Land of Terror

This natural-color image, acquired on October 22, 2017, by NASA/s Landsat 8 satellite, shows concentric rings of exposed sandstone strata that create stunning patterns across the Tanezrouft Basin. Viewed from 705 kilometers (438 miles) above Earth. Image via NASA.

The Tanezrouft Basin, a part of the Sahara Desert in central Algeria, lies just above the Tropic of Cancer, about 1200 kilometers (750 miles) south of the city of Algiers. The basin’s colloquial name is the Land of Terror because, for many, to traverse this land is to stare death in the face.

The land here is especially parched, with annual rainfall measured in millimeters (less than 5 millimeters or 0.2 inches). It’s a hyperarid place of soaring temperatures and scarce access to water or vegetation. There are no permanent residents here, only occasional Tuareg nomads.

Wind erosion — caused by constant sandblasting through millennia of frequent sandstorms — has exposed ancient folds in the Paleozoic rocks. The sandstone canyons in this region have walls that rise as high as 500 meters (1,600 feet), and with salt flats in their lower reaches. The flats indicate that water played a role in sculpting this landscape.

P. Kyle House, a geologist with the U.S. Geological Survey. House explained:

Intermittent flooding has occurred often enough to mold the landscape pretty thoroughly over millions of years. There are numerous canyons in this region that both follow and abruptly cut directly across the grain of the tilted and folded strata. These patterns are striking and reminiscent of landscapes formed on folded strata in, for example, the Red Desert of southern Wyoming and even parts of the heavily forested Appalachian Mountains of the Eastern United States.

Fifty miles east of this area, the trans-Saharan highway — known as one of the world’s most brutal roads — makes its way through the desert.

Bottom line: Satellite image of the Tanezrouft Basin, a part of the Sahara Desert.

Read more from NASA’s Earth Observatory



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This natural-color image, acquired on October 22, 2017, by NASA/s Landsat 8 satellite, shows concentric rings of exposed sandstone strata that create stunning patterns across the Tanezrouft Basin. Viewed from 705 kilometers (438 miles) above Earth. Image via NASA.

The Tanezrouft Basin, a part of the Sahara Desert in central Algeria, lies just above the Tropic of Cancer, about 1200 kilometers (750 miles) south of the city of Algiers. The basin’s colloquial name is the Land of Terror because, for many, to traverse this land is to stare death in the face.

The land here is especially parched, with annual rainfall measured in millimeters (less than 5 millimeters or 0.2 inches). It’s a hyperarid place of soaring temperatures and scarce access to water or vegetation. There are no permanent residents here, only occasional Tuareg nomads.

Wind erosion — caused by constant sandblasting through millennia of frequent sandstorms — has exposed ancient folds in the Paleozoic rocks. The sandstone canyons in this region have walls that rise as high as 500 meters (1,600 feet), and with salt flats in their lower reaches. The flats indicate that water played a role in sculpting this landscape.

P. Kyle House, a geologist with the U.S. Geological Survey. House explained:

Intermittent flooding has occurred often enough to mold the landscape pretty thoroughly over millions of years. There are numerous canyons in this region that both follow and abruptly cut directly across the grain of the tilted and folded strata. These patterns are striking and reminiscent of landscapes formed on folded strata in, for example, the Red Desert of southern Wyoming and even parts of the heavily forested Appalachian Mountains of the Eastern United States.

Fifty miles east of this area, the trans-Saharan highway — known as one of the world’s most brutal roads — makes its way through the desert.

Bottom line: Satellite image of the Tanezrouft Basin, a part of the Sahara Desert.

Read more from NASA’s Earth Observatory



from EarthSky http://ift.tt/2zLiLOf

Full supermoon on December 3

Image at top: November 2016 supermoon and friend via Roxana Soetebeer in Woodstock, New Brunswick, Canada.

Tonight – December 3, 2017 – the full moon is what we in the Northern Hemisphere call a Cold Moon, Moon Before Yule, or Long Night Moon. It’s also the year’s one and only full supermoon. In other words, it comes close enough to Earth (222,443 miles or 357,987 km) to enjoy supermoon status. The astrologer Richard Nolle, who is credited with coining the term, defines a supermoon as:

… a new or full moon which occurs with the moon at or near (within 90% of) its closest approach to Earth in a given orbit.

According to that definition, that means any new moon or full moon coming closer than 362,000 km of Earth in 2017 counts as a supermoon.

Visit a cool new website! Daniel Cummings’ Star in a Star

The Virtual Telescope Project in Rome, Italy will provide an online viewing of the December 3, 2017 supermoon, as it rises above Rome’s legendary monuments, with audio commentary by astrophysicist Gianluca Masi. Click here to join the show. The show starts December 3, 2017 at 16:00 UTC; translate UTC to your time zone.

This month, the full moon and lunar perigee – the moon’s closest point to Earth in its orbit – happen less than one day apart. The full moon comes on December 3, at 15:47 Universal Time (UTC), and lunar perigee takes place on December 4 at 8:42 UTC.

Full moon distance (2017 Dec 3 at 15:47 UTC): 357,987 km
Lunar perigee distance (2017 Dec 4 at 8:42 UTC): 357,492 km

This is in great contrast to the year’s farthest and smallest full moon on June 9, 2017, which closely aligned with lunar apogee – the moon’s farthest point from Earth in its monthly orbit. The June 2017 full moon was 252,443 miles (406,268 km) distant – or nearly 30,000 miles (50,000 km) farther away than this December 2017 full moon.

Full moon distance (2017 June 9 at 13:10 UTC): 406,268 km
Lunar apogee distance (2017 June 8 at 22:21 UTC): 406,401 km

The December 2017 supermoon features the first of three full moon supermoons in succession. The two full moons in January 2018 – on January 2 and 31 – also count as supermoons. As is typically the case, the second of these three full moon supermoons most closely coincides with lunar perigee, showcasing the closest and largest supermoon in this series of three.

Full moon distance (2017 Dec 3 at 15:47 UTC): 357,987 km
Lunar perigee distance (2017 Dec 4 at 8:42 UTC): 357,492 km

Full moon distance (2018 Jan 2 at 2:24 UTC): 356,846 km
Lunar perigee distance (2018 Jan 1 at 21:54 UTC): 356,565 km

Full moon distance (2018 Jan 31 at 13:27 UTC): 360,199 km
Lunar perigee distance (2018 Jan 30 at 9:54 UTC): 358,995 km

Some people will call the full moon on January 31 a Blue Moon because it’s the second of two full moons in one calendar month. Moreover, this supermoon will stage a total eclipse of the moon.

We can expect each full moon supermoon in this three-part succession to recur after 14 lunar months (14 returns to full moon). By the way, 14 lunar months represents a time period of about 1 year, 1 month and 18 days. In 2019, the second of three full moon supermoons will showcase the closest and largest supermoon of the series:

Full moon supermoons in 2019

Full moon distance (2019 Jan 21): 357,715 km
Full moon distance (2019 Feb 19): 356,846 km
Full moon distance (2019 Mar 21): 360,772 km

Read more: Super Blue Moon eclipse on January 31

Bottom line: The December 3, 2017 full moon is 2017’s only full supermoon. The two full moons in January 2018 – on January 2 and 31 – will also count as supermoons.



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Image at top: November 2016 supermoon and friend via Roxana Soetebeer in Woodstock, New Brunswick, Canada.

Tonight – December 3, 2017 – the full moon is what we in the Northern Hemisphere call a Cold Moon, Moon Before Yule, or Long Night Moon. It’s also the year’s one and only full supermoon. In other words, it comes close enough to Earth (222,443 miles or 357,987 km) to enjoy supermoon status. The astrologer Richard Nolle, who is credited with coining the term, defines a supermoon as:

… a new or full moon which occurs with the moon at or near (within 90% of) its closest approach to Earth in a given orbit.

According to that definition, that means any new moon or full moon coming closer than 362,000 km of Earth in 2017 counts as a supermoon.

Visit a cool new website! Daniel Cummings’ Star in a Star

The Virtual Telescope Project in Rome, Italy will provide an online viewing of the December 3, 2017 supermoon, as it rises above Rome’s legendary monuments, with audio commentary by astrophysicist Gianluca Masi. Click here to join the show. The show starts December 3, 2017 at 16:00 UTC; translate UTC to your time zone.

This month, the full moon and lunar perigee – the moon’s closest point to Earth in its orbit – happen less than one day apart. The full moon comes on December 3, at 15:47 Universal Time (UTC), and lunar perigee takes place on December 4 at 8:42 UTC.

Full moon distance (2017 Dec 3 at 15:47 UTC): 357,987 km
Lunar perigee distance (2017 Dec 4 at 8:42 UTC): 357,492 km

This is in great contrast to the year’s farthest and smallest full moon on June 9, 2017, which closely aligned with lunar apogee – the moon’s farthest point from Earth in its monthly orbit. The June 2017 full moon was 252,443 miles (406,268 km) distant – or nearly 30,000 miles (50,000 km) farther away than this December 2017 full moon.

Full moon distance (2017 June 9 at 13:10 UTC): 406,268 km
Lunar apogee distance (2017 June 8 at 22:21 UTC): 406,401 km

The December 2017 supermoon features the first of three full moon supermoons in succession. The two full moons in January 2018 – on January 2 and 31 – also count as supermoons. As is typically the case, the second of these three full moon supermoons most closely coincides with lunar perigee, showcasing the closest and largest supermoon in this series of three.

Full moon distance (2017 Dec 3 at 15:47 UTC): 357,987 km
Lunar perigee distance (2017 Dec 4 at 8:42 UTC): 357,492 km

Full moon distance (2018 Jan 2 at 2:24 UTC): 356,846 km
Lunar perigee distance (2018 Jan 1 at 21:54 UTC): 356,565 km

Full moon distance (2018 Jan 31 at 13:27 UTC): 360,199 km
Lunar perigee distance (2018 Jan 30 at 9:54 UTC): 358,995 km

Some people will call the full moon on January 31 a Blue Moon because it’s the second of two full moons in one calendar month. Moreover, this supermoon will stage a total eclipse of the moon.

We can expect each full moon supermoon in this three-part succession to recur after 14 lunar months (14 returns to full moon). By the way, 14 lunar months represents a time period of about 1 year, 1 month and 18 days. In 2019, the second of three full moon supermoons will showcase the closest and largest supermoon of the series:

Full moon supermoons in 2019

Full moon distance (2019 Jan 21): 357,715 km
Full moon distance (2019 Feb 19): 356,846 km
Full moon distance (2019 Mar 21): 360,772 km

Read more: Super Blue Moon eclipse on January 31

Bottom line: The December 3, 2017 full moon is 2017’s only full supermoon. The two full moons in January 2018 – on January 2 and 31 – will also count as supermoons.



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2017 SkS Weekly Climate Change & Global Warming News Roundup #48

A chronological listing of news articles posted on the Skeptical Science Facebook page during the past week. 

Editor's Pick

Climate Change Panel Talks ‘Hope and Despair’

Harvard Panel 

David Wallace-Wells, Cam Webb, Nancy Knowlton, and Nikhil Advani speak Wednesday evening at a panel discussion hosted by the Harvard University Center for the Environment. AMY Y. LI

Climate change researchers, professors, and journalists debated how best to present the severity of climate change to the public Wednesday evening at an event hosted by the Harvard University Center for the Environment.

The discussion, titled “Hope and Despair: Communicating an Uncertain Future,” was held in the Geological Lecture Hall. Elizabeth M. Wolkovich, an assistant professor in the Department of Organismic and Evolutionary Biology, moderated a discussion about how to best motivate the public to take action on climate change.

David Wallace-Wells, who is the deputy editor of the New York Magazine and wrote the article “The Uninhabitable Earth” this year, advocated the use of fear about the planet’s future as a way to inspire more people to become “climate agents.”

“I think that there is real value in scaring people,” Wallace-Wells said. “When I talk to colleagues it just seems so obvious to me that when you think about the relatively well-off Western world, that complacency about climate is just a much bigger problem than fatalism about climate.”/em>

Nancy Knowlton, chair for Marine Science at the Smithsonian Institution, said she thinks it is more effective to be optimistic about humanity’s ability to stave off disaster.

“I’ve had many, many students come up to me after talks about optimism or the Earth Optimism Summit that we ran in Washington saying ‘you know, this was incredibly empowering, I now really want to go out and work on solving this problem. I almost left the field of conservation because I thought there was nothing I could do,’” Knowlton said. “I do feel that it is absolutely essential to talk about what’s working, why it’s working, in addition to providing this very scary context.”

Climate Change Panel Talks ‘Hope and Despair’ by Yasmin Luthra & Aidan F Ryan, The Harvard Crimson, Nov 30, 2017 


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from Skeptical Science http://ift.tt/2nqX30C
A chronological listing of news articles posted on the Skeptical Science Facebook page during the past week. 

Editor's Pick

Climate Change Panel Talks ‘Hope and Despair’

Harvard Panel 

David Wallace-Wells, Cam Webb, Nancy Knowlton, and Nikhil Advani speak Wednesday evening at a panel discussion hosted by the Harvard University Center for the Environment. AMY Y. LI

Climate change researchers, professors, and journalists debated how best to present the severity of climate change to the public Wednesday evening at an event hosted by the Harvard University Center for the Environment.

The discussion, titled “Hope and Despair: Communicating an Uncertain Future,” was held in the Geological Lecture Hall. Elizabeth M. Wolkovich, an assistant professor in the Department of Organismic and Evolutionary Biology, moderated a discussion about how to best motivate the public to take action on climate change.

David Wallace-Wells, who is the deputy editor of the New York Magazine and wrote the article “The Uninhabitable Earth” this year, advocated the use of fear about the planet’s future as a way to inspire more people to become “climate agents.”

“I think that there is real value in scaring people,” Wallace-Wells said. “When I talk to colleagues it just seems so obvious to me that when you think about the relatively well-off Western world, that complacency about climate is just a much bigger problem than fatalism about climate.”/em>

Nancy Knowlton, chair for Marine Science at the Smithsonian Institution, said she thinks it is more effective to be optimistic about humanity’s ability to stave off disaster.

“I’ve had many, many students come up to me after talks about optimism or the Earth Optimism Summit that we ran in Washington saying ‘you know, this was incredibly empowering, I now really want to go out and work on solving this problem. I almost left the field of conservation because I thought there was nothing I could do,’” Knowlton said. “I do feel that it is absolutely essential to talk about what’s working, why it’s working, in addition to providing this very scary context.”

Climate Change Panel Talks ‘Hope and Despair’ by Yasmin Luthra & Aidan F Ryan, The Harvard Crimson, Nov 30, 2017 


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Supermassive black holes photobomb Andromeda galaxy

The universe is vast and contains billions upon billions of objects, existing in an immense space-time we humans are only beginning to comprehend. So it’s a curiosity, but not really surprising, when an object thought to be two orbiting stars and thought to be was part of the Andromeda galaxy – next-nearest large galaxy to Earth, only 2.5 million light-years from Earth – is revealed as 1,000 times more distant. New work shows the object known as as J0045+41 is likely not stars at all, but a pair of giant black holes, orbiting one another extremely closely, not millions but billions of light-years away. A paper describing this new result was accepted for publication in the peer-reviewed Astrophysical Journal (preprint online). A November 30, 2017 statement from Chandra X-Ray Observatory said:

It seems like even black holes can’t resist the temptation to insert themselves unannounced into photographs. A cosmic photobomb found as a background object in images of the nearby Andromeda galaxy has revealed what could be the most tightly coupled pair of supermassive black holes ever seen.

Astronomers now believe J0045+41 is around 2.6 billion light-years from Earth, and they’re now estimating the total mass for these two supermassive black holes at about 200 million times that of our sun.

The research team combined the Chandra X-ray Observatory data with spectra from the Gemini North telescope in Hawaii, showing that J0045+41 likely contained at least one supermassive black hole. Using data from the Palomar Transient Factory telescopes in California, the team found repeating variations in the light from J0045+41, a pointer to the presence of two orbiting giant black holes.

If these researchers are correct, the separation between the two giant black holes may be only a few hundred times the distance between our Earth and sun. This corresponds to less than 1/100th of a light-year. By comparison, the nearest star to our sun is about four light-years away. The statement from Chandra said:

Such a system could be formed as a consequence of the merger, billions of years earlier, of two galaxies that each contained a supermassive black hole. At their current close separation, the two black holes are inevitably being drawn closer together as they emit gravitational waves.

And so, bit by bit, our universe becomes more knowable!

This composite image shows Chandra X-Ray Observatory data (blue in inset) of the source known as J0045+41, within the context of optical images of Andromeda from the Hubble Space Telescope. In the inset image, north is up and in the large image north is to the lower right. Andromeda, also known as M31, is a spiral galaxy located about 2.5 million light years from Earth. Image via Chandra.

Bottom line: Astronomers thought the source known as J0045+41 was a binary star system, part of the nearby Andromeda galaxy, but new work shows the source is 1,000 times more distant and could be the most tightly coupled pair of supermassive black holes ever seen.

Via Chandra

Source: A Mote in Andromeda’s Disk: a Misidentified Periodic AGN Behind M31



from EarthSky http://ift.tt/2AD2cYH

The universe is vast and contains billions upon billions of objects, existing in an immense space-time we humans are only beginning to comprehend. So it’s a curiosity, but not really surprising, when an object thought to be two orbiting stars and thought to be was part of the Andromeda galaxy – next-nearest large galaxy to Earth, only 2.5 million light-years from Earth – is revealed as 1,000 times more distant. New work shows the object known as as J0045+41 is likely not stars at all, but a pair of giant black holes, orbiting one another extremely closely, not millions but billions of light-years away. A paper describing this new result was accepted for publication in the peer-reviewed Astrophysical Journal (preprint online). A November 30, 2017 statement from Chandra X-Ray Observatory said:

It seems like even black holes can’t resist the temptation to insert themselves unannounced into photographs. A cosmic photobomb found as a background object in images of the nearby Andromeda galaxy has revealed what could be the most tightly coupled pair of supermassive black holes ever seen.

Astronomers now believe J0045+41 is around 2.6 billion light-years from Earth, and they’re now estimating the total mass for these two supermassive black holes at about 200 million times that of our sun.

The research team combined the Chandra X-ray Observatory data with spectra from the Gemini North telescope in Hawaii, showing that J0045+41 likely contained at least one supermassive black hole. Using data from the Palomar Transient Factory telescopes in California, the team found repeating variations in the light from J0045+41, a pointer to the presence of two orbiting giant black holes.

If these researchers are correct, the separation between the two giant black holes may be only a few hundred times the distance between our Earth and sun. This corresponds to less than 1/100th of a light-year. By comparison, the nearest star to our sun is about four light-years away. The statement from Chandra said:

Such a system could be formed as a consequence of the merger, billions of years earlier, of two galaxies that each contained a supermassive black hole. At their current close separation, the two black holes are inevitably being drawn closer together as they emit gravitational waves.

And so, bit by bit, our universe becomes more knowable!

This composite image shows Chandra X-Ray Observatory data (blue in inset) of the source known as J0045+41, within the context of optical images of Andromeda from the Hubble Space Telescope. In the inset image, north is up and in the large image north is to the lower right. Andromeda, also known as M31, is a spiral galaxy located about 2.5 million light years from Earth. Image via Chandra.

Bottom line: Astronomers thought the source known as J0045+41 was a binary star system, part of the nearby Andromeda galaxy, but new work shows the source is 1,000 times more distant and could be the most tightly coupled pair of supermassive black holes ever seen.

Via Chandra

Source: A Mote in Andromeda’s Disk: a Misidentified Periodic AGN Behind M31



from EarthSky http://ift.tt/2AD2cYH

News digest – diabetes, junk food ads, HPV vaccine, and… cancer drug treats HIV?

  • Diabetes or carrying too much weight account for almost 800,000 cases of cancer a year worldwide, reports The Sun. A new study found that being diabetic, overweight or obese was behind more than 1 in 20 cancers. The Independent reported that cancers linked to the two factors were nearly twice as common in women than in men.
  • The Government set out its industrial strategy to boost performance in key areas and increase productivity. The Guardian cited the life sciences as a success story with massive potential to grow. New investment and jobs were announced by pharmaceutical companies. BBC News had more on whether the strategy will work.
  • Children are seeing up to 12 junk food adverts within an hour while watching family TV programmes, reports The Guardian. Campaigners have called for bans on junk food adverts before the 9pm watershed, which the Government has rejected.
  • A review into NHS radiology services has been launched after two patients came to “significant harm” at a hospital where junior doctors were left to interpret chest x-rays. The Guardian reports that the patients had their lung cancer missed. Diagnostic services are under huge strain with significant investment needed.
  • The HPV vaccine is safe and effective at preventing human papillomavirus for up to 10 years, reports Mail Online. A US study looked at 9 countries that offer the vaccination, saying the results support the use of the vaccine in boys and girls to reduce infection with HPV which is linked to certain cancers. The vaccine is routinely offered in the UK to girls aged 11-13.
  • Men are more than twice as likely to develop oral cancer as women, according to our new figures. The latest data show that around 5,300 men are diagnosed with oral cancer every year in the UK compared to around 2,500 women. The figures also show oral cancer is more often diagnosed in men at a younger age compared with other cancers.
  • A new study found that nearly half of US cancer deaths could be preventable, and are caused by factors such as smoking and excess weight. STAT News reports that 45% of cancer deaths could be attributed to what the researchers call “modifiable” risk factors, with 30% of cancer deaths down to smoking.
  • Glioblastomas are brain tumours that are particularly hard to treat. STAT News reports on efforts to change this as scientists are trying to understand these tumours better by growing mini-brains called organoids in the lab. They hope that by using samples from glioblastoma patients they’ll be able to watch how the cancer progresses and work out how best to target it with treatments.

And finally

  • A man’s HIV has been brought under control by a drug given to treat his lung cancer, reports The Guardian. The 51 year old, who has had HIV since 1995, was treated for lung cancer with surgery and chemotherapy. When the lung cancer came back, he was given the immunotherapy drug nivolumab (Opdivo). Doctors then saw that dormant HIV-infected cells were depleted at the same time as the patient’s immune system was awoken to attack the cancer. His medical team believe the rejuvenated immune cells might have been responsible for killing the HIV-infected cells, but this is just one case study. And the results weren’t replicated in another patient treated in the same way. More work needs to be done to understand exactly what happened before recommending any changes to treatment.

Michael



from Cancer Research UK – Science blog http://ift.tt/2khVVuJ
  • Diabetes or carrying too much weight account for almost 800,000 cases of cancer a year worldwide, reports The Sun. A new study found that being diabetic, overweight or obese was behind more than 1 in 20 cancers. The Independent reported that cancers linked to the two factors were nearly twice as common in women than in men.
  • The Government set out its industrial strategy to boost performance in key areas and increase productivity. The Guardian cited the life sciences as a success story with massive potential to grow. New investment and jobs were announced by pharmaceutical companies. BBC News had more on whether the strategy will work.
  • Children are seeing up to 12 junk food adverts within an hour while watching family TV programmes, reports The Guardian. Campaigners have called for bans on junk food adverts before the 9pm watershed, which the Government has rejected.
  • A review into NHS radiology services has been launched after two patients came to “significant harm” at a hospital where junior doctors were left to interpret chest x-rays. The Guardian reports that the patients had their lung cancer missed. Diagnostic services are under huge strain with significant investment needed.
  • The HPV vaccine is safe and effective at preventing human papillomavirus for up to 10 years, reports Mail Online. A US study looked at 9 countries that offer the vaccination, saying the results support the use of the vaccine in boys and girls to reduce infection with HPV which is linked to certain cancers. The vaccine is routinely offered in the UK to girls aged 11-13.
  • Men are more than twice as likely to develop oral cancer as women, according to our new figures. The latest data show that around 5,300 men are diagnosed with oral cancer every year in the UK compared to around 2,500 women. The figures also show oral cancer is more often diagnosed in men at a younger age compared with other cancers.
  • A new study found that nearly half of US cancer deaths could be preventable, and are caused by factors such as smoking and excess weight. STAT News reports that 45% of cancer deaths could be attributed to what the researchers call “modifiable” risk factors, with 30% of cancer deaths down to smoking.
  • Glioblastomas are brain tumours that are particularly hard to treat. STAT News reports on efforts to change this as scientists are trying to understand these tumours better by growing mini-brains called organoids in the lab. They hope that by using samples from glioblastoma patients they’ll be able to watch how the cancer progresses and work out how best to target it with treatments.

And finally

  • A man’s HIV has been brought under control by a drug given to treat his lung cancer, reports The Guardian. The 51 year old, who has had HIV since 1995, was treated for lung cancer with surgery and chemotherapy. When the lung cancer came back, he was given the immunotherapy drug nivolumab (Opdivo). Doctors then saw that dormant HIV-infected cells were depleted at the same time as the patient’s immune system was awoken to attack the cancer. His medical team believe the rejuvenated immune cells might have been responsible for killing the HIV-infected cells, but this is just one case study. And the results weren’t replicated in another patient treated in the same way. More work needs to be done to understand exactly what happened before recommending any changes to treatment.

Michael



from Cancer Research UK – Science blog http://ift.tt/2khVVuJ

December 2 moon is nearly full

Tonight – December 2, 2017 – watch for the nearly full moon. As seen from around the world, the moon will shine nearly all night long, starting around sunset on this night. Although the calendar gives December 3 as the full moon date, the exact clock time (and possibly the date) of the full moon varies by time zone. No matter where you live worldwide, the moon will appear plenty full to the eye both tonight and tomorrow night.

By the way, this full moon will be the only supermoon to light up our sky in 2017. What’s a supermoon? Read more about it in our post for December 3, 2017.

The December 2 moon shines in front of the constellation Taurus the Bull. Despite the lunar glare, you still might be able to make out Aldebaran, Taurus’ brightest star, and possibly the Pleiades star cluster.

Read more: Occultation of Aldebaran on the night of December 2-3, 2017

Worldwide map via the US Naval Observatory. Day and night sides of Earth at the instant of full moon (2017 December 3 at 15:47 UTC). The shadow line at left depicts sunrise December 3 and the the shadow line at right represents sunset December 3.

The full moon, our nocturnal sun, stays out throughout the night, and then sleeps in during the day. The December full moon, like the June sun, climbs up high as seen from the Northern Hemisphere sky. A full moon near the winter solstice travels a high path across the sky and stays in the sky for all hours of the night. That’s why one of the names for this full moon is the Long Night Moon.

From the Southern Hemisphere, where the days are long and the nights are short, the December full moon follows the low path of the winter sun. After all, it’s the hot season in that hemisphere now.

From the contiguous United States, the moon reaches the crest of its full phase during the daylight hours on December 3, when the moon is beneath our horizon. At North American time zones, the moon turns precisely full – resides 180o from the sun in ecliptic longitude – at 11:47 a.m. AST, 10:47 a.m. EST, 9:47 a.m. CST, 8:47 a.m. MST and 7:47 a.m. PST.

However, if you live in Alaska or Hawaii, the moon turns full before sunrise December 3, meaning the moon will be in your sky at the instant of full moon, which takes place on December 3, 2017, at 15:47 Universal Time (UTC) – or 6:47 a.m. AKST (Alaska Standard Time) and 5:47 a.m. Hawaii-Aleution Standard Time (HAST).

The Virtual Telescope Project in Rome, Italy will provide an online viewing of the December 3, 2017 supermoon, as it rises above Rome’s legendary monuments, with audio commentary by astrophysicist Gianluca Masi. Click here to join the show. The show starts December 3, 2017 at 16:00 UTC; translate UTC to your time zone.

Bottom line: From around the world, the December 2, 2017 moon shines in the east at nightfall, climbs highest for the night around midnight and sets in the west around sunrise December 3. For the contiguous United States, the moon will turn precisely full during the daylight hours on December 3, when the moon is below the horizon.

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Tonight – December 2, 2017 – watch for the nearly full moon. As seen from around the world, the moon will shine nearly all night long, starting around sunset on this night. Although the calendar gives December 3 as the full moon date, the exact clock time (and possibly the date) of the full moon varies by time zone. No matter where you live worldwide, the moon will appear plenty full to the eye both tonight and tomorrow night.

By the way, this full moon will be the only supermoon to light up our sky in 2017. What’s a supermoon? Read more about it in our post for December 3, 2017.

The December 2 moon shines in front of the constellation Taurus the Bull. Despite the lunar glare, you still might be able to make out Aldebaran, Taurus’ brightest star, and possibly the Pleiades star cluster.

Read more: Occultation of Aldebaran on the night of December 2-3, 2017

Worldwide map via the US Naval Observatory. Day and night sides of Earth at the instant of full moon (2017 December 3 at 15:47 UTC). The shadow line at left depicts sunrise December 3 and the the shadow line at right represents sunset December 3.

The full moon, our nocturnal sun, stays out throughout the night, and then sleeps in during the day. The December full moon, like the June sun, climbs up high as seen from the Northern Hemisphere sky. A full moon near the winter solstice travels a high path across the sky and stays in the sky for all hours of the night. That’s why one of the names for this full moon is the Long Night Moon.

From the Southern Hemisphere, where the days are long and the nights are short, the December full moon follows the low path of the winter sun. After all, it’s the hot season in that hemisphere now.

From the contiguous United States, the moon reaches the crest of its full phase during the daylight hours on December 3, when the moon is beneath our horizon. At North American time zones, the moon turns precisely full – resides 180o from the sun in ecliptic longitude – at 11:47 a.m. AST, 10:47 a.m. EST, 9:47 a.m. CST, 8:47 a.m. MST and 7:47 a.m. PST.

However, if you live in Alaska or Hawaii, the moon turns full before sunrise December 3, meaning the moon will be in your sky at the instant of full moon, which takes place on December 3, 2017, at 15:47 Universal Time (UTC) – or 6:47 a.m. AKST (Alaska Standard Time) and 5:47 a.m. Hawaii-Aleution Standard Time (HAST).

The Virtual Telescope Project in Rome, Italy will provide an online viewing of the December 3, 2017 supermoon, as it rises above Rome’s legendary monuments, with audio commentary by astrophysicist Gianluca Masi. Click here to join the show. The show starts December 3, 2017 at 16:00 UTC; translate UTC to your time zone.

Bottom line: From around the world, the December 2, 2017 moon shines in the east at nightfall, climbs highest for the night around midnight and sets in the west around sunrise December 3. For the contiguous United States, the moon will turn precisely full during the daylight hours on December 3, when the moon is below the horizon.

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What’s the birthstone for December?

turquoise

Turquoise

Turquoise is considered by some to be a symbol of good fortune and success, believed to bring prosperity to its wearer.

In the language of chemists and geologists, turquoise is known as “copper aluminum phosphate.” Turquoise is often found in weathered igneous rock that contains copper minerals, where it crystallizes in veins and nodules. The gemstone usually develops in rock near water tables, located in semiarid and arid environments. The chemicals in turquoise come from adjacent rock, leached out by rain and groundwater.

Turquoise is a relatively soft gemstone, and can be easily scratched and broken. This porous opaque stone is easily discolored by oil and pigments, and changes color when it loses some of its water content. A sky blue shade in turquoise is due to the presence of copper, while iron gives it a greener tone. Ochre and brown-black veins in the stone occur during the formation of turquoise, caused by inclusions from nearby rock fragments or from oxide staining. The most valued variety of turquoise is an intense sky blue color, like the color of a robin’s egg. Hard, relatively non-porous compact stones have the best appearance because the stone can be finely polished. Pale and chalky varieties however are sometimes impregnated with oil, paraffin, liquid plastic and glycerin to give it a good polish.

This stone can be found in Armenia, Kazakhstan, China, Australia, Tibet, China, Mexico, Brazil, and Egypt. In Iran, where some of the best stones are found, turquoise is the national gem. The American southwest-Nevada, Arizona, Colorado, New Mexico and California-are primary producers of turquoise. Much of the specimens have a light color, and are porous and chalky-only about 10% is of gem quality.

Its name is believed to originate from the French phrase “pierre turquoise” meaning “Turkish stone” because turquoise was brought to Europe by Venetian merchants who first acquired it in Turkish bazaars. It is also considered by some as a love charm. When received as a gift, the turquoise symbolizes a pledge of affection. Shakespeare used this lore in “The Merchant of Venice’. In it, Leah gave a turquoise ring to Shylock when he was a bachelor, hoping it would win his affections so he would ask her to marry him. In Russia, the turquoise is popularly used in wedding rings.

Turquoise is one of the earliest known stones to be used in jewelry. Pharaohs of Early Egypt wore them. A tomb excavated in 1900 contained the mummified remains of Queen Zer, who ruled in 5500 B.C.; found on her arm were four magnificent turquoise bracelets. Beads dating back to 5000 B.C. have been found in Mesopotamia (now Iraq). In Iran, turquoise was the national gemstone, adorning thrones, daggers, sword hilts, horse trappings, bowls, cups, and ornamental objects. Senior officials wore turquoise seals decorated with pearls and rubies. In the 7th century A.D., turquoise pieces inscribed with passages from the Koran and Persian proverbs were valued amulets. It was used as jewelry in ancient Siberia, around the Fifth and Sixth century B.C. During the Middle Ages, they were popularly used as decoration of vessels and covers for manuscripts. And it was again popular as jewelry during the Renaissance. It has also been found in ancient burial sites in Argentina, Bolivia, Chile, Peru, Mexico and Central America. The Incas crafted beads and figurines out of it, and the Aztecs made pendants and ritual masks.

Turquoise has a rich history in the American southwest. Native Americans have been using this gemstone to create magnificent jewelry and ornamental pieces for the past several thousand years. It was called “Chal-cui-hui-tal”, meaning “the highest and most valued thing in the world”. The Zuni, Hopi, Pueblo and Navajo Indians made magnificent necklaces, ear pendants and rings. The blue in turquoise symbolized the Heavens, and green symbolized the Earth. The stones were used by medicine men to work charms. The Navajo believed that turquoise pieces, thrown into a river while offering a prayer to the rain god, would bring much needed rain. Apache lore held that a turquoise attached to a bow or gun would ensure accurate aim.

There are many superstitions associated with the turquoise. In the Third century, it was believed to protect its owner from falling off a horse. A change in color revealed the infidelity of a wife. Twelfth century Arabian writings said “The turquoise shines when the air is pure and becomes pale when it is dim.” They also believed that its color changed with the weather. Persians said that the reflection of the new moon on a turquoise stone brought good luck, and guarded against evil. It was said to have a healing effect on the eye-merely looking at it strengthened the eye, while placing it on an inflamed eye brought a cure. A 15th century philosopher attributed its change of color to its ability to attract poisons. It was a barometer of its user’s health, turning pale in illness and losing color in death, yet regaining its original beauty in the hands of a new and healthy owner.

Photo credit:

Photo via Rob Lavinsky

Zircon

The alternate birthstone for December is the zircon.

Zircon, in its unchanged natural form appears colorless to pale yellow, or green. These colors are caused by minute quantities of thorium and uranium that replaces zircon in the crystal structure. But over the vast spans of geologic time, other forces work within the zirconium silicate crystals. The uranium and thorium inclusions emit radiation that alters the original crystal structure. A glass-like material is formed, with colors of red to brown, orange and yellow.

The mineral zircon, known as zirconium silicate, is commonly found as a minor constituent in igneous rock such as granites and some kinds of metamorphic rock. Gem quality zircon stones are usually rare. These gemstones are formed mainly in pegmatites (coarse-grained igneous rock) and in fissures. But due to weathering of the gem-bearing rocks, most zircons are found in alluvial and beach deposits.

A new blue color for zircon, called “starlight blue,” was created by heating golden brown or yellow zircon in the 1920s. From Gems and Crystals by Anna S. Sofianides and George E. Harlow:

In the 1920s, a new blue gemstone suddenly appeared in the market. Endowed with spectacular brilliance, it was an immediate hit.

The gems were zircons, normally brown to green – but not blue. George F. Kunz, the legendary Tiffany gemologist, immediately suspected trickery; not only were there extraordinary stones available in abundance but available all over the world! Upon Kunz’s behest, a colleague made inquiries during a trip to Siam (Thailand) and learned that a large deposit of unattractive brown zircon had stimulated color- improvement experimentation by local entrepreneurs. Heating in an oxygen-free environment had turned the drab material into “new” blue stones, which were sent to outlets worldwide. When the deception was revealed, the market simply accepted the information, and the demand for the new gems continued unabated.

The most prized zircon is the red gemstone, which is rare. The pure intense blue and sky blue varieties are also highly valued, while the colorless, orange, brown and yellow stones are less expensive. Many zircons on the market are heat treated, and sold as blue, golden brown or colorless stones. Colorless zircons are the best imitators of diamonds, in appearance only, with a brilliant fire that is almost as dazzling as the real thing. However, the resemblance is superficial. Zircon is a brittle stone, easily broken with a well-placed knock, due to internal stresses in the crystal caused by radiation damage and heat treatment. But despite its frail disposition, the stone is still highly valued because of its stunning beauty.

Major sources of zircon are the Chanthaburi area of Thailand, the Palin area of Cambodia and the southern part of Vietnam near the Cambodian border, where gemstones are found in alluvial deposits. Bangkok is well-known as a major center for processing zircons, where everything from heat treatment, cutting and marketing is carried out. Another important source is Sri Lanka, well known for a colorless variety of zircon called the ‘Matura diamond’. The gemstones are also found in Burma, France, Norway, Australia and Canada.

Its name is probably derived from the Arabic words “zar” and “gun”, meaning “gold” and “color”. The gemstone is found in a wide range of colors, and possess great brilliance, fire and clarity.
The hyacinth and jacinth, reddish-brown and orange-red varieties of zircon, were a favorite stone of ancient Arabs and was even mentioned in the famed book, ‘Arabian Nights’.

Green zircon was among the stones of the ‘Kalpa Tree’ of the Hindu religion, where it represented the tree’s foliage. This tree was a symbolic offering to the gods. Hindu poets of the 19th century described it as a glowing ensemble of precious stones that also included sapphires, diamonds and topaz.

Zircon was regarded as the amulet for travelers in the Eleventh century, protecting them from disease, injury, and insomnia, as well as assuring a cordial welcome wherever their travels would take them. The gem was also believed to hold magic powers to fight evil spirits. During the Fourteenth century, zircon was popular as a safeguard against the Black Death, the great plague that wiped out one quarter of the population of Europe. The stone was believed to possess healing powers. It was prescribed to insomniacs to induce sleep, used as an antidote against poison, and as an aid to digestion.

December’s birthstones are turquoise and zircon. Find out about the birthstones for all the months of the year:
January birthstone
February birthstone
March birthstone
April birthstone
May birthstone
June birthstone
July birthstone
August birthstone
September birthstone
October birthstone
November birthstone
December birthstone



from EarthSky http://ift.tt/2iE7zjg

turquoise

Turquoise

Turquoise is considered by some to be a symbol of good fortune and success, believed to bring prosperity to its wearer.

In the language of chemists and geologists, turquoise is known as “copper aluminum phosphate.” Turquoise is often found in weathered igneous rock that contains copper minerals, where it crystallizes in veins and nodules. The gemstone usually develops in rock near water tables, located in semiarid and arid environments. The chemicals in turquoise come from adjacent rock, leached out by rain and groundwater.

Turquoise is a relatively soft gemstone, and can be easily scratched and broken. This porous opaque stone is easily discolored by oil and pigments, and changes color when it loses some of its water content. A sky blue shade in turquoise is due to the presence of copper, while iron gives it a greener tone. Ochre and brown-black veins in the stone occur during the formation of turquoise, caused by inclusions from nearby rock fragments or from oxide staining. The most valued variety of turquoise is an intense sky blue color, like the color of a robin’s egg. Hard, relatively non-porous compact stones have the best appearance because the stone can be finely polished. Pale and chalky varieties however are sometimes impregnated with oil, paraffin, liquid plastic and glycerin to give it a good polish.

This stone can be found in Armenia, Kazakhstan, China, Australia, Tibet, China, Mexico, Brazil, and Egypt. In Iran, where some of the best stones are found, turquoise is the national gem. The American southwest-Nevada, Arizona, Colorado, New Mexico and California-are primary producers of turquoise. Much of the specimens have a light color, and are porous and chalky-only about 10% is of gem quality.

Its name is believed to originate from the French phrase “pierre turquoise” meaning “Turkish stone” because turquoise was brought to Europe by Venetian merchants who first acquired it in Turkish bazaars. It is also considered by some as a love charm. When received as a gift, the turquoise symbolizes a pledge of affection. Shakespeare used this lore in “The Merchant of Venice’. In it, Leah gave a turquoise ring to Shylock when he was a bachelor, hoping it would win his affections so he would ask her to marry him. In Russia, the turquoise is popularly used in wedding rings.

Turquoise is one of the earliest known stones to be used in jewelry. Pharaohs of Early Egypt wore them. A tomb excavated in 1900 contained the mummified remains of Queen Zer, who ruled in 5500 B.C.; found on her arm were four magnificent turquoise bracelets. Beads dating back to 5000 B.C. have been found in Mesopotamia (now Iraq). In Iran, turquoise was the national gemstone, adorning thrones, daggers, sword hilts, horse trappings, bowls, cups, and ornamental objects. Senior officials wore turquoise seals decorated with pearls and rubies. In the 7th century A.D., turquoise pieces inscribed with passages from the Koran and Persian proverbs were valued amulets. It was used as jewelry in ancient Siberia, around the Fifth and Sixth century B.C. During the Middle Ages, they were popularly used as decoration of vessels and covers for manuscripts. And it was again popular as jewelry during the Renaissance. It has also been found in ancient burial sites in Argentina, Bolivia, Chile, Peru, Mexico and Central America. The Incas crafted beads and figurines out of it, and the Aztecs made pendants and ritual masks.

Turquoise has a rich history in the American southwest. Native Americans have been using this gemstone to create magnificent jewelry and ornamental pieces for the past several thousand years. It was called “Chal-cui-hui-tal”, meaning “the highest and most valued thing in the world”. The Zuni, Hopi, Pueblo and Navajo Indians made magnificent necklaces, ear pendants and rings. The blue in turquoise symbolized the Heavens, and green symbolized the Earth. The stones were used by medicine men to work charms. The Navajo believed that turquoise pieces, thrown into a river while offering a prayer to the rain god, would bring much needed rain. Apache lore held that a turquoise attached to a bow or gun would ensure accurate aim.

There are many superstitions associated with the turquoise. In the Third century, it was believed to protect its owner from falling off a horse. A change in color revealed the infidelity of a wife. Twelfth century Arabian writings said “The turquoise shines when the air is pure and becomes pale when it is dim.” They also believed that its color changed with the weather. Persians said that the reflection of the new moon on a turquoise stone brought good luck, and guarded against evil. It was said to have a healing effect on the eye-merely looking at it strengthened the eye, while placing it on an inflamed eye brought a cure. A 15th century philosopher attributed its change of color to its ability to attract poisons. It was a barometer of its user’s health, turning pale in illness and losing color in death, yet regaining its original beauty in the hands of a new and healthy owner.

Photo credit:

Photo via Rob Lavinsky

Zircon

The alternate birthstone for December is the zircon.

Zircon, in its unchanged natural form appears colorless to pale yellow, or green. These colors are caused by minute quantities of thorium and uranium that replaces zircon in the crystal structure. But over the vast spans of geologic time, other forces work within the zirconium silicate crystals. The uranium and thorium inclusions emit radiation that alters the original crystal structure. A glass-like material is formed, with colors of red to brown, orange and yellow.

The mineral zircon, known as zirconium silicate, is commonly found as a minor constituent in igneous rock such as granites and some kinds of metamorphic rock. Gem quality zircon stones are usually rare. These gemstones are formed mainly in pegmatites (coarse-grained igneous rock) and in fissures. But due to weathering of the gem-bearing rocks, most zircons are found in alluvial and beach deposits.

A new blue color for zircon, called “starlight blue,” was created by heating golden brown or yellow zircon in the 1920s. From Gems and Crystals by Anna S. Sofianides and George E. Harlow:

In the 1920s, a new blue gemstone suddenly appeared in the market. Endowed with spectacular brilliance, it was an immediate hit.

The gems were zircons, normally brown to green – but not blue. George F. Kunz, the legendary Tiffany gemologist, immediately suspected trickery; not only were there extraordinary stones available in abundance but available all over the world! Upon Kunz’s behest, a colleague made inquiries during a trip to Siam (Thailand) and learned that a large deposit of unattractive brown zircon had stimulated color- improvement experimentation by local entrepreneurs. Heating in an oxygen-free environment had turned the drab material into “new” blue stones, which were sent to outlets worldwide. When the deception was revealed, the market simply accepted the information, and the demand for the new gems continued unabated.

The most prized zircon is the red gemstone, which is rare. The pure intense blue and sky blue varieties are also highly valued, while the colorless, orange, brown and yellow stones are less expensive. Many zircons on the market are heat treated, and sold as blue, golden brown or colorless stones. Colorless zircons are the best imitators of diamonds, in appearance only, with a brilliant fire that is almost as dazzling as the real thing. However, the resemblance is superficial. Zircon is a brittle stone, easily broken with a well-placed knock, due to internal stresses in the crystal caused by radiation damage and heat treatment. But despite its frail disposition, the stone is still highly valued because of its stunning beauty.

Major sources of zircon are the Chanthaburi area of Thailand, the Palin area of Cambodia and the southern part of Vietnam near the Cambodian border, where gemstones are found in alluvial deposits. Bangkok is well-known as a major center for processing zircons, where everything from heat treatment, cutting and marketing is carried out. Another important source is Sri Lanka, well known for a colorless variety of zircon called the ‘Matura diamond’. The gemstones are also found in Burma, France, Norway, Australia and Canada.

Its name is probably derived from the Arabic words “zar” and “gun”, meaning “gold” and “color”. The gemstone is found in a wide range of colors, and possess great brilliance, fire and clarity.
The hyacinth and jacinth, reddish-brown and orange-red varieties of zircon, were a favorite stone of ancient Arabs and was even mentioned in the famed book, ‘Arabian Nights’.

Green zircon was among the stones of the ‘Kalpa Tree’ of the Hindu religion, where it represented the tree’s foliage. This tree was a symbolic offering to the gods. Hindu poets of the 19th century described it as a glowing ensemble of precious stones that also included sapphires, diamonds and topaz.

Zircon was regarded as the amulet for travelers in the Eleventh century, protecting them from disease, injury, and insomnia, as well as assuring a cordial welcome wherever their travels would take them. The gem was also believed to hold magic powers to fight evil spirits. During the Fourteenth century, zircon was popular as a safeguard against the Black Death, the great plague that wiped out one quarter of the population of Europe. The stone was believed to possess healing powers. It was prescribed to insomniacs to induce sleep, used as an antidote against poison, and as an aid to digestion.

December’s birthstones are turquoise and zircon. Find out about the birthstones for all the months of the year:
January birthstone
February birthstone
March birthstone
April birthstone
May birthstone
June birthstone
July birthstone
August birthstone
September birthstone
October birthstone
November birthstone
December birthstone



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