aads

Insect apocalypse? Not so fast, at least in North America

A gray butterfly on green leaves.

The Texas frosted elfin (Callophrys irus hadros), a small butterfly subspecies found only in Arkansas, Texas, Oklahoma and Louisiana, has lost most of its prairie habitat and is thought to have dramatically declined over the last century. Image via Matthew D. Moran/ The Conversation.

By Matthew D. Moran, Hendrix College

In recent years, the notion of an insect apocalypse has become a hot topic in the conservation science community and has captured the public’s attention. Scientists who warn that this catastrophe is unfolding assert that arthropods – a large category of invertebrates that includes insects – are rapidly declining, perhaps signaling a general collapse of ecosystems across the world.

Starting around the year 2000, and more frequently since 2017, researchers have documented large population declines among moths, beetles, bees, butterflies and many other insect types. If verified, this trend would be of serious concern, especially considering that insects are important animals in almost all terrestrial environments.

But in a newly published study that I co-authored with 11 colleagues, we reviewed over 5,000 sets of data on arthropods across North America, covering thousands of species and dozens of habitats over decades of time. We found, in essence, no change in population sizes.

These results don’t mean that insects are fine. Indeed, I believe there is good evidence that some species of insects are in decline and in danger of extinction. But our findings indicate that overall, the idea of large-scale insect declines remains an open question.

The debate

For most scientists, the idea of disappearing insects is a foreboding prospect that would have harmful repercussions for all aspects of life on Earth, including human well-being.

But some scholars were skeptical of the reported insect apocalypse. A number of studies that showed broad declines were limited geographically, focusing mainly on Europe. Typically these studies analyzed only a few species or groups of species.


Insects have evolved adaptations that enable them to live in a huge range of environments around the globe.

Some particularly long-running assessments showed that declines in the past 30 years occurred after periods when the relevant insect populations increased. Many insect populations are known to naturally fluctuate, sometimes dramatically.

Many scientists concluded that while the prospect of mass insect losses was concerning, the jury was still out on what was actually happening.

Spotlighting North America

Ecologist Bill Snyder and I thought that the studies suggesting widespread insect die-offs produced an intriguing pattern with important ramifications, but that the evidence wasn’t strong enough yet to draw conclusions. We wanted to examine what was happening in North America, which has an immensely diverse landscape and, surprisingly to us, had not been broadly analyzed for insect declines.

For our study, we decided to use data from sites in the Long Term Ecological Research network, which is supported by the National Science Foundation. The network includes 28 sites across the U.S. that have been studied in depth since the 1980s, and covers deserts, mountains, prairies and forests. With almost 40 years of data collected, we hoped trends at these sites would be a good complement to European insect studies.

Green, yellow, and black striped hairless caterpillar hanging from a stick.

Monarch Butterfly (Danaus plexippus) larva preparing to pupate, or transform physically into a butterfly. This highly migratory species has declined across parts of its North American range in recent years. Image via Matthew Moran/ The Conversation.

We put together a 12-person team that included six undergraduate students, post-doctoral scholars Michael Scott Crossley and Amanda Meier, and colleagues from the U.S. Department of Agriculture. When we finished compiling our data sets, at least some of us expected to see broad insect declines.

Instead, the results left us perplexed. Some species we considered declined, while others increased. But by far the most common result for a species at a particular site was no significant change. The vast majority of our species had stable numbers.

At first we thought we were missing something. We tried comparing different taxonomic groups, such as beetles and butterflies, and different types of feeding, such as herbivores and carnivores. We tried comparing urban, agricultural and relatively undisturbed areas. We tried comparing different habitats and different periods of time.

But the answer remained the same: no change. We had to conclude that at the sites we examined, there were no signs of an insect apocalypse and, in reality, no broad declines at all.

Two young women and a young man in field collecting insects with a large tube.

Students from Matthew Moran’s laboratory at Hendrix College sampling insects in a natural prairie in Arkansas using a suction machine. Studies like these help scientist gather long-term data on insect populations. Image via Matthew Moran/ The Conversation.

Explaining continental differences

We are confident in our analysis and our conclusion, but a more important question is why our results are so different from those of other recent studies. I see two potential explanations: location and publication bias.

As I have noted, most insect decline papers have come from European data. Indeed, Europe has better and more extensive long-term data than other parts of the world. It is also one of the most densely populated parts of the world – three times higher than North America.

Moreover, almost all of Europe’s land has been modified for human use. Agriculture is widespread and intense, and cities and suburban areas cover large swaths of the landscape. So perhaps it is unsurprising that Europe has also lost a larger proportion of its wild creatures compared to North America.

Publication bias is not about dishonesty or false results. It refers to the idea that more dramatic results are more publishable. Reviewers and journals are more likely to be interested in species that are disappearing than in species that show no change over time.

The result is that over time, declining species can become overrepresented in the literature. Then, when scholars go looking for papers on animal populations, declines are predominantly what they find.

We selected Long-Term Ecological Research sites for our analysis in part because they had “raw” data available that had not been peer reviewed for publication and were not collected in anticipation of finding declines. Rather, scientists amassed these data to monitor ecosystems and observe trends over time. In other words, it was unbiased data. And because the data sets were so varied, they covered a broad range of species and habitats.

The future of insects

Our study will not be the final answer. As the human population continues to grow and appropriates an ever larger share of the world’s land, water, space and biomass, other species can only retreat and survive with fewer resources. I have no doubt that every time a forest is cut, a prairie is plowed or a field is paved, the world loses some of its animal and plant life.

Quantifying this process will require more monitoring, more conservation biologists working in the field and more awareness of how human actions affect Earth’s biodiversity. But it may be possible that insects, who have survived for millions of years through a great many biological catastrophes, are finding a way to survive our presence too.

Matthew D. Moran, Professor of Biology, Hendrix College

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

Bottom line: Although recent reports of dramatic declines in insect populations have sparked concern about an ‘insect apocalypse.’ a new analysis of data from sites across North America suggests the case isn’t proven.

The Conversation



from EarthSky https://ift.tt/3iDp8cD
A gray butterfly on green leaves.

The Texas frosted elfin (Callophrys irus hadros), a small butterfly subspecies found only in Arkansas, Texas, Oklahoma and Louisiana, has lost most of its prairie habitat and is thought to have dramatically declined over the last century. Image via Matthew D. Moran/ The Conversation.

By Matthew D. Moran, Hendrix College

In recent years, the notion of an insect apocalypse has become a hot topic in the conservation science community and has captured the public’s attention. Scientists who warn that this catastrophe is unfolding assert that arthropods – a large category of invertebrates that includes insects – are rapidly declining, perhaps signaling a general collapse of ecosystems across the world.

Starting around the year 2000, and more frequently since 2017, researchers have documented large population declines among moths, beetles, bees, butterflies and many other insect types. If verified, this trend would be of serious concern, especially considering that insects are important animals in almost all terrestrial environments.

But in a newly published study that I co-authored with 11 colleagues, we reviewed over 5,000 sets of data on arthropods across North America, covering thousands of species and dozens of habitats over decades of time. We found, in essence, no change in population sizes.

These results don’t mean that insects are fine. Indeed, I believe there is good evidence that some species of insects are in decline and in danger of extinction. But our findings indicate that overall, the idea of large-scale insect declines remains an open question.

The debate

For most scientists, the idea of disappearing insects is a foreboding prospect that would have harmful repercussions for all aspects of life on Earth, including human well-being.

But some scholars were skeptical of the reported insect apocalypse. A number of studies that showed broad declines were limited geographically, focusing mainly on Europe. Typically these studies analyzed only a few species or groups of species.


Insects have evolved adaptations that enable them to live in a huge range of environments around the globe.

Some particularly long-running assessments showed that declines in the past 30 years occurred after periods when the relevant insect populations increased. Many insect populations are known to naturally fluctuate, sometimes dramatically.

Many scientists concluded that while the prospect of mass insect losses was concerning, the jury was still out on what was actually happening.

Spotlighting North America

Ecologist Bill Snyder and I thought that the studies suggesting widespread insect die-offs produced an intriguing pattern with important ramifications, but that the evidence wasn’t strong enough yet to draw conclusions. We wanted to examine what was happening in North America, which has an immensely diverse landscape and, surprisingly to us, had not been broadly analyzed for insect declines.

For our study, we decided to use data from sites in the Long Term Ecological Research network, which is supported by the National Science Foundation. The network includes 28 sites across the U.S. that have been studied in depth since the 1980s, and covers deserts, mountains, prairies and forests. With almost 40 years of data collected, we hoped trends at these sites would be a good complement to European insect studies.

Green, yellow, and black striped hairless caterpillar hanging from a stick.

Monarch Butterfly (Danaus plexippus) larva preparing to pupate, or transform physically into a butterfly. This highly migratory species has declined across parts of its North American range in recent years. Image via Matthew Moran/ The Conversation.

We put together a 12-person team that included six undergraduate students, post-doctoral scholars Michael Scott Crossley and Amanda Meier, and colleagues from the U.S. Department of Agriculture. When we finished compiling our data sets, at least some of us expected to see broad insect declines.

Instead, the results left us perplexed. Some species we considered declined, while others increased. But by far the most common result for a species at a particular site was no significant change. The vast majority of our species had stable numbers.

At first we thought we were missing something. We tried comparing different taxonomic groups, such as beetles and butterflies, and different types of feeding, such as herbivores and carnivores. We tried comparing urban, agricultural and relatively undisturbed areas. We tried comparing different habitats and different periods of time.

But the answer remained the same: no change. We had to conclude that at the sites we examined, there were no signs of an insect apocalypse and, in reality, no broad declines at all.

Two young women and a young man in field collecting insects with a large tube.

Students from Matthew Moran’s laboratory at Hendrix College sampling insects in a natural prairie in Arkansas using a suction machine. Studies like these help scientist gather long-term data on insect populations. Image via Matthew Moran/ The Conversation.

Explaining continental differences

We are confident in our analysis and our conclusion, but a more important question is why our results are so different from those of other recent studies. I see two potential explanations: location and publication bias.

As I have noted, most insect decline papers have come from European data. Indeed, Europe has better and more extensive long-term data than other parts of the world. It is also one of the most densely populated parts of the world – three times higher than North America.

Moreover, almost all of Europe’s land has been modified for human use. Agriculture is widespread and intense, and cities and suburban areas cover large swaths of the landscape. So perhaps it is unsurprising that Europe has also lost a larger proportion of its wild creatures compared to North America.

Publication bias is not about dishonesty or false results. It refers to the idea that more dramatic results are more publishable. Reviewers and journals are more likely to be interested in species that are disappearing than in species that show no change over time.

The result is that over time, declining species can become overrepresented in the literature. Then, when scholars go looking for papers on animal populations, declines are predominantly what they find.

We selected Long-Term Ecological Research sites for our analysis in part because they had “raw” data available that had not been peer reviewed for publication and were not collected in anticipation of finding declines. Rather, scientists amassed these data to monitor ecosystems and observe trends over time. In other words, it was unbiased data. And because the data sets were so varied, they covered a broad range of species and habitats.

The future of insects

Our study will not be the final answer. As the human population continues to grow and appropriates an ever larger share of the world’s land, water, space and biomass, other species can only retreat and survive with fewer resources. I have no doubt that every time a forest is cut, a prairie is plowed or a field is paved, the world loses some of its animal and plant life.

Quantifying this process will require more monitoring, more conservation biologists working in the field and more awareness of how human actions affect Earth’s biodiversity. But it may be possible that insects, who have survived for millions of years through a great many biological catastrophes, are finding a way to survive our presence too.

Matthew D. Moran, Professor of Biology, Hendrix College

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

Bottom line: Although recent reports of dramatic declines in insect populations have sparked concern about an ‘insect apocalypse.’ a new analysis of data from sites across North America suggests the case isn’t proven.

The Conversation



from EarthSky https://ift.tt/3iDp8cD

Hello, sunrise!

Sunrise over a frozen landscape, with 2 researchers looking on reverently.

The European Space Agency (ESA) released this image this week. Captured on August 11, 2020, it celebrates the sunrise at Concordia research station in Antarctica, after 4 months of darkness. On the left is medical doctor Stijn Thoolen. On the right is engineer Wenceslas Marie-Sainte. They are part of the 12-member crew spending an entire year at Concordia. Image via ESA.

Concordia Research Station is a French–Italian facility, open since 2005, at a location called Dome C on the Antarctic Plateau. It’s 10,607 feet (3,233 meters) above sea level and about 1,000 miles (1,600 km) from the geographic South Pole (where the U.S. Amundsen–Scott South Pole Station has been permanently staffed since 1956). The researchers at Concordia were understandably excited this week when the sun rose there for the first time in four months, ending the winter darkness.

Read more about this photo from ESA

A map of Antarctica, with Dome C's location marked by a red dot.

Location of Dome C in Antarctica, site of Concordia Research Station, via Wikimedia Commons.

Bottom line: Photo from ESA of the first sunrise in four months at Concordia Research Station in Antarctica.

Via ESA



from EarthSky https://ift.tt/3fWY5Hi
Sunrise over a frozen landscape, with 2 researchers looking on reverently.

The European Space Agency (ESA) released this image this week. Captured on August 11, 2020, it celebrates the sunrise at Concordia research station in Antarctica, after 4 months of darkness. On the left is medical doctor Stijn Thoolen. On the right is engineer Wenceslas Marie-Sainte. They are part of the 12-member crew spending an entire year at Concordia. Image via ESA.

Concordia Research Station is a French–Italian facility, open since 2005, at a location called Dome C on the Antarctic Plateau. It’s 10,607 feet (3,233 meters) above sea level and about 1,000 miles (1,600 km) from the geographic South Pole (where the U.S. Amundsen–Scott South Pole Station has been permanently staffed since 1956). The researchers at Concordia were understandably excited this week when the sun rose there for the first time in four months, ending the winter darkness.

Read more about this photo from ESA

A map of Antarctica, with Dome C's location marked by a red dot.

Location of Dome C in Antarctica, site of Concordia Research Station, via Wikimedia Commons.

Bottom line: Photo from ESA of the first sunrise in four months at Concordia Research Station in Antarctica.

Via ESA



from EarthSky https://ift.tt/3fWY5Hi

Spectacular! Moon and Venus before sunrise August 14 to 16

EarthSky’s yearly crowd-funding campaign is in progress. In 2020, we are donating 8.5% to No Kids Hungry. Please donate to help us keep going, and help feed a kid!

Before sunrise on August 14, 15 and 16, 2020, watch for the waning crescent moon to pair up with the dazzling planet Venus in the predawn sky. Even as dawn breaks, it’ll be hard to miss these two brilliant and beautiful celestial bodies. If you’re watching in early morning darkness – especially if you’re in a rural location – you might also see a sprinkling of Perseid meteors, although the Perseid shower is past its peak now and the meteors numbers are falling off rapidly.

The sky chart above shows the moon and Venus as they appear at mid-northern latitudes in North America. For a specific view from your particular location on the globe on these mornings, try Stellarium.

Keep in mind that the moon appears larger in our chart than it will in your actual sky. But, no matter where you live, the moon will be in the vicinity of Venus on all three dates: August 14, 15 and 16. And no matter where you live, the moon travels in front of the constellations of the zodiac at the rate of about 1/2 degree (the moon’s own angular diameter) eastward per hour, or about 13 degrees eastward per day.

Find out which constellation of the zodiac is presently behind the moon via Heavens-Above.

A bright planet shining over an Arizona landscape, in a slate-blue sky with low pink dawn clouds.

View at EarthSky Community Photos. | Eliot Herman in Tucson, Arizona, caught brilliant Venus before sunrise on August 7, 2020. Do you see the constellation Orion the Hunter to Venus’ upper right? Eliot wrote: “Rare event: Venus traversing Orion’s club over the Tucson, Arizona, foothills. Predawn 4:30 a.m. This occurs once every 8 years on August 7. Next time in 2028. This scene follows the every 8-year interval of Venus transiting the Pleiades in April. See: flic.kr/p/2iM3tG2.” Thank you, Eliot!

With the moon there to assist you, this is a great time to look for Venus in a daytime sky. Sharped-eyed people can pick out Venus in a daytime sky with the unaided eye. Want to try your luck? First look for the moon, then seek out Venus. Or aim binoculars at the moon to view Venus nearby. A typical binocular field spans about 5 degrees of sky. From a whole-Earth perspective, the moon will pass 4 degrees north of Venus on August 15 at about 13:00 UTC. This is a great month for viewing Venus in daylight, because Venus reached its greatest elongation from the sun (45.8 degrees west) on August 13.

Although the moon and Venus appear close together on the sky’s dome, they are not truly close together in space. At the time that the moon swings by Venus, the moon will be very close to its average distance from Earth (238,855 miles or 384,400 km). Venus, at a distance of about 0.73 astronomical units (one astronomical unit = sun/Earth distance), is over 280 times the moon’s distance from Earth.

Find out the moon’s present distance from Earth via The Moon Tonight.

Find out Venus’ present distance from Earth and the sun via Heavens-Above.

A small, featureless 'half moon,' really the planet Venus.

View at EarthSky Community Photos. | Aurelian Neacsu in Visina, Dambovita, Romania, captured Venus appearing approximately half-illuminated (48.5% illuminated) on August 10, 2020. Thank you, Aurelian!

Because Venus is an inferior planet – a planet that orbits the sun inside Earth’s orbit – Venus goes through phases, like our moon. However, you need to use a telescope to see Venus’ phases.

You might think that the moon and Venus should display a similar phase in the morning sky, given that these two luminaries are nearly on the same line of sight. But no, that is not the case. As the moon sweeps by Venus, the waning crescent moon will be about 15% illuminated by sunshine, whereas Venus will be just a touch past (51% illuminated) its half-illuminated first quarter phase.

Whenever you see the moon and Venus together in the morning sky, the moon is always waning while Venus is always waxing. The converse is also true: whenever you see the moon with Venus in the evening sky, the moon is always waxing while Venus is always waning. That’s because the moon orbits Earth whereas Venus orbits the sun.

Diagram of Earth showing moon at 8 different phases around it.

A quarter moon takes place whenever the sun-Earth-moon angle makes a right angle in space, with our planet Earth being at the vertex of this right angle. Image via Wikipedia.

When the moon is at first or last quarter phase, the sun-Earth-moon makes a 90-degree right angle in space, with Earth at the vertex of this right angle. (See illustration above.) On the other hand, when Venus is at first or last quarter phase, the sun-Venus-Earth also forms a 90-degree right angle in space, except that it’s Venus that’s at the vertex of the right angle. (See below.)

Diagram of Earth and Venus orbits with dotted lines going from Earth to two positions of Venus.

Bird’s-eye view of the sun, Earth and Venus as viewed from the north side of the solar system. From this vantage point, both Venus and Earth orbit the sun counterclockwise. When Venus is at or near greatest elongation, Venus makes a right angle with the Earth and sun. Diagram via Dominic Ford.

Bottom line: Enjoy the moon and Venus as they beautify the morning sky in mid-August 2020!



from EarthSky https://ift.tt/3gTGmCf

EarthSky’s yearly crowd-funding campaign is in progress. In 2020, we are donating 8.5% to No Kids Hungry. Please donate to help us keep going, and help feed a kid!

Before sunrise on August 14, 15 and 16, 2020, watch for the waning crescent moon to pair up with the dazzling planet Venus in the predawn sky. Even as dawn breaks, it’ll be hard to miss these two brilliant and beautiful celestial bodies. If you’re watching in early morning darkness – especially if you’re in a rural location – you might also see a sprinkling of Perseid meteors, although the Perseid shower is past its peak now and the meteors numbers are falling off rapidly.

The sky chart above shows the moon and Venus as they appear at mid-northern latitudes in North America. For a specific view from your particular location on the globe on these mornings, try Stellarium.

Keep in mind that the moon appears larger in our chart than it will in your actual sky. But, no matter where you live, the moon will be in the vicinity of Venus on all three dates: August 14, 15 and 16. And no matter where you live, the moon travels in front of the constellations of the zodiac at the rate of about 1/2 degree (the moon’s own angular diameter) eastward per hour, or about 13 degrees eastward per day.

Find out which constellation of the zodiac is presently behind the moon via Heavens-Above.

A bright planet shining over an Arizona landscape, in a slate-blue sky with low pink dawn clouds.

View at EarthSky Community Photos. | Eliot Herman in Tucson, Arizona, caught brilliant Venus before sunrise on August 7, 2020. Do you see the constellation Orion the Hunter to Venus’ upper right? Eliot wrote: “Rare event: Venus traversing Orion’s club over the Tucson, Arizona, foothills. Predawn 4:30 a.m. This occurs once every 8 years on August 7. Next time in 2028. This scene follows the every 8-year interval of Venus transiting the Pleiades in April. See: flic.kr/p/2iM3tG2.” Thank you, Eliot!

With the moon there to assist you, this is a great time to look for Venus in a daytime sky. Sharped-eyed people can pick out Venus in a daytime sky with the unaided eye. Want to try your luck? First look for the moon, then seek out Venus. Or aim binoculars at the moon to view Venus nearby. A typical binocular field spans about 5 degrees of sky. From a whole-Earth perspective, the moon will pass 4 degrees north of Venus on August 15 at about 13:00 UTC. This is a great month for viewing Venus in daylight, because Venus reached its greatest elongation from the sun (45.8 degrees west) on August 13.

Although the moon and Venus appear close together on the sky’s dome, they are not truly close together in space. At the time that the moon swings by Venus, the moon will be very close to its average distance from Earth (238,855 miles or 384,400 km). Venus, at a distance of about 0.73 astronomical units (one astronomical unit = sun/Earth distance), is over 280 times the moon’s distance from Earth.

Find out the moon’s present distance from Earth via The Moon Tonight.

Find out Venus’ present distance from Earth and the sun via Heavens-Above.

A small, featureless 'half moon,' really the planet Venus.

View at EarthSky Community Photos. | Aurelian Neacsu in Visina, Dambovita, Romania, captured Venus appearing approximately half-illuminated (48.5% illuminated) on August 10, 2020. Thank you, Aurelian!

Because Venus is an inferior planet – a planet that orbits the sun inside Earth’s orbit – Venus goes through phases, like our moon. However, you need to use a telescope to see Venus’ phases.

You might think that the moon and Venus should display a similar phase in the morning sky, given that these two luminaries are nearly on the same line of sight. But no, that is not the case. As the moon sweeps by Venus, the waning crescent moon will be about 15% illuminated by sunshine, whereas Venus will be just a touch past (51% illuminated) its half-illuminated first quarter phase.

Whenever you see the moon and Venus together in the morning sky, the moon is always waning while Venus is always waxing. The converse is also true: whenever you see the moon with Venus in the evening sky, the moon is always waxing while Venus is always waning. That’s because the moon orbits Earth whereas Venus orbits the sun.

Diagram of Earth showing moon at 8 different phases around it.

A quarter moon takes place whenever the sun-Earth-moon angle makes a right angle in space, with our planet Earth being at the vertex of this right angle. Image via Wikipedia.

When the moon is at first or last quarter phase, the sun-Earth-moon makes a 90-degree right angle in space, with Earth at the vertex of this right angle. (See illustration above.) On the other hand, when Venus is at first or last quarter phase, the sun-Venus-Earth also forms a 90-degree right angle in space, except that it’s Venus that’s at the vertex of the right angle. (See below.)

Diagram of Earth and Venus orbits with dotted lines going from Earth to two positions of Venus.

Bird’s-eye view of the sun, Earth and Venus as viewed from the north side of the solar system. From this vantage point, both Venus and Earth orbit the sun counterclockwise. When Venus is at or near greatest elongation, Venus makes a right angle with the Earth and sun. Diagram via Dominic Ford.

Bottom line: Enjoy the moon and Venus as they beautify the morning sky in mid-August 2020!



from EarthSky https://ift.tt/3gTGmCf

Astronomers spy a Milky Way look-alike 12 billion light-years away

EarthSky’s yearly crowd-funding campaign is in progress. In 2020, we are donating 8.5% to No Kids Hungry. Please donate to help us keep going, and help feed a kid!

Using the ALMA telescope in Chile, astronomers say they’ve found an extremely distant and therefore very young galaxy that surprised them by looking so much like our Milky Way. The galaxy is 12 billion light-years away. Thus we see the galaxy as it was 12 billion years ago, when – according to recent estimates of our universe’s age – the universe was only 1.4 billion years old. The galaxy is called SPT0418-47. It doesn’t appear to have spiral arms as our Milky Way does, these astronomers said, but it has two other features reminiscent of our Milky Way. It has a rotating disk, thought to be similar to the flat disk of our own galaxy, in which our own sun revolves around the galactic center. And it has a galactic bulge, a large group of stars packed tightly its center. This is the first time a bulge has been seen this early in the history of the universe, making SPT0418-47 the most distant Milky Way look-alike.

That’s surprising, these astronomers said, because they’d have expected galaxies at this point in the young universe to be “turbulent and unstable,” not organized enough to have disks and bulges. The astronomers’ statement said:

This unexpected discovery challenges our understanding of how galaxies form, giving new insights into the past of our universe.

Francesca Rizzo of the Max Planck Institute for Astrophysics in Germany led the research, which was published August 12, 2020, in the peer-reviewed journal Nature. Rizzo said in a statement:

This result represents a breakthrough in the field of galaxy formation, showing that the structures that we observe in nearby spiral galaxies and in our Milky Way were already in place 12 billion years ago.

The astronomers added that studying distant galaxies like SPT0418-47 is fundamental to our understanding of how galaxies formed and evolved.

Orange and yellow narrow ring on black.

In this ALMA image, the galaxy SPT0418-47 appears as a near-perfect ring of light. That’s because this image was obtained via gravitational lensing, a process involving a second massive galaxy between us and the more distant galaxy. The gravity of the intervening galaxy causes the light of the more distant galaxy to bend: hence, the ring. What is the more distant galaxy’s true shape? See the image below. Image via ESO.

Oblong orange blue with yellow-white center.

This image represents the distant galaxy’s true shape, as revealed by computer modeling that incorporated data from the lensed image and other observations of the galaxy. Image via ALMA/ ESO/ NAOJ/ NRAO/ Rizzo et al.

In their statement, the astronomers explained how they were able to see SPT0418-47 despite its distance of 12 billion light-years:

Because these galaxies are so far away, detailed observations with even the most powerful telescopes are almost impossible as the galaxies appear small and faint. The team overcame this obstacle by using a nearby galaxy as a powerful magnifying glass – an effect known as gravitational lensing – allowing ALMA to see into the distant past in unprecedented detail. In this effect, the gravitational pull from the nearby galaxy distorts and bends the light from the distant galaxy, causing it to appear misshapen and magnified.

The gravitationally lensed, distant galaxy appears as a near-perfect ring of light around the nearby galaxy, thanks to their almost exact alignment. The research team reconstructed the distant galaxy’s true shape and the motion of its gas from the ALMA data using a new computer modeling technique.

Rizzo added:

When I first saw the reconstructed image of SPT0418-47 I could not believe it: a treasure chest was opening.

Simona Vegetti, also from the Max Planck Institute for Astrophysics, is a study co-author. Vegetti said:

What we found was quite puzzling; despite forming stars at a high rate, and therefore being the site of highly energetic processes, SPT0418-47 is the most well-ordered galaxy disc ever observed in the early universe. This result is quite unexpected and has important implications for how we think galaxies evolve.

Will SPT0418-47 evolve into another Milky Way? These astronomers said they don’t think so. They said they expect it to evolve into a galaxy very different from our Milky Way, and to join the class of elliptical galaxies, which lack spiral arms, instead appearing a bit like American footballs.

Bottom line: Astronomers would have expected a galaxy seen at a distance of 12 billion light-years to be “turbulent and unstable.” They were surprised to find one – labeled SPT0418-47 – with a disk and bulge similar to our Milky Way. They say this galaxy is the most distant Milky Way look-alike yet found.

Source: A dynamically cold disk galaxy in the early Universe

Via ESO



from EarthSky https://ift.tt/3gWvUtx

EarthSky’s yearly crowd-funding campaign is in progress. In 2020, we are donating 8.5% to No Kids Hungry. Please donate to help us keep going, and help feed a kid!

Using the ALMA telescope in Chile, astronomers say they’ve found an extremely distant and therefore very young galaxy that surprised them by looking so much like our Milky Way. The galaxy is 12 billion light-years away. Thus we see the galaxy as it was 12 billion years ago, when – according to recent estimates of our universe’s age – the universe was only 1.4 billion years old. The galaxy is called SPT0418-47. It doesn’t appear to have spiral arms as our Milky Way does, these astronomers said, but it has two other features reminiscent of our Milky Way. It has a rotating disk, thought to be similar to the flat disk of our own galaxy, in which our own sun revolves around the galactic center. And it has a galactic bulge, a large group of stars packed tightly its center. This is the first time a bulge has been seen this early in the history of the universe, making SPT0418-47 the most distant Milky Way look-alike.

That’s surprising, these astronomers said, because they’d have expected galaxies at this point in the young universe to be “turbulent and unstable,” not organized enough to have disks and bulges. The astronomers’ statement said:

This unexpected discovery challenges our understanding of how galaxies form, giving new insights into the past of our universe.

Francesca Rizzo of the Max Planck Institute for Astrophysics in Germany led the research, which was published August 12, 2020, in the peer-reviewed journal Nature. Rizzo said in a statement:

This result represents a breakthrough in the field of galaxy formation, showing that the structures that we observe in nearby spiral galaxies and in our Milky Way were already in place 12 billion years ago.

The astronomers added that studying distant galaxies like SPT0418-47 is fundamental to our understanding of how galaxies formed and evolved.

Orange and yellow narrow ring on black.

In this ALMA image, the galaxy SPT0418-47 appears as a near-perfect ring of light. That’s because this image was obtained via gravitational lensing, a process involving a second massive galaxy between us and the more distant galaxy. The gravity of the intervening galaxy causes the light of the more distant galaxy to bend: hence, the ring. What is the more distant galaxy’s true shape? See the image below. Image via ESO.

Oblong orange blue with yellow-white center.

This image represents the distant galaxy’s true shape, as revealed by computer modeling that incorporated data from the lensed image and other observations of the galaxy. Image via ALMA/ ESO/ NAOJ/ NRAO/ Rizzo et al.

In their statement, the astronomers explained how they were able to see SPT0418-47 despite its distance of 12 billion light-years:

Because these galaxies are so far away, detailed observations with even the most powerful telescopes are almost impossible as the galaxies appear small and faint. The team overcame this obstacle by using a nearby galaxy as a powerful magnifying glass – an effect known as gravitational lensing – allowing ALMA to see into the distant past in unprecedented detail. In this effect, the gravitational pull from the nearby galaxy distorts and bends the light from the distant galaxy, causing it to appear misshapen and magnified.

The gravitationally lensed, distant galaxy appears as a near-perfect ring of light around the nearby galaxy, thanks to their almost exact alignment. The research team reconstructed the distant galaxy’s true shape and the motion of its gas from the ALMA data using a new computer modeling technique.

Rizzo added:

When I first saw the reconstructed image of SPT0418-47 I could not believe it: a treasure chest was opening.

Simona Vegetti, also from the Max Planck Institute for Astrophysics, is a study co-author. Vegetti said:

What we found was quite puzzling; despite forming stars at a high rate, and therefore being the site of highly energetic processes, SPT0418-47 is the most well-ordered galaxy disc ever observed in the early universe. This result is quite unexpected and has important implications for how we think galaxies evolve.

Will SPT0418-47 evolve into another Milky Way? These astronomers said they don’t think so. They said they expect it to evolve into a galaxy very different from our Milky Way, and to join the class of elliptical galaxies, which lack spiral arms, instead appearing a bit like American footballs.

Bottom line: Astronomers would have expected a galaxy seen at a distance of 12 billion light-years to be “turbulent and unstable.” They were surprised to find one – labeled SPT0418-47 – with a disk and bulge similar to our Milky Way. They say this galaxy is the most distant Milky Way look-alike yet found.

Source: A dynamically cold disk galaxy in the early Universe

Via ESO



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Favorite photos from 2020’s Perseid meteor shower

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Peak Perseid mornings: August 11, 12, 13

Meteor in a dark sky.

View at EarthSky Community Photos. | Jorge Colomer in Trujillo Alto, Puerto Rico took this photo on August 12, 2020 at 4:45 a.m. He said: “I love meteor showers and that great space. Very happy to get this Perseid meteor flying into planet Venus and above some palm trees.”

View at EarthSky Community Photos. | Photo by Aaron Robinson in Blackfoot, Idaho, 3:06 a.m. on August 12, 2020.

View at EarthSky Community Photos. | Riste Spiroski captured this Perseid meteor from Ohrid, Macedonia on August 10,2020. Riste said, “The photo was shot at around 11:30 pm, earlier than we ever photographed a meteor shower. We had to go earlier because the moon was rising at around 12:15 am and we only had like 4 hours to enjoy the dark sky. We were photographing for less than 2 hours and I can say that the peak is going to be great. We saw more than 10 good meteors in less than an hour.”

Two thin white stripes in the night sky.

View at EarthSky Community Photos. | Gary Quest in Devon, U.K., captured this image on August 10, 2020. He said: “Camera set using intervalometer from my back garden, looking northeast. This is 1 image, not stacked images, 20s exposure. That’s why I was extremely excited to see 2 meteors side by side and another very faint one on the horizontal plane below and right.”

Steve Pauken captured a Perseid meteor on Saturday (August 8, 2020) over Bisbee, Arizona.

Meteor streaking above a treeline.

View at EarthSky Community Photos. | Phil Seeney in Cambridge UK caught this meteor on August 6, 2020. He wrote: “Encouraged by your articles, I thought I would try ‘astrophotography’ for the first time. Trying to capture a Perseid, but caught this other meteor passing through the Great Bear. I did manage 2 other Perseids as well!” Thank you, Phil! Perhaps you know about the other meteor shower that runs along concurrently with the Perseids? The meteors radiate from a different part of the sky. The shower is called the Delta Aquarids.

Bottom line: Photos of the Perseid meteor shower in August 2020



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Share you meteor photos with us here1

Peak Perseid mornings: August 11, 12, 13

Meteor in a dark sky.

View at EarthSky Community Photos. | Jorge Colomer in Trujillo Alto, Puerto Rico took this photo on August 12, 2020 at 4:45 a.m. He said: “I love meteor showers and that great space. Very happy to get this Perseid meteor flying into planet Venus and above some palm trees.”

View at EarthSky Community Photos. | Photo by Aaron Robinson in Blackfoot, Idaho, 3:06 a.m. on August 12, 2020.

View at EarthSky Community Photos. | Riste Spiroski captured this Perseid meteor from Ohrid, Macedonia on August 10,2020. Riste said, “The photo was shot at around 11:30 pm, earlier than we ever photographed a meteor shower. We had to go earlier because the moon was rising at around 12:15 am and we only had like 4 hours to enjoy the dark sky. We were photographing for less than 2 hours and I can say that the peak is going to be great. We saw more than 10 good meteors in less than an hour.”

Two thin white stripes in the night sky.

View at EarthSky Community Photos. | Gary Quest in Devon, U.K., captured this image on August 10, 2020. He said: “Camera set using intervalometer from my back garden, looking northeast. This is 1 image, not stacked images, 20s exposure. That’s why I was extremely excited to see 2 meteors side by side and another very faint one on the horizontal plane below and right.”

Steve Pauken captured a Perseid meteor on Saturday (August 8, 2020) over Bisbee, Arizona.

Meteor streaking above a treeline.

View at EarthSky Community Photos. | Phil Seeney in Cambridge UK caught this meteor on August 6, 2020. He wrote: “Encouraged by your articles, I thought I would try ‘astrophotography’ for the first time. Trying to capture a Perseid, but caught this other meteor passing through the Great Bear. I did manage 2 other Perseids as well!” Thank you, Phil! Perhaps you know about the other meteor shower that runs along concurrently with the Perseids? The meteors radiate from a different part of the sky. The shower is called the Delta Aquarids.

Bottom line: Photos of the Perseid meteor shower in August 2020



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Visualize the Perseid meteor stream in space

Diagram of Earth orbit with an arc of debris following a narrow elliptical path intersecting it.

Perseid meteor stream visualization. It looks blurry because it’s a screen shot from a video. Be sure to click into the interactive page; it’s awesome! Visualization via Ian Webster.

EarthSky’s yearly crowd-funding campaign is in progress. In 2020, we are donating 8.5% to No Kids Hungry. Please donate to help us keep going, and help feed a kid!

This visualization uses NASA data to render known Perseid meteoroids as they move through the space of our solar system. What’s a meteoroid? It’s simply the name for a bit of debris in space before it has entered Earth’s atmosphere and vaporized, thereby becoming a meteor or fiery streak in our night sky. Meteors originate in the bodies of comets. The Perseids, in particular, come from Comet Swift-Tuttle, which last visited the inner solar system in 1992. Ian Webster developed this visualization of the Perseid meteor stream in space, using meteor data provided by Peter Jenniskens. The visualization was created with the help of the SETI Institute with the goal of making it easier to understand the natural phenomenon of meteor showers.

What’s so cool about the interactive page of this visualization? It’s always great to have an aid for picturing a three-dimensional aspect of outer space. This visualization is especially effective because it lets you click into the view from various perspectives. For example, the view below is the Perseid meteor stream as seen from Earth; be sure to click into the page to see the meteors coming toward you!

Diagram of extremely oblique Earth orbit with stream of white particles sweeping almost vertically across it.

Perseid meteor stream from Earth’s perspective in space. Click into the interactive page to see the meteors coming toward you. Click the box in the upper left that says “Watch from Earth.” Visualization via Ian Webster.

Bottom line: Two screen shots from Ian Webster and Peter Jenniskens’ wonderful visualization showing Perseid meteoroids in space.



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Diagram of Earth orbit with an arc of debris following a narrow elliptical path intersecting it.

Perseid meteor stream visualization. It looks blurry because it’s a screen shot from a video. Be sure to click into the interactive page; it’s awesome! Visualization via Ian Webster.

EarthSky’s yearly crowd-funding campaign is in progress. In 2020, we are donating 8.5% to No Kids Hungry. Please donate to help us keep going, and help feed a kid!

This visualization uses NASA data to render known Perseid meteoroids as they move through the space of our solar system. What’s a meteoroid? It’s simply the name for a bit of debris in space before it has entered Earth’s atmosphere and vaporized, thereby becoming a meteor or fiery streak in our night sky. Meteors originate in the bodies of comets. The Perseids, in particular, come from Comet Swift-Tuttle, which last visited the inner solar system in 1992. Ian Webster developed this visualization of the Perseid meteor stream in space, using meteor data provided by Peter Jenniskens. The visualization was created with the help of the SETI Institute with the goal of making it easier to understand the natural phenomenon of meteor showers.

What’s so cool about the interactive page of this visualization? It’s always great to have an aid for picturing a three-dimensional aspect of outer space. This visualization is especially effective because it lets you click into the view from various perspectives. For example, the view below is the Perseid meteor stream as seen from Earth; be sure to click into the page to see the meteors coming toward you!

Diagram of extremely oblique Earth orbit with stream of white particles sweeping almost vertically across it.

Perseid meteor stream from Earth’s perspective in space. Click into the interactive page to see the meteors coming toward you. Click the box in the upper left that says “Watch from Earth.” Visualization via Ian Webster.

Bottom line: Two screen shots from Ian Webster and Peter Jenniskens’ wonderful visualization showing Perseid meteoroids in space.



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Arecibo Observatory damaged by broken lashing cable

Wedge-shaped broken out section of huge dish seen from below, debris lying around.

Some of the damages caused by a broken supporting cable on the 1,000-foot (305 m) Arecibo radio dish. The cable broke on Monday, August 10. Image via University of Central Florida.

One of the auxiliary cables that helps support the receiver platform in place above the famous Arecibo Observatory in Puerto Rico broke on Monday, August 10, 2020, causing a 100-foot-long (30-meter-long) gash on the southeast side of the 1,000-foot (305-meter) reflector dish.

According to the University of Central Florida (UFC), which manages the National Science Foundation facility, the three-inch cable also damaged about six to eight panels in the Gregorian Dome, an antenna receiver on the platform.  It is not yet clear what caused the cable to break.

There are 18 cables, running from three reinforced concrete towers, which support the 900-ton platform above the dish. The facility is now closed while engineers review the damage and assess the extent of repairs that will be needed to bring the telescope back online. Francisco Cordova, the director of the observatory, said:

We have a team of experts assessing the situation. Our focus is assuring the safety of our staff, protecting the facilities and equipment, and restoring the facility to full operations as soon as possible, so it can continue to assist scientists around the world.

Geodesic dome hanging from trusses above Arecibo telescope dish.

The Gregorian Dome above the big radio dish at the Arecibo Observatory. The cable accident – which caused a gash in the disk itself – also damaged about 6 to 8 panels in this dome. Image via the Planetary Society.

You’ve likely seen photos – or a movie, or played a video game – featuring Arecibo Observatory’s radio telescope. It was the world’s largest single-aperture telescope from its completion in 1963 until July 2016, when China completed its Five-Hundred-Meter Aperture Spherical Telescope (FAST). Still, the big radio telescope at Arecibo – built into a natural depression in the landscape of a Caribbean island – is used for professional research not just in radio astronomy, but also for radar and atmospheric studies. And, in recent years, as multiple hurricanes have swept across the Caribbean, including Hurricanes Irma and Maria in 2017, it’s been more of a struggle to keep the telescope in good repair. That is why, in late 2019, the U.S. Congress supported emergency supplemental funds for the site. The new funds ($12.3 million, to be used over four years) represented an investment in Arecibo’s future.

The new damage to Arecibo, caused by the heavy cable, happened while repairs from Hurricane Maria (2017) were still ongoing.

Arecibo radio dish

A wide view of the Arecibo radio dish, prior to the damage. Image via Arecibo Observatory.

Among other discoveries made at Arecibo Observatory, the first planets beyond our solar system – now called exoplanets – were found from there in 1990 by astronomer Aleksander Wolszczan; the planets orbit the pulsar PSR B1257+12

Among many contributions to science, the facility helps in the analysis of Near-Earth Objects, playing an important role in defending our planet from asteroid strikes.

Night view of brightly lit truss construction high above telescope dish.

The Gregorian Dome and metal platform are visible in this beautiful image captured during a star party at the Arecibo Observatory. Image by Ivan Arce.

Bottom line: The famous Arecibo Observatory in Puerto Rico underwent damage on Monday, August 10, 2020, when one of the auxiliary cables that helps support the receiver platform in place above the large radio dish broke, causing a 100-foot-long (30-meter-long) gash on the southeast side of the dish.



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Wedge-shaped broken out section of huge dish seen from below, debris lying around.

Some of the damages caused by a broken supporting cable on the 1,000-foot (305 m) Arecibo radio dish. The cable broke on Monday, August 10. Image via University of Central Florida.

One of the auxiliary cables that helps support the receiver platform in place above the famous Arecibo Observatory in Puerto Rico broke on Monday, August 10, 2020, causing a 100-foot-long (30-meter-long) gash on the southeast side of the 1,000-foot (305-meter) reflector dish.

According to the University of Central Florida (UFC), which manages the National Science Foundation facility, the three-inch cable also damaged about six to eight panels in the Gregorian Dome, an antenna receiver on the platform.  It is not yet clear what caused the cable to break.

There are 18 cables, running from three reinforced concrete towers, which support the 900-ton platform above the dish. The facility is now closed while engineers review the damage and assess the extent of repairs that will be needed to bring the telescope back online. Francisco Cordova, the director of the observatory, said:

We have a team of experts assessing the situation. Our focus is assuring the safety of our staff, protecting the facilities and equipment, and restoring the facility to full operations as soon as possible, so it can continue to assist scientists around the world.

Geodesic dome hanging from trusses above Arecibo telescope dish.

The Gregorian Dome above the big radio dish at the Arecibo Observatory. The cable accident – which caused a gash in the disk itself – also damaged about 6 to 8 panels in this dome. Image via the Planetary Society.

You’ve likely seen photos – or a movie, or played a video game – featuring Arecibo Observatory’s radio telescope. It was the world’s largest single-aperture telescope from its completion in 1963 until July 2016, when China completed its Five-Hundred-Meter Aperture Spherical Telescope (FAST). Still, the big radio telescope at Arecibo – built into a natural depression in the landscape of a Caribbean island – is used for professional research not just in radio astronomy, but also for radar and atmospheric studies. And, in recent years, as multiple hurricanes have swept across the Caribbean, including Hurricanes Irma and Maria in 2017, it’s been more of a struggle to keep the telescope in good repair. That is why, in late 2019, the U.S. Congress supported emergency supplemental funds for the site. The new funds ($12.3 million, to be used over four years) represented an investment in Arecibo’s future.

The new damage to Arecibo, caused by the heavy cable, happened while repairs from Hurricane Maria (2017) were still ongoing.

Arecibo radio dish

A wide view of the Arecibo radio dish, prior to the damage. Image via Arecibo Observatory.

Among other discoveries made at Arecibo Observatory, the first planets beyond our solar system – now called exoplanets – were found from there in 1990 by astronomer Aleksander Wolszczan; the planets orbit the pulsar PSR B1257+12

Among many contributions to science, the facility helps in the analysis of Near-Earth Objects, playing an important role in defending our planet from asteroid strikes.

Night view of brightly lit truss construction high above telescope dish.

The Gregorian Dome and metal platform are visible in this beautiful image captured during a star party at the Arecibo Observatory. Image by Ivan Arce.

Bottom line: The famous Arecibo Observatory in Puerto Rico underwent damage on Monday, August 10, 2020, when one of the auxiliary cables that helps support the receiver platform in place above the large radio dish broke, causing a 100-foot-long (30-meter-long) gash on the southeast side of the dish.



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