of basic mathematics. We physicists do our best to calculate with it, but we’re still learning how.

The other aspect of the Standard Model is “A Model of Leptons.” That’s the name of the landmark 1967 paper by Steven Weinberg that pulled together quantum mechanics with the vital pieces of knowledge of how particles interact and organized the two into a single theory. It incorporated the familiar electromagnetism, joined it with what physicists called “the weak force” that causes certain radioactive decays, and explained that they were different aspects of the same force. It incorporated the Higgs mechanism for giving mass to fundamental particles.

Since then, the Standard Model has predicted the results of experiment after experiment, including the discovery of several varieties of quarks and of the W and Z bosons – heavy particles that are for weak interactions what the photon is for electromagnetism. The possibility that neutrinos aren’t massless was overlooked in the 1960s, but slipped easily into the Standard Model in the 1990s, a few decades late to the party.

3D view of an event recorded at the CERN particle accelerator showing characteristics expected from the decay of the SM Higgs boson to a pair of photons (dashed yellow lines and green towers). Image via McCauley, Thomas; Taylor, Lucas; for the CMS Collaboration CERN.

Discovering the Higgs boson in 2012, long predicted by the Standard Model and long sought after, was a thrill but not a surprise. It was yet another crucial victory for the Standard Model over the dark forces that particle physicists have repeatedly warned loomed over the horizon. Concerned that the Standard Model didn’t adequately embody their expectations of simplicity, worried about its mathematical self-consistency, or looking ahead to the eventual necessity to bring the force of gravity into the fold, physicists have made numerous proposals for theories beyond the Standard Model. These bear exciting names like Grand Unified Theories, Supersymmetry, Technicolor, and String Theory.

Sadly, at least for their proponents, beyond-the-Standard-Model theories have not yet successfully predicted any new experimental phenomenon or any experimental discrepancy with the Standard Model.

After five decades, far from requiring an upgrade, the Standard Model is worthy of celebration as the Absolutely Amazing Theory of Almost Everything.

Glenn Starkman, Distinguished University Professor of Physics, Case Western Reserve University

This article was originally published on The Conversation. Read the original article.

Bottom line: What is The Standard Model theory of particle physics?



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

How does our world work on a subatomic level? Image via Varsha Y S.

By Glenn Starkman, Case Western Reserve University

The Standard Model. What dull name for the most accurate scientific theory known to human beings.

More than a quarter of the Nobel Prizes in physics of the last century are direct inputs to or direct results of the Standard Model. Yet its name suggests that if you can afford a few extra dollars a month you should buy the upgrade. As a theoretical physicist, I’d prefer The Absolutely Amazing Theory of Almost Everything. That’s what the Standard Model really is.

Many recall the excitement among scientists and media over the 2012 discovery of the Higgs boson. But that much-ballyhooed event didn’t come out of the blue – it capped a five-decade undefeated streak for the Standard Model. Every fundamental force but gravity is included in it. Every attempt to overturn it to demonstrate in the laboratory that it must be substantially reworked – and there have been many over the past 50 years – has failed.

In short, the Standard Model answers this question: What is everything made of, and how does it hold together?

The smallest building blocks

You know, of course, that the world around us is made of molecules, and molecules are made of atoms. Chemist Dmitri Mendeleev figured that out in the 1860s and organized all atoms – that is, the elements – into the periodic table that you probably studied in middle school. But there are 118 different chemical elements. There’s antimony, arsenic, aluminum, selenium … and 114 more.

Our annual crowd-funding campaign has started. Please donate what you can to help EarthSky keep going!

But these elements can be broken down further. Image via Rubén Vera Koster.

Physicists like things simple. We want to boil things down to their essence, a few basic building blocks. Over a hundred chemical elements is not simple. The ancients believed that everything is made of just five elements – earth, water, fire, air and aether. Five is much simpler than 118. It’s also wrong.

By 1932, scientists knew that all those atoms are made of just three particles – neutrons, protons and electrons. The neutrons and protons are bound together tightly into the nucleus. The electrons, thousands of times lighter, whirl around the nucleus at speeds approaching that of light. Physicists Planck, Bohr, Schroedinger, Heisenberg and friends had invented a new science – quantum mechanics – to explain this motion.

That would have been a satisfying place to stop. Just three particles. Three is even simpler than five. But held together how? The negatively charged electrons and positively charged protons are bound together by electromagnetism. But the protons are all huddled together in the nucleus and their positive charges should be pushing them powerfully apart. The neutral neutrons can’t help.

What binds these protons and neutrons together? “Divine intervention” a man on a Toronto street corner told me; he had a pamphlet, I could read all about it. But this scenario seemed like a lot of trouble even for a divine being – keeping tabs on every single one of the universe’s 10?? protons and neutrons and bending them to its will.

Expanding the zoo of particles

Meanwhile, nature cruelly declined to keep its zoo of particles to just three. Really four, because we should count the photon, the particle of light that Einstein described. Four grew to five when Anderson measured electrons with positive charge – positrons – striking the Earth from outer space. At least Dirac had predicted these first anti-matter particles. Five became six when the pion, which Yukawa predicted would hold the nucleus together, was found.

Then came the muon – 200 times heavier than the electron, but otherwise a twin. “Who ordered that?” I.I. Rabi quipped. That sums it up. Number seven. Not only not simple, redundant.

By the 1960s there were hundreds of “fundamental” particles. In place of the well-organized periodic table, there were just long lists of baryons (heavy particles like protons and neutrons), mesons (like Yukawa’s pions) and leptons (light particles like the electron, and the elusive neutrinos) – with no organization and no guiding principles.

Into this breach sidled the Standard Model. It was not an overnight flash of brilliance. No Archimedes leapt out of a bathtub shouting “eureka.” Instead, there was a series of crucial insights by a few key individuals in the mid-1960s that transformed this quagmire into a simple theory, and then five decades of experimental verification and theoretical elaboration.

Quarks. They come in six varieties we call flavors. Like ice cream, except not as tasty. Instead of vanilla, chocolate and so on, we have up, down, strange, charm, bottom and top. In 1964, Gell-Mann and Zweig taught us the recipes: Mix and match any three quarks to get a baryon. Protons are two ups and a down quark bound together; neutrons are two downs and an up. Choose one quark and one antiquark to get a meson. A pion is an up or a down quark bound to an anti-up or an anti-down. All the material of our daily lives is made of just up and down quarks and anti-quarks and electrons.

The Standard Model of elementary particles provides an ingredients list for everything around us. Image via Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory.

Simple. Well, simple-ish, because keeping those quarks bound is a feat. They are tied to one another so tightly that you never ever find a quark or anti-quark on its own. The theory of that binding, and the particles called gluons (chuckle) that are responsible, is called quantum chromodynamics. It’s a vital piece of the Standard Model, but mathematically difficult, even posing an unsolved problem of basic mathematics. We physicists do our best to calculate with it, but we’re still learning how.

The other aspect of the Standard Model is “A Model of Leptons.” That’s the name of the landmark 1967 paper by Steven Weinberg that pulled together quantum mechanics with the vital pieces of knowledge of how particles interact and organized the two into a single theory. It incorporated the familiar electromagnetism, joined it with what physicists called “the weak force” that causes certain radioactive decays, and explained that they were different aspects of the same force. It incorporated the Higgs mechanism for giving mass to fundamental particles.

Since then, the Standard Model has predicted the results of experiment after experiment, including the discovery of several varieties of quarks and of the W and Z bosons – heavy particles that are for weak interactions what the photon is for electromagnetism. The possibility that neutrinos aren’t massless was overlooked in the 1960s, but slipped easily into the Standard Model in the 1990s, a few decades late to the party.

3D view of an event recorded at the CERN particle accelerator showing characteristics expected from the decay of the SM Higgs boson to a pair of photons (dashed yellow lines and green towers). Image via McCauley, Thomas; Taylor, Lucas; for the CMS Collaboration CERN.

Discovering the Higgs boson in 2012, long predicted by the Standard Model and long sought after, was a thrill but not a surprise. It was yet another crucial victory for the Standard Model over the dark forces that particle physicists have repeatedly warned loomed over the horizon. Concerned that the Standard Model didn’t adequately embody their expectations of simplicity, worried about its mathematical self-consistency, or looking ahead to the eventual necessity to bring the force of gravity into the fold, physicists have made numerous proposals for theories beyond the Standard Model. These bear exciting names like Grand Unified Theories, Supersymmetry, Technicolor, and String Theory.

Sadly, at least for their proponents, beyond-the-Standard-Model theories have not yet successfully predicted any new experimental phenomenon or any experimental discrepancy with the Standard Model.

After five decades, far from requiring an upgrade, the Standard Model is worthy of celebration as the Absolutely Amazing Theory of Almost Everything.

Glenn Starkman, Distinguished University Professor of Physics, Case Western Reserve University

This article was originally published on The Conversation. Read the original article.

Bottom line: What is The Standard Model theory of particle physics?



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

Today is Walt Whitman’s birthday

Walt Whitman by Thomas Eakins, 1887-88

May 31, 1819. Today is the birthday of Walt Whitman, poet and journalist, born in West Hills, New York. He’s considered one of America’s most influential poets, and his collection Leaves of Grass is considered a landmark in American literature. Would Whitman himself approved of celebrating his birthday on a science website like EarthSky? After all, he was a poet. But this quote by itself caused us to include him:

This is what you shall do; Love the earth and sun and the animals, despise riches, give alms to every one that asks, stand up for the stupid and crazy, devote your income and labor to others, hate tyrants, argue not concerning God, have patience and indulgence toward the people, take off your hat to nothing known or unknown or to any man or number of men, go freely with powerful uneducated persons and with the young and with the mothers of families, read these leaves in the open air every season of every year of your life, re-examine all you have been told at school or church or in any book, dismiss whatever insults your own soul, and your very flesh shall be a great poem and have the richest fluency not only in its words but in the silent lines of its lips and face and between the lashes of your eyes and in every motion and joint of your body.

Do these ideas remind you of science? Not yet? Then how about this one?

I believe a leaf of grass is no less than the journey-work of the stars.

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

Walt Whitman as photographed by Matthew Brady.

Walt Whitman as photographed by Matthew Brady.

Bottom line: Walt Whitman was born on May 31, 1819.



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

Walt Whitman by Thomas Eakins, 1887-88

May 31, 1819. Today is the birthday of Walt Whitman, poet and journalist, born in West Hills, New York. He’s considered one of America’s most influential poets, and his collection Leaves of Grass is considered a landmark in American literature. Would Whitman himself approved of celebrating his birthday on a science website like EarthSky? After all, he was a poet. But this quote by itself caused us to include him:

This is what you shall do; Love the earth and sun and the animals, despise riches, give alms to every one that asks, stand up for the stupid and crazy, devote your income and labor to others, hate tyrants, argue not concerning God, have patience and indulgence toward the people, take off your hat to nothing known or unknown or to any man or number of men, go freely with powerful uneducated persons and with the young and with the mothers of families, read these leaves in the open air every season of every year of your life, re-examine all you have been told at school or church or in any book, dismiss whatever insults your own soul, and your very flesh shall be a great poem and have the richest fluency not only in its words but in the silent lines of its lips and face and between the lashes of your eyes and in every motion and joint of your body.

Do these ideas remind you of science? Not yet? Then how about this one?

I believe a leaf of grass is no less than the journey-work of the stars.

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

Walt Whitman as photographed by Matthew Brady.

Walt Whitman as photographed by Matthew Brady.

Bottom line: Walt Whitman was born on May 31, 1819.



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

adds 2