Articles of Interest in Science

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kmaherali
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Re: Articles of Interest in Science

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Republican Science Denial Has Nasty Real-World Consequences

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A substantial number of Republican voters are losing faith in science.

In April 2020, 14 percent reported to Pew Research that they had little or no faith that scientists would “act in the best interest of the public.” By October 2023, that figure had risen to 38 percent.

Over the same period, the share of Democrats who voiced little or no confidence rose much less and from a smaller base line — to 13 percent from 9 percent.

“Empirical data do not support the conclusion of a crisis of public trust in science,” Naomi Oreskes and Erik M. Conway, historians of science at Harvard and Caltech, write in their 2022 article “From Anti-Government to Anti-Science: Why Conservatives Have Turned Against Science.” But the data “do support the conclusion of a crisis of conservative trust in science.”

A paper published by the Journal of the American Medical Association on July 31, “Trust in Physicians and Hospitals During the Covid-19 Pandemic in a 50-State Survey of U.S. Adults,” by doctors and health specialists at Harvard, Northeastern, Rutgers, the University of Rochester and the University of South Carolina, reports that “in every sociodemographic group in this survey study among 443, 455 unique respondents aged 18 years or older residing in the U.S., trust in physicians and hospitals decreased substantially over the course of the pandemic, from 71.5 percent in April 2020 to 40.1 percent in January 2024.”

“During the Covid-19 pandemic,” the authors write,

"medicine and public health more broadly became politicized, with the internet amplifying public figures and even physicians encouraging individuals not to trust the advice of public health experts and scientists. As such, the pandemic may have represented a turning point in trust, with a profession previously seen as trustworthy increasingly subject to doubt."

In “The Polarization and Politicization of Trust in Scientists,” a paper presented last week at the annual meeting of the American Political Science Association, James Druckman and Jonathan Schulman, of the University of Rochester and the University of Pennsylvania, write:

"Consider in 2000, 46 percent of Democrats and, almost equivalently, 47 percent of Republicans expressed a great deal of confidence in scientists. In 2022, these respective percentages were 53 percent and 28 percent. In twenty years, a partisan chasm in trust (a 25-percentage point gap) emerged."

Matthew Dallek, a political historian at George Washington University, wrote by email:

"Distrust of science is arguably the greatest hindrance to societal action to stem numerous threats to the lives of Americans and people worldwide. Americans died because they had read or heard that MRNA vaccines were more dangerous than a bout of Covid.

Some people suffer from poor dental health in part because their parents distrusted fluoridation of drinking water. The national failure to invest until recently in combating climate change has raised the odds of pandemics, made diseases more rampant, destabilized entire regions, and spurred a growing crisis of migration and refugees that has helped popularize far-right nativism in many Western democracies."

Donald Trump’s MAGA movement, Dallek argued,

"turbocharged anti-science conspiracy theories and attitudes on the American right, vaulting them to an even more influential place in American politics. Bogus notions — vaccines may cause autism, hydroxychloroquine may cure Covid, climate change isn’t real — have become linchpins of MAGA-era conservatism."

The most recent precipitating event widening the split between Democrats and Republicans regarding the trustworthiness of science has been the partisan divide over how to deal with the Covid pandemic, especially support for and opposition to mandatory vaccination.

Between 2018 and 2021, the General Social Survey found that the spread between the percentage of Democrats and Republicans who said they have “a great deal of confidence in the scientific community” rose to 33 points (65-32) from 13 points (54-41).

The role of our leaders: Writing at the end of 2020, Al Gore, the 45th vice president of the United States, found reasons for optimism in the Biden presidency, a feeling perhaps borne out by the passing of major climate legislation. That doesn’t mean there haven’t been criticisms. For example, Charles Harvey and Kurt House argue that subsidies for climate capture technology will ultimately be a waste.

The worst climate risks, mapped: In this feature, select a country, and we'll break down the climate hazards it faces. In the case of America, our maps, developed with experts, show where extreme heat is causing the most deaths.

What people can do: Justin Gillis and Hal Harvey describe the types of local activism that might be needed, while Saul Griffith points to how Australia shows the way on rooftop solar. Meanwhile, small changes at the office might be one good way to cut significant emissions, writes Carlos Gamarra.

Adrian Bardon, a professor of philosophy at Wake Forest and the author of “The Truth About Denial: Bias and Self-Deception in Science, Politics and Religion,” described in an email the partisan shift in attitudes toward science that began in the early 1970s:

"Whereas up through the 1960s the left would have more of a reputation as the anti-science wing. The standard story explaining this is the fact that the most salient science in public perception up through the ’60s was what we now call “production science” — the science of industrial production. Plastics, cars and fossil fuels in general, military tech, nuclear power, industrial agriculture, etc.

The ’60s saw the rise of “impact science” — the science of the impacts of industrial production and consumption. Note the famous 1964 World’s Fair exhibition “Tomorrowland,” depicting the industrial and technological utopia of the future — featured just as Rachel Carson is writing about DDT, and air and water pollution are becoming more evidently a problem to casual observers."

The direction of the partisan response, Bardon wrote, is driven by “who the facts are favoring, and science currently favors bad news for the industrial status quo. People who identify with the status quo social and economic hierarchy (white males, economic conservatives, white evangelicals, and social conservative MAGAs) are going to feel more threatened by the bad news for status quo systems.”

The roots of the divergence, however, go back at least 50 years with the creation of the Environmental Protection Agency and the Occupational Safety and Health Administration in 1970, along with the enactment that same year of the Clean Air Act and two years later of the Clean Water Act.

These pillars of the regulatory state were, and still are, deeply dependent on scientific research to set rules and guidelines. All would soon be seen as adversaries of the sections of the business community that are closely allied with the Republican Party, although each of these agencies and laws was backed by a Republican president, Richard Nixon.

Julianna Margulies: ‘This Is the Play I’ve Been Waiting For’

These agencies and laws fostered the emergence of what Gordon Gauchat, a professor of sociology at the University of Wisconsin at Milwaukee, calls “regulatory science.” This relatively new role thrust science into the center of political debates with the result that federal agencies like the E.P.A. and OSHA “are considered adversarial to corporate interests. Regulatory science directly connects to policy management and, therefore, has become entangled in policy debates that are unavoidably ideological.”

In their 2022 article, Oreskes and Conway, write that conservatives’ hostility to science

"took strong hold during the Reagan administration, largely in response to scientific evidence of environmental crises that invited governmental response. Thus, science — particularly environmental and public health science — became the target of conservative anti-regulatory attitudes."

Oreskes and Conway argue that the strength of the anti-science movement was driven by the alliance in the Reagan years between corporate interests and the ascendant religious right, which became an arm of the Republican Party as it supported creationism (which attributes life to a supernatural creator) over evolution (which explains life through natural processes):

"As the Republican Party has become identified with conservative religiosity — in particular, evangelical Protestantism — religious and political skepticism of science have become mutually constitutive and self-reinforcing.

Meanwhile, individuals who are comfortable with secularism, and thus secular science, concentrate in the Democratic Party. The process of party-sorting along religious lines has helped turn an ideological divide over science into a partisan one."

Matt Motta, a professor of health law, policy and management at Boston University, argued in an email that partisan divisions in the electorate over the legitimacy of science result in large part from divisions among elites:

"As partisan elites have staked out increasingly clear positions on issues related to climate change, vaccine hesitancy, and other science-related policy issues, the public has polarized in response.

People look to their political leaders to provide them with information (“cues” or “heuristics”) about how they ought to think about complex science-related issues. This creates a feedback cycle, whereby — once public opinion polarizes about science-related issues — political elites have an electoral incentive to appeal to that polarization, both in the anti-science rhetoric they espouse and in expressing opposition to evidence-based policies."

In a January 2023 paper, “Is Cancer Treatment Immune From Partisan Conflict? How Partisan Communication Motivates Opposition to Preventative Cancer Vaccination in the U.S.,” Motta explores differences in responses to a promising medical treatment — anticancer vaccinations — between Republicans and Democrats:

"In a demographically representative survey of 1,959 U.S. adults, I tracked how intentions to receive preventative cancer vaccines (currently undergoing clinical trials) vary by partisan identity. I find that cancer vaccines are already politically polarizing, such that Republicans are less likely than Democrats to intend to vaccinate.

I conceptually replicate these findings in application to a second hypothetical vaccine for noncommunicable illness: experimental preventatives for Alzheimer’s disease. Critically, I find that when elite Democrats claim credit for funding cancer research, Republicans become even less likely to intend to vaccinate. Collectively, these results suggest that partisan asymmetries in vaccine uptake extend to developmental vaccines that could prevent life-threatening, noncommunicable disease."

Another key factor driving a wedge between the two parties over the trustworthiness of science is the striking partisan difference over risk tolerance and risk aversion.

In their 2023 paper, “Gender Differences in Preferences,” Rachel Croson and Uri Gneezy, economists at the University of Minnesota and the University of California, San Diego, reviewed a wide range of studies of the relationship between risk and gender.

Their conclusion: “We find, on average, that women are more risk averse than men.”

Similarly, Melissa Finucane, Paul Slovic, C.K. Mertz, James Flynn and Theresa Satterfield wrote in “Gender, Race and Perceived Risk: The ‘White Male’ Effect,”

"Our survey revealed that men rate a wide range of hazards as lower in risk than do women. Our survey also revealed that whites rate risks lower than do nonwhites. Nonwhite females often gave the highest risk ratings. The group with the consistently lowest risk perceptions across a range of hazards was white males.

Furthermore, we found sizable differences between white males and other groups in sociopolitical attitudes. Compared with the rest of the sample, white males were more sympathetic with hierarchical, individualistic, and anti-egalitarian views, more trusting of technology managers, less trusting of government, and less sensitive to potential stigmatization of communities from hazards. These positions suggest greater confidence in experts and less confidence in public-dominated social processes."

In other words, white men — the dominant constituency of the Republican Party, in what is known in the academic literature as “the white male effect” — are relatively risk tolerant and thus more resistant (or less committed) to science-based efforts to reduce the likelihood of harm to people or to the environment, while major Democratic constituencies are more risk averse and supportive of harm-reducing policies.

Insofar as people tend to accept scientific findings that align with their political beliefs and disregard those that contradict them, political views carry more weight than knowledge of science.

Dan M. Kahan, a Yale law professor, reported in his 2015 paper “Climate-Science Communication and the Measurement Problem,” that comparing the answers to scientific questions among religious and nonreligious respondents revealed significant insight into differing views of what is true and what is not.

When asked whether “electrons are smaller than atoms” and “what gas makes up most of the earth’s atmosphere: hydrogen, nitrogen, carbon dioxide or oxygen,” almost identical shares of religious and nonreligious men and women who scored high on measures of scientific knowledge gave correct answers to the questions.

However, when asked “human beings, as we know them today, developed from earlier species of animals, true or false,” the religious students high in scientific literacy scored far below their nonreligious counterparts.

In other words, Kahan argues, the evolution question did not measure scientific knowledge but instead was a gauge of “something else: a form of cultural identity.”

Kahan then cites a survey that asked “how much risk do you believe climate change poses to human health, safety or prosperity?” The survey demonstrated a striking correlation between political identity and the level of perceived risk: Strong Democrats saw severe risk potential; strong Republicans close to none.

Kahan suggests that the different responses offered by religious and nonreligious respondents to the evolution question were similar to the climate change responses in that they were determined by “cultural identity” — in this case, political identity.

Kahan continues:

"Indeed, the inference can be made even stronger by substituting for, or fortifying political outlooks with, even more discerning cultural identity indicators, such as cultural worldviews and their interaction with demographic characteristics such as race and gender. In sum, whether people “believe in” climate change, like whether they “believe in” evolution, expresses who they are."

In their 2023 PNAS paper, “Prosocial Motives Underlie Scientific Censorship by Scientists,” Cory J. Clark, Steven Pinker, David Buss, Philip Tetlock, David Geary and 34 others make the case that the scientific community at times censors itself: “Our analysis suggests that scientific censorship is often driven by scientists, who are primarily motivated by self-protection, benevolence toward peer scholars, and prosocial concerns for the well-being of human social groups.”

The authors go on:

"The fundamental principle of science is that evidence — not authority, tradition, rhetorical eloquence, or social prestige — should triumph. This commitment makes science a radical force in society: challenging and disrupting sacred myths, cherished beliefs, and socially desirable narratives. Consequently, science exists in tension with other institutions, occasionally provoking hostility and censorship."

Clark and her co-authors argue that

"Prosocial motives for censorship may explain four observations: 1) widespread public availability of scholarship coupled with expanding definitions of harm has coincided with growing academic censorship; 2) women, who are more harm-averse and more protective of the vulnerable than men, are more censorious; 3) although progressives are often less censorious than conservatives, egalitarian progressives are more censorious of information perceived to threaten historically marginalized groups; and 4) academics in the social sciences and humanities (disciplines especially relevant to humans and social policy) are more censorious and more censored than those in STEM."

In an email, Clark wrote:

"We see that perceptions that political values influence the work of academic disciplines is similarly related to reduced trust and increased skepticism.

The explicit politicization of academic institutions, including science journals, academic professional societies, universities, and university departments, is likely one causal factor that explains reduced trust in science."

Dietram A. Scheufele, who is a professor in science communication at the University of Wisconsin, was sharply critical of what he calls the scientific community’s “self-inflicted wounds”:

"One is the sometimes gratuitous tendency among scientists to mock groups in society whose values we see as misaligned with our own. This has included prominent climate scientists tweeting that no Republicans are safe to have in Congress, popularizers like Neil deGrasse Tyson trolling Christians on Twitter on Christmas Day."

Scheufele warned against

'Democrats’ tendency to align science with other (probably very worthwhile) social causes, including the various yard signs that equate science to B.L.M., gender equality, immigration, etc. The tricky part is that most of these causes are seen as Democratic-leaning policy issues. Science is not that. It’s society’s best way of creating and curating knowledge, regardless of what that science will mean for politics, belief systems, or personal preferences.'

For many on the left, Scheufele wrote,

"Science has become a signaling device for liberals to distinguish themselves from what they see as “anti-science” Republicans. That spells trouble. Science relies on the public perception that it creates knowledge objectively and in a politically neutral way. The moment we lose that aspect of trust, we just become one of the many institutions, including Congress, that have suffered from rapidly eroding levels of public trust."

When Ronald Reagan quipped in 1986, “The nine most terrifying words in the English language are ‘I’m from the government and I’m here to help,’” he was signaling the escalation of the conservative antigovernment movement.

The Republican Party signed on and hasn’t let go. Over the following decades, that message has become ever more entrenched. Trump and his MAGA movement have been occupied since 2015 not only with spreading incessant lies but also with disbursing a corrosive loss of faith, leaving advances in modern science as one of many casualties.

https://www.nytimes.com/2024/09/11/opin ... 778d3e6de3
swamidada
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Re: Articles of Interest in Science

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BBC
Astronauts reveal what life is like on ISS – and how they deal with 'space smell'
Georgina Rannard - Science reporter
Sun, September 15, 2024 at 4:34 PM CDT·7 min read

The International Space Station

In June two American astronauts left Earth expecting to spend eight days on the International Space Station (ISS).

But after fears that their Boeing Starliner spacecraft was unsafe to fly back on, Nasa delayed Suni Williams and Butch Wilmore’s return until 2025.

They are now sharing a space about the size of a six-bedroom house with nine other people.

Ms Williams calls it her "happy place" and Mr Wilmore says he is "grateful" to be there.

But how does it really feel to be 400km above Earth? How do you deal with tricky crewmates? How do you exercise and wash your clothes? What do you eat - and, importantly, what is the “space smell”?

Talking to BBC News, three former astronauts divulge the secrets to surviving in orbit.

Every five minutes of the astronauts’ day is divided up by mission control on Earth.

They wake early. At around 06:30 GMT, astronauts emerge from the phone-booth size sleeping quarter in the ISS module called Harmony.

“It has the best sleeping bag in the world,” says Nicole Stott, an American astronaut with Nasa who spent 104 days in space on two missions in 2009 and 2011.

The compartments have laptops so crew can stay in contact with family and a nook for personal belongings like photographs or books.

The astronauts might then use the bathroom, a small compartment with a suction system. Normally sweat and urine is recycled into drinking water but a fault on the ISS means the crew must currently store urine instead.

Then the astronauts get to work. Maintenance or scientific experiments take up most time on the ISS, which is about the size of Buckingham Palace - or an American football field.

“Inside it's like many buses all bolted together. In half a day you might never see another person,” explains Canadian astronaut Chris Hadfield, commander on the Expedition 35 mission in 2012-13.

“People just don't go zipping through the station. It’s big and it's peaceful,” he says.


The ISS has six dedicated labs for experiments, and astronauts wear heart, brain or blood monitors to measure their responses to the challenging physical environment.

“We’re guinea pigs,” says Ms Stott, adding that “space puts your bones and muscles into an accelerated ageing process, and scientists can learn from that”.

If the astronauts can, they work faster than mission control predicts.

Mr Hadfield explains: "Your game is to find five free minutes. I would float to the window to watch something go by. Or write music, take photographs or write something for my children."

A lucky few are asked to do a spacewalk, leaving the ISS for the space vacuum outside. Mr Hadfield has done two. “Those 15 hours outside, with nothing between me and the universe but my plastic visor, was as stimulating and otherworldly as any other 15 hours of my life."

But that spacewalk can introduce something novel to the space station - the metallic “space smell”.

“On Earth we have lots of different smells, like washing machine laundry or fresh air. But in space there’s just one smell, and we get used to it quickly,” explains Helen Sharman, the first British astronaut, who spent eight days on the Soviet space station Mir in 1991.

Objects that go outside, like a suit or scientific kit, are affected by the strong radiation of space. “Radiation forms free radicals on the surface, and they react with oxygen inside the space station, creating a metallic smell,” she says.

When she returned to Earth, she valued sensory experiences much more. “There’s no weather in space - no rain on your face and or wind in your hair. I appreciate those so much more to this day now,” she says, 33 years later.

In between working, astronauts on long stays must do two hours of exercise daily. Three different machines help to counter the effect of living in zero gravity, which reduces bone density.

The Advanced Resistive Exercise Device (ARED) is good for squats, deadlifts, and rows that work all the muscle groups, says Ms Stott.

Crew use two treadmills that they must strap into to stop themselves floating away, and a cycle ergometer for endurance training.

'One pair of trousers for three months'
All that work creates a lot of sweat, Ms Stott says, leading to a very important issue - washing.

“We don't have laundry - just water that forms into blobs and some soapy stuff," she explains.

Without gravity pulling sweat off the body, the astronauts get covered in a coating of sweat - "way more than on Earth", she says.

"I would feel the sweat growing on my scalp - I had to swab down my head. You wouldn't want to shake it because it just would fly everywhere."

Those clothes become so dirty that they are thrown out in a cargo vehicle that burns up in the atmosphere.

But their daily clothes stay clean, she says.

“In zero-gravity, clothes float on the body so oils and everything else don’t affect them. I had one pair of trousers for three months,” she explains.

Instead food was the biggest hazard. “Somebody would open up a can, for example, meats and gravy,” she says.

“Everybody was on alert because little balls of grease drifted out. People floated backwards, like in the Matrix film, to dodge the balls of meat juice.”

At some point another craft might arrive, bringing a new crew or supplies of food, clothes, and equipment. Nasa sends a few supply vehicles a year. Arriving at the space station from Earth is “amazing”, says Mr Hadfield.

“It’s a life-changing moment when you catch sight of the ISS there in the eternity of the universe - seeing this little bubble of life, a microcosm of human creativity in the blackness,” he says.

After a hard day’s work, it is time for dinner. Food is mostly reconstituted in packets, separated into different compartments by nation.

“It was like camping food or military rations. Good but it could be healthier,” Ms Stott says.

“My favourite was Japanese curries, or Russian cereal and soups,” she says.

Families send their loved ones bonus food packs. “My husband and son picked little treats, like chocolate-covered ginger,” she says.

The crew share their food most of the time.

Astronauts are pre-selected for personal attributes - tolerant, laid-back, calm - and trained to work as a team. That reduces the likelihood of conflict, explains Ms Sharman.

“It’s not just about putting up with somebody's bad behaviour, but calling it out. And we always give each other metaphorical pats-on-the back to support each other,” she says.

And finally, bed again, and time to rest after a day in a noisy environment (fans run constantly to disperse pockets of carbon dioxide so the astronauts can breathe, making it about as loud as a very noisy office).

“We can have eight hours of sleep - but most people get stuck in the window looking at Earth,” Ms Stott says.

All three astronauts talked about the psychological impact of seeing their home planet from 400km in orbit.

“I felt very insignificant in that vastness of space," Ms Sharman says. "Seeing Earth so clearly, the swirls of clouds and the oceans, made me think about the geopolitical boundaries that we construct and how actually we are completely interconnected."

Ms Stott says she loved living with six people from different countries “doing this work on behalf of all life on Earth, working together, figuring out how to deal with problems”.

“Why can't that be happening down on our planetary spaceship?” she asks.

Eventually all astronauts must leave the ISS - but these three say they would return in a heartbeat.

They don’t understand why people think the Nasa astronauts Suni Williams and Butch Wilmore are “stranded”.

“We dreamed, worked and trained our entire lives hoping for an extended stay in space," says Mr Hadfield. "The greatest gift you can give a professional astronaut is to let them stay longer."

And Ms Stott says that as she left the ISS she thought: “You're gonna have to pull my clawing hands off the hatch. I don't know if I'm going to get to come back.”

https://www.yahoo.com/news/astronauts-r ... 07360.html
swamidada
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Re: Articles of Interest in Science

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CNN
A severe geomagnetic storm could cause colorful auroras over Northern California and Alabama
Ashley Strickland, CNN
Wed, October 9, 2024 at 7:54 PM CDT·

Colorful auroras could be visible in areas of the United States such as Alabama and Northern California — much farther south than they typically appear — on Thursday evening due to a powerful solar flare and coronal mass ejection released from the sun, according to the National Weather Service’s Space Weather Prediction Center.

The severe solar storm, classified as a level 4 on a scale from 1 to 5, also could disrupt communications, the power grid and satellite operations, according to officials at the center.

The storm is expected to reach Earth between early morning and 12 p.m. ET Thursday, with the potential to last through Friday.

The intensity and full characteristics of the storm, moving toward Earth at more than 2.5 million miles per hour (about 4 million kilometers per hour), won’t be known until it reaches the Deep Space Climate Observatory and the Advanced Composition Explorer satellites orbiting 1 million miles from Earth.

The satellites will measure the speed and magnetic intensity of the storm, which is expected to arrive at Earth 15 to 30 minutes after reaching the space observatories, said Shawn Dahl, service coordinator for the Space Weather Prediction Center, at a news briefing Wednesday.

A series of the most intense type of solar flares, known as X-class flares, have released from the sun this week. The flares also coincided with coronal mass ejections on Tuesday.

Coronal mass ejections are large clouds of ionized gas called plasma and magnetic fields that erupt from the sun’s outer atmosphere. When these outbursts are directed at Earth, they can cause geomagnetic storms, or major disturbances of Earth’s magnetic field.

“Geomagnetic storms can impact infrastructure in near-Earth orbit and on Earth’s surface,” according to the Space Weather Prediction Center.

As a result, the center has notified the Federal Emergency Management Agency, the North American power grid and satellite operators to prepare for disruptions, especially given the amount of preparations and expected relief efforts for Hurricane Milton, Dahl said.

Historically, G4 storms are common during a solar cycle, but G5, or extreme geomagnetic storms such the one that occurred on May 10, are incredibly rare, Dahl said. This new storm has a 25% chance of becoming a G5, he said.

An uptick in solar activity
As the sun nears solar maximum — the peak in its 11-year cycle, expected this year — it becomes more active, and researchers have observed increasingly intense solar flares erupting from the fiery orb.

Increased solar activity causes auroras that dance around Earth’s poles, known as the northern lights, or aurora borealis, and southern lights, or aurora australis. When the energized particles from coronal mass ejections reach Earth’s magnetic field, they interact with gases in the atmosphere to create those different colored lights in the sky.

Currently, scientists at the prediction center believe visible auroras are likely to appear in central Eastern states and the lower Midwest, but it remains to be seen whether the storm will cause a global phenomenon of auroras as the G5 in May did, Dahl said. But if the storm escalates to a G5, auroras could be visible across southern states and elsewhere around the world.

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration officials recommend using the center’s aurora dashboard to find out whether northern and southern lights are predicted to be visible in your area. The dashboard is constantly updated and can show where an aurora may appear within minutes of the information becoming available.

The chance of seeing auroras has also dramatically increased, given that darkness falls earlier during this time of year. Sky-gazers in the US who spied auroras caused by a G3 storm over the weekend witnessed the northern lights within an hour or two after nightfall, Dahl said.

And even if the colorful displays don’t seem apparent to the naked eye, sensors in cameras and cell phone cameras can pick them up, center officials said.

Potential for disruptions
NOAA scientists said they don’t believe this week’s storm will surpass the one in May. Before then, the last G5 storm to hit Earth was in 2003, resulting in power outages in Sweden and damaging power transformers in South Africa.

During the May geomagnetic storm, tractor company John Deere reported that some customers reliant on GPS for precision farming experienced a disruption. But for the most part, power grid and satellite operators kept satellites in order and properly in orbit and managed the buildup of intense geomagnetic currents on the grid systems.

The solar storm in May was the most successfully mitigated space weather storm in history, Dahl said.

Scientists are continuing to monitor the spikes in solar activity as they increase because they could indicate where the sun currently is in its cycle.

The speed of Tuesday’s coronal mass ejection surprised scientists at the center because it’s the fastest measured in this solar cycle so far, Dahl said. But that doesn’t mean the peak of solar activity is occurring right now. Previous solar cycles have shown that some of the biggest storms can happen after the peak, he said.

“We are in the midst of solar maximum right now; we just don’t know if we reached the peak yet,” Dahl said. “That would be decided later and could be either sometime this year or even early next year. Bottom line is, we’re still in for a ride with the solar cycle activity through this year, as well as the next year and even into early 2026.”

For more CNN news and newsletters create an account at CNN.com

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kmaherali
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Re: Articles of Interest in Science

Post by kmaherali »

A Rare Sighting of Northern Lights Entrances Viewers in New York Area

The aurora borealis, which transformed the sky with startling streaks of pink and purple, arose from a magnetic storm.

Image
The northern lights lit up the sky above apartment buildings in Queens on Thursday.Credit...Daniel P. Derella/Associated Press

Christopher MaagTim Balk
By Christopher Maag and Tim Balk
Oct. 10, 2024
As a girl in Michigan, Gabriela Aguilar sometimes went looking for the northern lights in the state’s Upper Peninsula. But it wasn’t until Thursday night, when she climbed to the roof of her apartment building in Harlem, that she finally saw them.

“I’m just shocked that it took my entire life to be able to see it,” said Dr. Aguilar, 37, who stood with her dog, Gomez, and watched the sky turn pink, purple and green until the autumn chill drove her back inside. “And — of all places — seeing it in New York City!”

New Yorkers were treated to a rare light show Thursday night as the aurora borealis, also known as the northern lights, spread an ethereal smear across the sky. On social media, people as far south as Washington, D.C., and Kentucky reported seeing the lights, which in pictures seemed to vary in color and intensity from neon pink to a subtle hazy purple.

Udi Ofer, a professor of public affairs at Princeton University, was at home shortly after dusk when a neighbor texted to alert him to the sky. He rushed to his backyard in Princeton, N.J., with his 9-year-old daughter and 4-year-old son.

For about 20 minutes, they watched stripes of pink and purple as the stars began to come out.

“I think the thing that’s most remarkable about it are the streaks of light, which I just didn’t expect,” Mr. Ofer, 49, said. He called them “pretty magical.”

Image
A pink glowing sky above the East River, with a lit-up bridge in the background.
Image
The northern lights were also seen from behind Gracie Mansion, the mayor’s official residence, on the Upper East Side.Credit...City of New York

The facts behind the event are nearly as spectacular as the sight of New York City’s night sky streaked with pink. The lights started with a “severe” geomagnetic storm, the result of a “fast coronal mass ejection” of plasma from the sun Tuesday night, according to the Space Weather Prediction Center.

The charged particles raced through space at 1.5 million miles per hour and reached Earth at 11:15 a.m., the center found. The event brought enough energy coursing through space to possibly disrupt satellites in orbit and power systems on Earth, the center warned.

New York City’s Emergency Management Department said there could be possible disruptions to electricity, GPS and communications systems, but suggested there was little need for the public to be concerned.

At the National Weather Station center in Upton, N.Y., on Long Island, the meteorologist Bill Goodman took a break from his monitors and screens Thursday night to go outside and look up.

“We got a pretty cool picture of that behind our Doppler radar,” he said, describing a picture taken from the center’s campus and posted on X. It was the second severe solar storm of the year to cause extended aurora borealis on Earth, “but this time we lucked out because we had clear skies across the entire New York City area,” Mr. Goodman said.

Image
The northern lights are pink and purple, with the sphere of the Doppler radar in the foreground.
Image
The northern lights as seen behind the Doppler radar at the National Weather Station in Upton, N.Y., on Thursday night.Credit...National Weather Service New York NY

“To get them here to the New York metro area is pretty rare,” said David Robinson, New Jersey’s state meteorologist, who saw some vestiges of the lights from the second-story window of his house near Princeton on Thursday night.

Anna Kathryn Barry, a lawyer, heard on her commute home from Washington that the northern lights might appear over the region.

She doubted that she would actually see it. But, at about 7:20 p.m., she headed out to her deck in Herndon, Va. Sure enough, she could see the northern lights.

“At first, it looked like purple clouds almost,” Ms. Barry, 31, said, adding, “then it started to get richer in color.”

The light show lasted about 15 minutes before slowly fading away, Ms. Barry said.

The lights may return Friday night because the stream of charged particles is continuing, Mr. Goodman said, and New York’s skies will remain clear.

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Northern lights above a house in Maine.
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The lights, seen in Falmouth, Maine, The lights started with a severe geomagnetic storm.Credit...David Sharp/Associated Press

The area’s next big aerial show will be the Tsuchinshan-ATLAS comet, which will rival the brightness of Jupiter starting this week. To find it, scout out the darkest location available with an open view of the western horizon, looking low in the evening sky, near where the sun has set.

https://www.nytimes.com/2024/10/10/nyre ... 778d3e6de3
kmaherali
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Joined: Thu Mar 27, 2003 3:01 pm

Re: Articles of Interest in Science

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Scientists uncover car-sized insect

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The arthropod hid in forests near close to the equator millions of years ago (Picture: Getty)

Scientists have uncovered a car-sized mega-millipede that walked the earth around 340 million years ago.

After centuries of mystery, the face of the Arthropleura has been unveiled, thanks to two well-preserved fossils.

The arthropod is thought to have lived in forests close to the equator between 346 and million and 290 million years ago during the late Paleozoic era.

Arthopleura could grow to a whopping 8.5 feet long and weigh over 45kg, and their existence has baffled palaeontologists for decades.

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The Arthopleura could grow to a staggering 8ft tall (Picture: Getty)

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It is likely that the creature lived on vegetation in forests (Picture: Claude Bernard Lyon)

The creature had similar characteristics to a millipede, but as experts had never seen its head before they couldn’t work out its relationship to modern arthropods.

But now the head has been unearthed, with its round structure adorned with two short, bell-shaped antennae.
According to new research it also has two protruding eyes like crabs and a small mouth for scavenging leaves and bark.

Like other arthropods, it is likely lived on vegetation and would shed its exoskeleton through an opening on its head.

The fossilized exoskeletons left clues about the size of the creature’s head, but no indication of its facial structure.

But now that more juvenile fossils have been found, experts have finally been able to study the head and find out more about the creature.

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With more juvenile fossils having been found, experts have been able to study its head and find out more about the creature (Picture: Getty)

A co-author of the study Mickael Lheritier explained: ‘We discovered that it had the body of a millipede, but the head of a centipede.’

Researchers used advanced CT scanning techniques to model the head while also examining the fossils.

The fossils were taken back in the 1980s in a French coal field and were still embedded in rock.

Scans enabled the team to examine hidden details without causing any damage to the ancient fossils.

Palebiologist James Lamsdell, who did not take part in the study, said: ‘We’ve been wanting to see what the head of this animal looked like for a really long time.’

‘When you chip away at rock, you don’t know what part of a delicate fossil may have been lost or damaged.’

Even though the fossils are only two inches long, the researchers believe they can tell us what the Arthropleura was like.

https://www.msn.com/en-ca/news/world/sc ... 5572f&ei=5
kmaherali
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Joined: Thu Mar 27, 2003 3:01 pm

Re: Articles of Interest in Science

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NEUROSCIENCE

The Power of Small Brain Networks
It only takes four neurons to achieve big things.

BY ELENA RENKEN November 15, 2024

Small may be mightier than we think when it comes to brains. This is what neuroscientist Marcella Noorman is learning from her neuroscientific research into tiny animals like fruit flies, whose brains hold around 140,000 neurons each, compared to the roughly 86 billion in the human brain.

In work published earlier this month in Nature Neuroscience, Noorman and colleagues showed that a small network of cells in the fruit fly brain was capable of completing a highly complex task with impressive accuracy: maintaining a consistent sense of direction. Smaller networks were thought to be capable of only discrete internal mental representations, not continuous ones. These networks can “perform more complex computations than we previously thought,” says Noorman, an associate at the Howard Hughes Medical Institute.

You know which way you’re facing even if you close your eyes and stand still.

The scientists monitored the brains of fruit flies as they walked on tiny rotating foam balls in the dark, and recorded the activity of a network of cells responsible for keeping track of head direction. This kind of brain network is called a ring attractor network, and it is present in both insects and in humans. Ring attractor networks maintain variables like orientation or angular velocity—the rate at which an object rotates—over time as we navigate, integrating new information from the senses and making sure we don’t lose track of the original signal, even when there are no updates. You know which way you’re facing even if you close your eyes and stand still, for example.

After finding that this small circuit in fruit fly brains—which contains only about 50 neurons in the core of the network—could accurately represent head direction, Noorman and her colleagues built models to identify the minimum size of a network that could still theoretically perform this task. Smaller networks, they found, required more precise signaling between neurons. But hundreds or thousands of cells weren’t necessary for this basic task. As few as four cells could form a ring attractor, they found.

“Attractors are these beautiful things,” says Mark Brandon of McGill University, who was not involved in the study. Ring attractor networks are a type of “continuous” attractor network, used not just to navigate, but also for memory, motor control, and many other tasks. “The analysis they did of the model is very thorough,” says Brandon, of the study. If the findings extend to humans, it hints that a large brain circuit could be capable of more than researchers thought.

Noorman says a lot of neuroscience research focuses on large neural networks, but she was inspired by the tiny brain of the fruit fly. “The fly’s brain is capable of performing complex computations underlying complex behaviors,” she says. The findings may have implications for artificial intelligence, she says. “Certain kinds of computations might only require a small network,” she says. “And I think it’s important that we keep our minds open to that perspective.”

https://nautil.us/the-power-of-small-br ... 2193111708
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