Holistic management makes ecosystems healthier, people wealthier – Phys.Org

June 7, 2017 by Kevin Dennehy Credit: Yale University

Economists agree that natural ecosystems store large quantities of wealth, but the challenge of measuring that wealth has prevented it from being included in typical accounting systems.

A new Yale-led study tackles this challenge by recognizing the value of "natural capital" assetssuch as groundwater or fish speciesand connecting them with holistic ecosystem management to calculate asset values for the interacting parts of an ecosystem.

Using as a case study the Baltic Sea fishery ecosystem, the researchers project that the use of a holistic management scheme, which tracks multiple connected species, will increase the stored wealth of the entire system over five decades. Management of a single species stock, meanwhile, will generally produce declining wealth.

In this case, researchers find that the interaction of three commercially important Baltic fish speciescod, herring, and sprathas a critical impact on the value of the whole system, according to the results published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. Specifically, they conclude that the prey species (herring and sprat) have greater value than expected, based on market value, due to their role in helping produce their predator, cod.

These results are due to the interdependence of the species and the limits to substitution within the ecosystem community, said Eli Fenichel, a professor at the Yale School of Forestry & Environmental Studies (F&ES) and senior author of the study. In other words, the evaluation of the wealth of an ecosystemand its subsequent managementis best viewed in terms of how different species interact.

"We found that being part of an ecosystem has impacts on the natural capital asset value, or the price of natural capital," said Fenichel. "Even if the cod stock didn't change at all, its value increased if you had more herring or sprat."

"Overall we estimate that the value stored in this fishery was just over 1.2 billion euros under the old single-species management," he said. "That value goes up to just under 1.5 billion euros under a new ecosystem-based management. That's a pretty substantial bump."

While it might seem counterintuitive that increased stocks of one species would drive up the capital value of another species, the predators and prey within an ecosystem have a complementary relationship. It's sort of like hot dogs, Fenichel said. The more hot dogs you have, he said, the more valuable hot dog buns become.

Such a process also provides a badly need "headline" indicators to evaluate the performance of ecosystem-based management, the authors write.

"This paper shows that ecosystems are best thought of as portfolios of natural capital assets and the wealth held in the ecosystem provides an attractive headline index for ecosystem-based management," said Seong Do Yun, a postdoctoral fellow at F&ES and lead author of the paper. "Making sure the 'principle balance' of wealth is protect is a common investment goal; the wealth index we develop extends this idea to natural resources and provides an intuitive way think about sustainability - protecting the principle balance of all wealth including that stored in the environment."

For the study the authors utilized an adapted finance capital model developed by Fenichel, Joshua Abbott, a professor at Arizona State University, and others in recent years to evaluate the value of other natural capital stocks, including groundwater on the Kansas High Plains and reef fish in the Gulf of Mexico. In addition, they used a software package, created by Yun, that computes natural capital asset prices.

Explore further: What's nature worth? Study helps put a price on groundwater and other natural capital

More information: Seong Do Yun et al, Ecosystem-based management and the wealth of ecosystems, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (2017). DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1617666114

Most people understand that investing in the future is important, and that goes for conserving nature and natural resources, too. But in the case of investing in such "natural" assets as groundwater, forests, and fish populations, ...

Economists have long touted the importance of quantifying nature's valuefrom the natural treatment of pollution by wetlands to the carbon storage capacity of forestsand including it in measures of national wealth.

Imagine that you are considering selling stocks that you own in a company. You would probably consider how much the shares are worth today, how much they might be worth in the future and how much you might receive in dividend ...

Fish and other important resources are moving toward the Earth's poles as the climate warms, and wealth is moving with them, according to a new paper by scientists at Rutgers, Princeton, Yale, and Arizona State universities.

A report released today provides a path forward for countries to implement inclusive wealth accounting - a better and more comprehensive wealth indicator than GDP.

If you build it, they will come. That's historically been a common approach to species recovery: Grow the prey population first and predators will quickly return. As it turns out, that's not quite the case. A new study has ...

Economists agree that natural ecosystems store large quantities of wealth, but the challenge of measuring that wealth has prevented it from being included in typical accounting systems.

According to recent studies, declines in wild and managed bee populations threaten the pollination of flowers in more than 85 percent of flowering plants and 75 percent of agricultural crops worldwide. Widespread and effective ...

A team led by University of Idaho researchers is calling into question a widely publicized 2016 study that concluded eastern and red wolves are not distinct species, but rather recent hybrids of gray wolves and coyotes. In ...

In 1859, Charles Darwin included a novel tree of life in his trailblazing book on the theory of evolution, On the Origin of Species. Now, scientists from Rutgers University-New Brunswick and their international collaborators ...

You've been there: Trying to carry on a conversation in a room so noisy that the background chatter threatens to drown out the words you hear. Yet somehow your auditory system is able to home in on the message being conveyed ...

Worms, it appears, are good at keeping secrets.

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Mass. Biomedical Leaders On The State Of Our Ecosystem | Radio … – WBUR

wbur President and CEO of Partners HealthCare David Torchiana and chairman, president and CEO of Vertex Pharmaceuticals, Jeffrey Leiden, at WBUR. (Robin Lubbock/WBUR)

Though President Trump has threatened to cut funding from the National Institutes of Health, Congress has pushed back, awarding the agency an extra $2 billion in fiscal year 2017.

Massachusetts is the second-largest recipient of grants from the NIH. In 2016, the state received approximately $2.5 billion in grants.

We speak to two of the state's leaders in the biomedical community about what they foresee for the state and potential consequences.

Jeffrey Leiden, chairman, president and CEO of Vertex Pharmaceuticals

David Torchiana, president and CEO of Partners HealthCare

On why they felt compelled to write an op-ed on the biomedical ecosystem

Leiden: "It's a critical time for this biomedical ecosystem. We have been successful in America for the last 50 years and really led the world; we're the envy of the world in terms of new breakthrough drugs produced, patents produced and jobs created; and we stand on the threshold of a time where there's even more opportunity for serious diseases like cancer and Alzheimer's. But to make sure we recognize that opportunity it's more important than ever that we provide funding for the NIH that does all of the basic science research that leads to these new treatments.

Torchiana: "The administration has made its position clear with its budget proposal reducing NIH funding by 20 percent. I have a reasonably high level of confidence that there's historically been bipartisan support in Congress to not go down that path, so I think that there's lots of concern. I think part of the concern is it reflects an indifference to the importance of science..."

Ontheir meeting at the White House

Torchiana: "The perspective that certainly Secretary [of Health and Human Services Tom] Price and I think the president and his advisers have, is that there is waste in every level of government. ... And then secondly that there's an opportunity for the private sector to intervene and make up some of the funding gap. ... And I think the government looks at NIH indirect cost payments and feels like they're overpaying for the infrastructure that supports research. It's a perspective you would expect from a business leader and a business-oriented administration. And for better or worse, I don't know that calling people out when you're trying to have a dialogue and reach a constructive end, accomplishes a heck of a lot."

Leiden: "These different parts of the ecosystem the NIH, academia, biotech they aren't actually interchangeable. What the NIH and academia do is absolutely irreplaceable and so cuts in NIH funding can't simply be made up for by what the private sector is going to do."

On what cuts to NIH might mean forthem

Torchiana: "One of the very unique things about Massachusetts is that about 60 percent of the NIH funding actually goes to hospitals in Massachusetts. ... And we actually have many of the highest funding levels of independent hospitals in the country I think we have eight out of the top 14 and MGH is No. 1on the list.

Partners actually in aggregate, including the Brigham and Spaulding and McLean, is the largest institutional recipient of NIH funds in the country. ... Boston is absolutely a unique concentration of basic research and that's why this economy and the ecology has grown up around it so powerfully in the last 15 years. And that's the thing that I think is at risk and it's at risk from multiple directions."

Leiden: "First of all, we rely on the hospitals and universities for our future workforce, that's where these folks get trained. If training goes down, and it certainly would if there were major cuts to the NIH, it affects directly our ability to get the best and the brightest out of our local universities. But the second one is the entire biomedical economy has grown up because of the proximity of the NIH-funded work that's going on with the hospitals, universities.

... I've been involved in the startup part of this economy for a long time. There's 50 to 80 new startups that form here every year and they won't form with these kinds of cuts."

On what Partners 2.0 will mean for Partners HealthCare

Torchiana: "Partners 2.0 has a research component, but it's basically responding to the pressures on costs that all health care systems are facing around the country. And we're trying to make sure that we're all lined up and organized as efficiently as we can so that we're making efficient use of the resources that we have."

On if more buyouts are on the way under Partners 2.0

Torchiana: "I think there are certainly more personnel moves on the way in the future. As you said, we have 73,000 employees. We actually hire and turn over about 8,000 employees a year so there is a lot of in and out. And I hope that whatever we are able to accomplish over the next few years will mostly be accomplished through managing that. But when you look at hospital systems particularly, 70 percent of our costs are in people. So you can't manage your costs without managing your people."

This segment aired on June 6, 2017.

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Mass. Biomedical Leaders On The State Of Our Ecosystem | Radio ... - WBUR

Israeli data startups driving NY ecosystem – ISRAEL21c

Amir Orad is a big-data technology thought leader and go-to guy for reporters from Forbes, Business Week, Washington Post and USA Today seeking perspectives on how companies are meeting the demand for data analysis.

Its well known that New York City is securing its position as a data-driven powerhouse, but less well known that Israeli startups in the Big Apple like Orads Sisense, among many others are leading the development of this ecosystem, according to ICONYC Labs cofounder and partner Eyal Bino.

I see more Israeli companies than their relative share in these areas, Orad tells ISRAEL21c at Sisense headquarters in Tel Aviv. All of the Israeli companies in data have one thing in common: they took very advanced technologies, lots of data analytics, into focused sites whether to help businesses, doctors, banks this and that. The Israelis are really good at taking hardcore science and a pragmatic approach to getting results quickly.

The entire ecosystem of data is strong in the Israeli tech scene, says Pini Yakuel, founder and CEO of Optimove, founded in 2009 and now helping more than 250 brands grow through their existing customers with predictive technologies.

But Israel is a small country. So, in order to build a business and expand, you need to go outside and the US is known as the biggest IT market on the planet.

Pini Yakuel of Optimove. Photo: courtesy

Yakuel, 39, moved his family from Israel to the US last year as his Tel Aviv-based company opened a New York City office.

New York is a good place for an Israeli tech startup, he says. There is a good feeling here about Israeli tech. I dont think there was a specific plan that Israeli companies said Lets design the data ecosystem of New York. But rather it just happens because there are a lot of data companies in Israel, a lot of them come to New York.

Find the needle in the haystack

The ability to interpret big data and find the needle in the haystack of information to help in decision-making is crucial.

Orad says the militarys elite intelligence unit, 8200, and others, produce a lot of graduates good at mining data for valuable nuggets. Data is a natural resource. Data by itself is like bricks. Its all about what you do with it.

Amir Orad, CEO of Sisense. Photo: courtesy

Other examples of Israeli companies disrupting the data-analytics and big-data sphere in New York are Taykey, a real-time audience data company; NICE Actimize, using data for financial-crime prevention; Signals Group data analytics for product development; Zebra Medical Vision deep-learning platform for medical imaging; Via analytics to solve transportation problems; and Taboola and Outbrain content-discovery platforms.

In the world of decision-making our technology challenges the traditional consulting approach, says Gil Sadeh, CEO and founder of Signals Group, about his companys platform based on military intelligence methods to analyze external data, connect faint signals and provide valuable insights for new product development.

IoT and beyond

IoT is often considered the most data-dependent field. But Orad, of Sisense, says that in todays digital world theres no such thing as a sector that is not data-dependent.

Today, every business, hotel chain, government agency, tech company, education agency all of them understand the potential of data, Orad tells ISRAEL21c. If you watch Netflix, they know what youll want to watch next before you do. If you buy from Amazon, they ship the product to your house before you buy it. If you take an online class, they suggest the next class youll want to take.

Orad says the view of big data has changed in the last few years. Now analytics is definitely the focus area. Give me data, Ill give you value.

Optimoves Yakuel tells ISRAEL21c that the value comes from smarter methods to digest and make sense of data, synthesize it and provide it context.

A Gartner report tapped 2017 as the year data and analytics will drive modern business operations, and not simply reflect their performance. Executives will make data and analytics part of the business strategy, which will allow data and analytics professionals to assume new roles and create business growth.

The revolution has been going on for a few years, but it takes time for the market to realize that its a revolution and for businesses to understand the importance, Orad tells ISRAEL21c. The fact that you can do something doesnt mean that someone wants you to do it.

In fact, when Sisense was founded in 2010, its founders had a totally different way of doing things that was defined as stupid by every professional on the planet, to the point that no one invested in them, says Orad. It was not stupid; it just took five years to prove that every single way people approached analytics and BI before can be disrupted.

Today, says Yakuel, Businesses definitely welcome us and want to talk about what we do. Theres a greater level of sophistication within the companies we talk to, and the market is better educated about how to buy data analytics products and use them.

From cybersecurity to advertising, health to education, fintech and beyond, Orad predicts Israeli companies in New York will continue making a mark in the data-analytics arena.

New York-based Israeli companies that use analytics on big data [have] substantially changed the market, he says. Theres no arena that wont be affected. All companies will use analytics or die.

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#Infosec17 IoT Testing Must Focus on the Entire Ecosystem – Infosecurity Magazine

Security professionals need to evaluate entire IoT ecosystems rather thanfocus on individual elements if they wanttesting to be as accurate as possible,according to Rapid7.

The firms research lead, Deral Heiland, explained that the interconnected nature of separateIoT components demands a holistic approach to testing covering: embedded hardware; mobile and control applications; cloud APIs and web services; network communication; and data.

When you want to test an IoT solution, if you test the product alone your test is insufficient, and if you test just the cloud APIs thats not enough, heargued.

Youve got to look at the entire ecosystem What happens in the cloud can impact the hardware and if you compromise thehardware, it could lead to a compromise of the mobile or cloud elements.

Effective IoT testing should follow an eight-step process starting with a functional evaluation which takes the product and puts it in a normal operating stance. From here, its various features, functions, components and communication paths can be examined, said Heiland.

Next comes device reconnaissance; that is, finding out info including its software version, vulnerability history, whether it uses any open source tech, if it's white labelled, and so on.

Often user manuals, spec sheets and even information from regulators such as the FCC can help with intel gathering here, said Heiland.

The testing should continue on with cloud and web APIs, the mobile and control apps, and networks, looking at things like use of encryption, access controls and communication.

Its also important to take a lookinside the hardware at its chips, ports and circuit connections, and to test for physical device attacks by reverse engineering the firmware and checking configurations.

Radio RF emissions form the final component that needs evaluating, said Heiland.

Too many products are going out with common repeatable vulnerabilities that could be easily removed with better testing, he concluded. [Every time I] dig into the IoT system, looking at the eight steps, I learn something new, and every time I learn something new it becomes possible to make better products for everybody.

Heilands words come as new research this week highlighted the huge number of vulnerabilities in IoT systems. High-Tech Bridge claimed that 98% of web interfaces and admin panels in IoT devices have fundamental security problems.

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#Infosec17 IoT Testing Must Focus on the Entire Ecosystem - Infosecurity Magazine

Teen Titans / Comicbook – TV Tropes

Wonder Girl, Starfire, Robin, Cyborg, Changeling, Raven, Kid Flash

open/close all folders

Pre-New 52

Kid Flash: I gotta secret, too. I ran out of clean underwear yesterday, so I stole some of Beast Boy's.

Beast Boy: You what?!

Dr. Light: I lost with Flash! Hawkman! The JLA! Green Lantern! The Titans! Even the Atom! But this is the final humilliation! I don't even know who has defeated me!

Kid Devil: Hot damn!

Robin: This isn't what it looks like.

Ravager: Yes it is.

"No teen-ager would use "music" in a hip language message! They'd use jive!"

New 52

Madre...you know the rest

Cassie: Yo! Up here. (points at eyes) And before you askYes, they're real. Tim: I wasn't looking at, um... them, Cassie. I was trying to figure out how those war bracelets you're wearing are invisible.

Rebirth

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Teen Titans / Comicbook - TV Tropes

Behind the scenes of the first flight of a cyborg dragonfly drone – Fast Company

According to SuperData Research, HTC has sold about half a million of its high-end Vive virtual reality systems. For its part, Facebook-owned Oculus has moved in the neighborhood of 300,000 Rifts. And these are expensive devices, running $799 for the Vive, and (currently) $500 for the Rift. With that much money invested, you'd think people would be spending a good deal of time actually using their VR headsets.

But, according to VRLFG.net, which is bringing in live data from Steamthe distribution platform that people use to buy (and use) Vive titles (and in some cases, content for the Rift as well)usage is really low. In a blog post yesterday on New World Notes, Wagner James Au noted that according to VRLFG.net, the total number of concurrent VR users of content on Steam was less than 2,500. As of this writing, the number stands at 2,203approximately 0.44% of the total number of Vive owners. The most-used title is Steam developer Valve's own The Lab, with just 173 concurrent users. There's been lots of discussion over the last couple of years about when or whether VR would become a mainstream consumer technology, with lots of people arguing no. And while Samsung's mobile Gear VR sold more than 6 million units in 2016, per SuperData, sales of the Vive and Riftthe flagships of the VR industryhave not really blown off the doors. And while it's hard to tell if the data from VRFLG.net is wholly accurate, it will still give those who doubt VR's potential even more fuel.

[Photo: VRLFG.net] DT

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Behind the scenes of the first flight of a cyborg dragonfly drone - Fast Company

Cris Cyborg vs. Megan Anderson Reportedly Still Targeted For UFC 214 – LowKick MMA

The UFC appears close to finalizing a fight betweenCris Cyborg Santos and Megan Anderson for UFC 214 on July 29, sources say.

While the newly crowned womens featherweight champion Germaine de Randamie has publicly stated her refusal to take on Cyborg for her first title defense, the UFC apparently is making other plans for the Brazilian, who is widely regarded as the best female fighter on the planet.

Cyborg (17-1-1) is already 2-0 in the UFC, with each victory coming by way of TKO. The former Strikeforce womens featherweight champ had been serving a suspension following a failed drug test in 2016, but was granted a retroactive exemption for the substance in question back in February, making her eligible to fight.

De Randamie defeated former womens bantamweight champ Holly Holm by decision at UFC 208 and has remained fairly quiet ever since.

The one thing she has made clear is that she does not want to fight Cyborg, accusing her of being a cheater and refusing to defend the strap against her.

Megan Anderson (8-2) has yet to make her octagon debut, but carries with her an impressive four-fight win streak in the Invicta cage, with all four wins coming by way of TKO.

The Australian is the current Invicta womens featherweight champion after TKOing Charmaine Tweet in January. She reportedly signed to face newcomer Helena Kolesnyk in the main event of July 15s Invicta FC 24 from Kansas City, but a potential bout with Cyborg would presumably take precedence.

With de Randamies refusal to fight Cyborg and her suggestion that she will most likely return to bantamweight after winning the newly-created 145 pound belt in February.

Cyborgs two UFC appearances were both at a catchweight of 140 pounds, as both bouts took place prior to the creation of a 145 pound womens weight division.

Although the Cyborg vs. Anderson fight has not been finalized as of today, the UFC is reportedly working hard on putting it together for UFC 214.

UFC 214 will take place on July 29 in Anaheim California, and is set to feature the long-awaited rematch between former champion Jon Bones Jones and current light heavyweight champ Daniel Cormier.

NEXT: Max Holloway Wants Big Contract Following Win Over Jose Aldo

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Cris Cyborg vs. Megan Anderson Reportedly Still Targeted For UFC 214 - LowKick MMA

Dana White on Cyborg Hitting Angela Magana: ‘You Can’t Go and … – MMAWeekly (blog)


MMAWeekly (blog)
Dana White on Cyborg Hitting Angela Magana: 'You Can't Go and ...
MMAWeekly (blog)
Even UFC president Dana White had to admit that Cris Cyborg went a step too far when she hit Angela Magana at the UFC Athlete Retreat.
Max Holloway receives hero's welcome after arriving in Hawaii as ...FOXSports.com
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Dana White on Cyborg Hitting Angela Magana: 'You Can't Go and ... - MMAWeekly (blog)

Sharks bring changes to San Clemente beaches this summer – OCRegister

San Clementes marine safety chief, Bill Humphreys, describes for the City Council how the citys drone can help spot sharks. (Photo by Fred Swegles, Orange County Register/SCNG)

This photo taken by San Clemente lifeguards drone, dubbed Pelican 1, shows a shark on May 21 about half a piers distance offshore, north of Mariposa Point, officials said. (Photo by Fred Swegles, Orange County Register/SCNG)

Dr. Chris Lowe, director of the Shark Lab at California State University Long Beach, addresses San Clementes City Council about recent increases in shark sightings off the coast. (Photo by Fred Swegles; Orange County Register/SCNG)

Marine Safety Chief Bill Humphreys provides tips on avoiding sharks at a June 6 San Clemente City Council meeting. (Photo by Fred Swegles; Orange County Register/SCNG)

When San Clementes summer junior lifeguard program begins on Monday, June 12, it will be different from past years, in deference to the sudden presence of swarms of great white sharks off the coast.

Since May, weve have over 100 sightings of sharks and this isnt just due to more people on stand-up paddleboards or more drones, San Clementes marine safety chief, Bill Humphreys, said Tuesday, June 6 during a presentation to the City Council. Theres more sharks. Until a couple of years ago, I had never seen a white shark from lifeguarding. (Then) the first time I saw one, I walked out on the pier and I saw three. Its a new situation for us.

The parents of 260 boys and girls enrolled in the current session of junior lifeguards have been notified that the program will go on and that safety will be the No. 1 priority.

It can still be fun, Humphreys said. It can still be very educational. You can learn beach and ocean safety, although we may modify some programs or activities. Its going to depend upon the conditions. For next week, for example, weve had some shark sightings and shark activity, so were not going to do some of the long-distance activities that we would normally do.

The chief addressed these scenarios during thepresentation.

Next week, he said, when junior lifeguards normally would hold a distance swim test for prospective captains and lieutenants, we are going to hold the swim test at the Ole Hanson pool. No sense in sending a bunch of kids out to the end of the pier strung out a long distance.

If the city has a shark sighting, junior lifeguards will be confined to beach activities or classroom instruction, the chief said.

The public, he said, should look to see if lifeguards are flying a yellow or red warning flag at the beach, then ask a lifeguard why it is not green. It may be surf conditions or it may be a shark sighting.

Before going to the beach, hear the citys beach, weather and surf report at 949-492-1011. Alerts are on on weather boards posted at the pier entrance and on towers up and down the beach, also on shark-sighting signs or on the citys homepage at san-clemente.org, using a link in the lower right corner to live beach camera, surf and weather.

Lifeguards now have a drone to hover offshore, looking for sharks. Humphreys said lifeguards also will do morning and ongoing patrols for sharks, observing from towers and on the pier.

Lifeguards maintain contact with other lifeguard agencies and with the Sheriffs Department, which has helicopters fly the coast and a Harbor Patrol boat out of Dana Point Harbor. Lifeguards can also contact with commercial fishermen, Humphreys said.

We are asking the public, if you see something, to notify lifeguards, he said. We end up getting a lot of reports late in the day someone saw a shark in the morning or the next day. There is not a lot we can do about it. The sooner you can report it to us, the more help it can be for everybody.

Reach city lifeguards at 949-361-8219.

Lifeguards also are discouraging chumming by fishermen off the pier, are considering a ban on fishing behaviors that attract sharks and are coordinating beach-closure policies with neighboring lifeguard jurisdictions.

What we dont want to have is one beach closed and the next beach open, giving mixed messages, Humphreys said.

Tom Gudauskas, a San Clemente resident with a degree in marine science from UCLA and father of pro surfers Dane, Patrick and Tanner Gudauskas, attended the council meeting to ask if the city and other coastal cities might ask the California Division of Fish and Wildlife to lift a moratorium on fishing for great white sharks, a protected species.

My love for marine life is spiritual, Gudauskas said, and I do believe in observation, conservation and our human nature to control our environment. I think the short-term solution to the protection and safety of all our beachgoers is to open the moratorium on fishing the great white sharks and reduce their presence in our area.

Gudauskas said the shark presence already has resulted in near-death attacks at San Onofre and at Corona del Mar within the last year and economic impacts including cancellation of a local surf school, cancellations of reservations at a San Clemente surf lodging and reduced orders for new surfboards.

And of course the Hurley Pro is coming to town and who knows what the decisions will be to run or to not run the event, Gudauskas said. When lives are at risk and economic forces collide with Mother Nature, we know those are difficult situations. Im just trying to open the conversation.

Humphreys said the city is assisting the Shark Lab at California State University Long Beachs shark-tagging efforts, acquiring buoys that will help track sharks.

Dr. Chris Lowe, director of the Shark Lab, told the City Council that the San Clemente offshore area has long been a nursery habitat for young great whites. He also mentioned Huntington Beach, Santa Monica Bay and Ventura as hot spots. The pattern that we see is that theyll find a beach, theyll be at that beach for a few weeks to a few months and theyll move between beaches, he said.

Asked if a burgeoning sea lion population might account for more shark sightings, Lowe said that legislation protecting marine mammals including seals and sea lions has brought a major recovery to those populations, which had been endangered. They are food for great whites. But he said they mostly populate the channel islands.

Mayor Kathy Ward thanked Lowe for working with the city and thanked lifeguards for increased efforts to keep people safe. She pledged the councils help if lifeguards need more equipment.

Keep in mind, we dont currently have a hospital, the mayor said.

TIPS FOR BEACH SWIMMERS

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Sharks bring changes to San Clemente beaches this summer - OCRegister

Best Beaches | ACCENT | greenevillesun.com – Greeneville Sun

SIESTA KEY, Fla. (AP) The sand on Siesta Beach on Floridas Gulf Coast is as fine as powdered sugar, a pure, sparkling white and soft as a kittens fur all because its comprised of 99 percent pure crushed quartz.

For that reason, and many others, it was selected this year as the best beach in America by a professor whos made a career ranking and studying beaches around the United States.

The sand is outstanding, said Stephen Leatherman, aka Dr. Beach, a professor at Miamis Florida International University. Every time I go there, Ive got to take a bag home with me. Its almost sacrilegious to walk on it with shoes on.

Other beaches that made the list this year, in order of ranking, are: Kapalua Bay Beach in Maui, Hawaii; Ocracoke Lifeguarded Beach on the Outer Banks of North Carolina; Grayton Beach State Park on the Florida Panhandle; Coopers Beach in Southampton, New York; Coast Guard Beach on Cape Cod in Massachusetts; Caladesi Island State Park in Dunedin/Clearwater, Florida; Hapuna Beach State Park, Big Island, Hawaii; Coronado Beach in San Diego, California; and Beachwalker Park on Kiawah Island, South Carolina.

On a recent workday, Siesta Beach was packed with people, even though it wasnt particularly sunny. The turquoise water was still gorgeous, the sand still fine. The beach is about 200-300 feet (60-90 meters) wide in some places, which means people can stretch out and not feel crowded. The beach was last years runner up and one of three in Florida on this years top 10 list.

Its nice and clean, thats what I look for, said Jamie Gaskin, a 59-year-old retiree from Lakeland, Florida, who was scoping out the beach for a family Memorial Day party. She especially liked the two-story pavilion, which boasts a snack bar and restrooms. Its only two years old and even offers sweet crepes for breakfast and tapas dishes in the early evening.

Theres plenty of tables to barbecue and to hang out. And the restrooms were nice and clean. Id definitely recommend this, she said.

Siesta Beach is on a barrier island in the Gulf of Mexico, and is located just southwest of downtown Sarasota. The water is placid on most days Leatherman says you can measure the waves in inches and is shallow and safe for swimming, with no sharp drop-offs. Added bonuses include lots of parking, a trolley service to and from the islands adorable downtown area and plenty of lifeguards. The beach also has natural dunes, which is a bit rare for Florida, and the fine sand is excellent for building sand castles.

I look for kind of a balance between nature and a developed environment, said Leatherman, who lives on the other side of the state, closer to Miami Beach. Fourteen million people go to Miami Beach every year. Theres just too many people there. I think a lot of people are looking for more of a getaway.

Leatherman, who is director of the Laboratory for Coastal Research at Florida International University, uses about 50 criteria to assess and rank beaches across the country. In recent years, he has given extra points to beaches that prohibit smoking, saying cigarette butts are not only environmentally damaging, but can ruin the experience for beach-goers. Safety and environmental management are other major factors, he said.

Hes rated beaches since 1991.

The Maui beach that came in at No. 2 on the list, Kapalua Bay Beach, is smaller than Siesta Beach. Its crescent-shaped and flanked by palm trees. Unlike lots of Hawaii beaches, there arent many waves at Kapalua, he said, making it perfect for safe swimming.

The coral reefs almost go right to the beach. There are tropical fish swimming all around.

The third beach on the list, Ocracoke, is unique in both history and location. Leatherman points out that it was once the pirate Blackbeards old haunt. And its only accessible by a state ferry.

The only negative I have, it seems like too many cars, he said. I wish they would turn car ferries to pedestrian ferries.

Leatherman says he tries to select locations that are a bit off the beaten path, yet immensely rewarding once visitors arrive. Siesta Beach, he points out, is an outstanding place to watch the sun dip below the Gulf horizon one more reason why it made the top of this years list.

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Chaos ensues as massive great white shark nearly beaches itself … – GrindTV

Injured great white shark struggles in shallow water off Baja California, Mexico. Photo: Courtesy of Dale Pearson

Solitude along the Sea of Cortez shoreline was shattered recently when a 15-foot great white shark began to thrash violently in the shallows.

Dale Pearson, who owns a house in the Baja California community of Puertecitos, thought at first that a pilot whale was trying to strand, or that an extremely large hammerhead shark had come in to hunt at midday on May 27.

Pearson and a friend hurried to the water for a closer look, while the commotion also captured the attention of Mexican fishermen camped on the beach.

When they realized it was a full-grown great white shark, they guessed it had become trapped in a net. But they soon realized it had been struck by a boat propellor, behind its dorsal fin, and was seriously wounded.

Pearson, a dive operator who resides in Alpine, Calif., captured extensive video, but the footage is so riddled with expletives that we chose merely to publish screen shots from the encounter. (Those who wish to view the video can click on this link.)

The shark, too injured to hunt for sea lions, was foraging on stingrays (typical prey for juvenile white sharks).

Ive done several expeditions for work on TV programs with white sharks; those were always operations where I was expecting to see such an animal, Pearson, who also co-owns a California winery, told GrindTV. But to see one in front of your house in the middle of the day, in three feet of water, completely floored me.

RELATED: Close encounters galore as great white shark tour debuts off SoCal; photos, video

It seemed at times that the shark would die, as it rested on sandbars for long periods. But in each case the shark would ultimately spring to life.

Michael Domeier, who runs the Marine Conservation Science Institute, saw the video and immediately thought of the great white sharks he has tagged at Guadalupe Island, west of Baja California.

We are always nervous about our Guadalupe White Sharks during the pupping season. Our big pregnant females pup both in the Sea of Cortez and the Pacific side of Baja, Domeier wrote on Facebook. The Sea of Cortez is loaded with gill nets; typically the shark can break through it, but occasionally they get so entangled that they die. We agree with person who took this video, in that the injuries from the boat propeller would likely not kill the shark they are exceptionally tough with incredible healing ability.

Adding to the chaos, Pearson and his friend were stung by stingrays as they ventured close to the shark.Pearson said he spotted the shark roaming the coastline over the next two days, and expected the predator to survive.

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Chaos ensues as massive great white shark nearly beaches itself ... - GrindTV

Seabirds washing up and dying on Cape Cod beaches – Cape Cod Times (subscription)

Doug Fraser @dougfrasercct

EASTHAM They started washing ashore in April.

Big birds, with wingspans approaching six feet and heavy, durable bodies topped with a formidable beak.

Spectacular hunters, working big schools of herring and mackerel, northern gannets spend most of their life far out to sea and nest up north in Quebec and Newfoundland. The only time they are ever seen onshore around Cape Cod is during a major storm when flocks huddle out of the wind on the flats of Cape Cod Bay.

So, when Stephanie Ellis, the executive director of Wild Care, the animal rehabilitation center in Eastham, and Zachary Mertz, executive director of The Cape Wildlife Center veterinary hospital in Barnstable, saw gannets brought into their facilities, sometimes two to four a day, over the past couple of months, they knew something extraordinary was happening.

I love those birds, said Ellis.They are so strong and fierce.

Their big webbed feet are used to propel the birds through the water after spectacular dives on folded wings from upward of 130 feet in the air, down as deep as 72 feet below the surface. As elegant as they are in the air and water, they are not built for walking on land.

But the birds had far worse problems than tripping over two oversize feet, according toEllis, Mertz and their staffs.

They were unable to hold their head up, they had tremors and were unable to control their body movements, Ellis said. To us, that usually suggests a toxin or trauma.

Birds with a long-term illness or injury often stop feeding and are emaciated when they are recovered. But these gannets were within a normal weight range and their blood work appeared normal, Ellis said.

What this tells us is that whatever is happening to them is hitting them quickly, she said. Domoic acid and saxotoxin, both biotoxins created by algae, have caused neurological disorders and have been known to kill seals, sea lions and even whales who are feeding on fish that have been eating the algae.

Whatever it is, it's been deadly, killing 16 of the 21 gannets that Wild Care worked on.

The staff vet and myself have been in the field for many years. This is the first time we have seen gannets affected by this, Mertz said. We are sort of figuring out if this is disease-based or toxicosis, diet-based.

The sentiment out there is that this may be a virus passed bird to bird or by ticks or fleas (at nesting sites,) Mertz said.

Necropsies have thus far been inconclusive.

The Cape Wildlife Center is affiliated with New England Wildlife Center and the regional facility has been reporting sick and dying gannets washing onto beaches in Duxbury, Hingham and Cohasset, covering 60 to 70 miles of coastline, Mertz said.

But the bulk of affected animals have come ashore on the Atlantic side of the Outer Cape towns of Provincetown, Truro, Wellfleet and Eastham, Mertz and Ellis said.

U.S. Department of Agriculture wildlife technician Ryan Bevilacqua said his agency sent tissue, blood and other samples taken from dead birds to the Southeastern Cooperative Wildlife Disease Study at the University of Georgia veterinary medicine program. Analysis has ruled out avian flu, Bevilacqua said. He estimated as many as 100 northern gannets have been affected. Thats not going to impact the population which is believed to be stable at nearly 130,000 individuals.

Wild Care has five gannets in its care, four of which survived the mysterious ailment. Nursing such large animals back to health is labor intensive and expensive, Ellis said, especially at a busy time of year with young injured and abandoned animals and birds coming in. Both facilities have more than 100 patients now.

Rehabilitators first get fluids back into the birds to help flush out toxins if they are present. They then get an easy-to-digest formula mixed from a powder. Next comes a nutritional slurry, a seabird milkshake with the powder and vitamins blended with mackerel, herring or capelin.

It does not smell good, Ellis said.

They are then fed fish, which they swallow whole. Rehabilitators place them in pools to encourage them to preen and spread the oil that helps waterproof them against the icy North Atlantic.

They need to be 101 percent waterproof, Ellis said. It is one of the most critical things for us in assessing their readiness for release.

Then, its time to load them on a boat and return them to sea

It saddens me, because they should be farther north and breeding, Ellis said. It is my favorite bird because they are so sexy, absolutely stunning. They tuck their wings and dive like a torpedo. They are completely built for a lifestyle in the water.

Follow Doug Fraser on Twitter:@dougfrasercct.

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Rio Vista Man Stormed The Beaches Of Normandy In D-Day Invasion – CBS Sacramento

June 6, 2017 10:38 PM By Tony Lopez

RIO VISTA (CBS13) Few remember D-Day like Rio Vista resident Henry Hank Tussy. The 92-year-old World War II veteran survived that fateful day and tells CBS13 News the images will never leave him.

I can remember bodies flying up in the airpieces of body and stuffso close that you can feel it you can feel it in your face and stuff, Tussy said.

Tussy was 19 years old when he stormed the beaches of Normandy, France on June 6, 1944. He was a captain of a Higgins Boat, used to transport men to the shores. Hank quickly realized this would be a mission of survival.

You cant imagine 9,500 killed on that one day, on a stretch of beach about 4, 4-and-a-half miles long, he said. He goes to describe the waters around his boat, saying The beach water was redwashing up on the beach the wavesit was more red than it was blue.

Hank Tussy ended up making countless trips from the shores of Omaha Beach to the Hospital Ships out at sea.

Of the 24 boats in his squadron, his was the only one to make it back.

But the Rio Vista veteran doesnt consider himself a hero, telling us, The heroes are the ones that were left over there that died there on that beach, to me, they are the heroes.

Tony Lopez has been a proud member of the CBS13 news team for nearly a decade, now. Hired to launch Sacramentos only local news at 4 p.m., he continues to bring viewers their first afternoon news of the day, including breaking news at it...

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Rio Vista Man Stormed The Beaches Of Normandy In D-Day Invasion - CBS Sacramento

Astronomy – Celestron

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Astronomy - Celestron

Telescopes, Telescope Accessories, Outdoor and Scientific …

WIFI

Celestrons telescopes reach a new level with integrated WiFi! Leave your hand control behind and slew to all the best celestial objects with a tap of your smart device. Connect your device to your WiFi telescopes built-in wireless network and explore the universe with Celestrons SkyPortal mobile app for iOS and Android.

Or upgrade your compatible Celestron computerized telescope with the SkyPortal WiFi module. SkyPortal provides full wireless control of your telescope and turns your smart device into your own personal planetarium and observatory!

SKYPORTAL

STARSENSE

In about three minutes, its gathered enough information to triangulate its position and align itself. Then, press the Sky Tour button: StarSense will automatically slew to all the best stars, planets, galaxies, and more currently visible in the night sky.

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Do stellar flares damage exoplanets? – Astronomy Magazine

Cool stars have really come into their own lately, especially as discoveries of their planetary systems increase (think TRAPPIST-1 and Proxima Centauri). But despite their relatively cool nature, these stars can put out intense flares that might affect the planets haplessly circling them. The role of such flares remains unknown but maybe not for long, now that a team of astronomers has begun building a database of dwarf star flares from high-precision data obtained by the Galaxy Evolution Explorer (GALEX) mission.

The database was introduced Tuesday morning at the 230th Meeting of the American Astronomical Society by Chase Million of Million Concepts. Million is the leader of a project called gPhoton, which has undertaken the effort to reprocess data taken by GALEX, which recorded the sky in ultraviolet (UV) light. Thus far, the team has examined more than 100 terabytes of data, looking for flares from red dwarf stars. Although these stars are normally unremarkable in the UV bands, the flares they emit cause them to brighten and become noticeable at these wavelengths, if only for a short time. The foundation of this work is the observation that the sky changes rapidly, said Million during the press conference in Austin, Texas.

While large flares are easier to record, smaller flares have also been seen and theyre predicted to occur more frequently. Its these smaller flares that Million and his colleagues are looking to identify, thanks to the remarkably high precision (5 thousandths of a second) of the data taken by GALEX. Finding these rapid flares is now possible with the help of gPhoton, which allows astronomers to unlock that very short time domain data and study very fast variables with archival data, he said.

The gPhoton database is now a trillion photons strong and 1.2 terabytes in size. Its currently comprised of 10,000 m-dwarf stars with known distances, and each star has its own light curve (a measurement of the amount of light it emits over time). From these light curves, the team has already identified 100 to 200 small flares, each about a minute in length, at energies that havent really been measured before, said Million.

And these flares could have serious implications for planets around these cool stars. Habitable planets are closer to cooler stars and cooler stars, we know, have a lot of these flares Even though small flares are small, because the planets are closer, they will have more of an impact on the habitability of those planets.

As Scott Fleming of the Space Telescope Science Institute explained in an accompanying press release, What if planets are constantly bathed by these smaller, but still significant, flares? There could be a cumulative effect.

Concluding his presentation, Million said, Im intentionally vague. This means something I really do not know. It may be that flares strip away the atmospheres and maybe that they irradiate the surfaces. Theres even a recent preprint where they say some amount of flare activity may be necessary for prebiotic chemistry. I dont know, but Im really excited to get this result out so that other people can tell me what it means.

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Do stellar flares damage exoplanets? - Astronomy Magazine

Gravitational lenses reveal the universe’s brightest galaxies – Astronomy Magazine

The term gravitational lensing has become pretty commonplace. This effect, which occurs when light from a background object, such as a galaxy, is magnified and brightened when it encounters a massive gravitational field, say from a galaxy cluster, on its way to Earth. Gravitational lensing can make otherwise impossible-to-see objects visible, and offers a window into the very distant universe. It also turns out, gravitational lensing is responsible for many, if not all, of the brightest infrared galaxies we see in the sky.

James Lowenthal of Smith College made the announcement Tuesday afternoon at a press conference during the 230th Meeting of the American Astronomical Society, which is taking place in Austin, Texas. Lowenthal and his collaborators are interested in studying galaxies called ultra-luminous infrared galaxies, or ULIRGS, which are undergoing huge booms of star formation in the faraway universe. However, star formation produces dust as a natural result; because these galaxies are dusty, much of their optical light is hidden and reprocessed by the dust, which re-emits the light at longer wavelengths: the infrared. Understanding why these galaxies are undergoing such intense star formation is vital to creating a more complete picture of galaxy evolution over time.

Lowenthals group began with data taken by the Planck satellite, which was launched to map the cosmic microwave background left over from the Big Bang. But because the satellite observed the sky in infrared and submillimeter wavelengths, it was also able to spot bright infrared galaxies. From this data, Lowenthals team assembled a sample of 31 of the brightest sources some of the very brightest infrared galaxies in the universe, Lowenthal said during the press conference. These sources are star-forming galaxies that existed between 8 and 11.5 billion years ago, churning out stars at a rate 1,000 or more times that of the Milky Ways current star formation rate (about one solar mass per year). In fact, theyre so active that theyre not just ULIRGS, theyre 10 or 100 times the ULIRG threshold, said Lowenthal. They really are the most luminous objects that we know of.

They team followed up their sample by looking at data taken with the ESA's Herschel Space Observatory and the Very Large Array. Finally, they used the Large Millimeter Telescope to observe their galaxy sample to measure their distances.

But because observing in longer wavelengths reduces the resolution, or sharpness, of the data, the team was still missing information about the nature of these galaxies. In particular, it was still difficult to tell why they were forming stars at such high rates. So they next turned to the Hubble Space Telescope (HST); while ULIRG galaxies dont normally put out a lot of optical light because its obscured by dust, these galaxies are so extreme that they still emit enough for Hubble to pick it up.

Now, the first 11 of 31 have been imaged by HST, and the result is already astounding: These galaxies are all gravitationally lensed. They knocked our socks off, Lowenthal said. This has been a treasure box, a jewel box of cool new images. And one after another, you see gravitational lenses galore.

What does that mean? These galaxies are all made brighter and bigger by the presence of galaxy clusters containing huge amounts of mass between the ULIRG and Earth. At least eight of the images show Einstein rings, an artifact of lensing that can smear the distant galaxy into a circular shape as a result of the viewing geometry. Lowenthal likened it to looking at a candle through a wine glass held longwise. If the glass is tilted just right, the image of the candle will smear out into a circle.

We have added significantly to the total list of known gravitational lenses without even trying, Lowenthal said. We did not set out to find gravitational lenses. We set out to study distant, dusty starburst galaxies. But it turns out the brightest ones are all gravitationally lensed.

These lensed images also show dramatically more detail than images captured with other instruments. And despite the distorted images created by the lenses, Lowenthals team can use these new, clearer images to reconstruct the galaxies to, he said, unscramble the true shape and nature of the background galaxies. And we can do it with better precision than we could before.

This unprecedented detail will allow astronomers to peer deeper into the mechanisms responsible for these galaxies star formation on smaller scales within the galaxy itself, as small as 10 to 100 light-years across. Currently, there are two theories behind such huge bursts of star-forming activity in the distant universe: mergers between galaxies that excite material into forming stars, and cold gas flooding into galaxies from the intergalactic medium to feed star formation. In nearby galaxies, the former is responsible, but in these more distant galaxies, the question remains. The information needed to discern between the two ideas might be found inside these gravitationally lensed galaxies.

Lowenthal concluded the press conference by showing the attendees a sneak peek of the newest image, which hed received while at the conference. And, just as the others in his sample: Its another one, he said, as the image appeared on the screen to confirm it. Its another spectacular gravitational lens.

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Gravitational lenses reveal the universe's brightest galaxies - Astronomy Magazine

An observatory higher than the sky | Astronomy.com – Astronomy Magazine

Its a freezing January night, at 3200-meter above sea level, in southwest China. The wind sweeps across the mountaintop from east to west, reddening bare fingers in seconds. But looking at the stars above, youll easily forget where you are.

About 26 miles away from Lijiang, Yunnan, the Lijiang observatory is within a village called Gao Mei Gu. Gao Mei Gu means a place higher than the sky in the language of Naxi people, the only ethnic group in China that has maintained traditions of a matrilineal clan. While Lijiang is famous for its ancient city and tourism, Gao Mei Gu is famous for its starry sky.

Its the same starry sky that has attracted some businessman to drive across half of the country about 1200 miles just for an overnight camping every winter, tent and telescope in his BMW trunk. And its the same starry sky that stopped a female officer during a tour, laying herself down on the ground and staring at the heaven-like view despite the coldness. Many amateur astronomers and enthusiasts were also moved to tears by the starry sky.

The Lijiang Observatory hosts the most productive research optical telescope in China, the observatorys director, Jinming Bai, wrote in the preface of its 2016 annual report. The optical telescope hes referring to is the 2.4m telescope. About 30 percent of active galactic nuclei identified in the world were viewed at this telescope, as well as 10 percent of the supernovae, according to Liang Chang, the chief optical engineer at the Observatory. The 2.4m telescope was also used to look for high-redshift quasars, important celestial bodies for studying universes early days and the evolution of black holes. In a 2016 Astrophysical Journal article surveying 75 high redshift quasars, researchers were able to find 36 of them with the 2.4m telescope.

Some special features of the 2.4m telescope make such discoveries possible. For example, the telescope is capable of creating both spectrographs and visual images. Its 2.3-ton primary mirror is made from materials with near-zero thermal expansion, and the mirrors position can be auto-adjusted by air pressure for precise observation. On its Cassegrain focus, a fast instrument change system switches different instruments in less than 30 seconds, thus maximizing the telescopes observation time.

When I visit the control room during a winter night researchers on shift are observing astronomical bodies that might be supernovae. These supernovae candidates are not confirmed yet, explains a PhD student as he zooms in to show the redshift of star of interest. Because they are too close to the galaxies around them, its impossible to tell the supernovae and the galaxies apart not by direct imaging. The good news is that supernovae and galaxies have vastly different spectrograph presentations. So spectrographs collected by the 2.4m telescope will be used to disentangle these two groups of celestial bodies and to see if there are supernovae hiding insides their surrounding galaxies.

The perspectives of those young astronomers at the Lijiang Observatory are somewhat unique too. They conquer technical and financial difficulties with innovations, sacrificing family time and health by devoting themselves to this high altitude observatory in their 30s. Not only driven by an academic passion, they also have a sense of mission. They aspire to make Chinas astronomy research abreast with the worlds best.

Recently, a 12-meter Optical/Infrared Telescope has been listed as a key project of Chinas Thirteenth Five-Year Plan. The chief optical engineer, Chang, says while its ok for China to aim at building the next biggest telescopes, China needs more medium optical telescopes in the diameter range of 3-5 meters. It would mean lower investment and more scientific output. An 8-meter optical telescope in design, the Chinese Giant Solar Telescope, is expected to cost $90 million.

Yufeng Fan, engineer in chief of the Lijiang Observatory, agrees on the usefulness of optical telescopes with medium size. And Fan adds that the Lijiang observatory always looks forward to having more fresh blood to help with the teams research.

As we step out of the dome, clouds from the east have covered almost all stars, and the nights observation has to end. Its past 11pm and our guide Yuxin Xin is still energetic. Staying up late is an old habit of astronomers observing the sky at night, Xin says. On the drive back to downtown, we talk about his work, future of astronomy and unsolved mysteries. To him, he says, its really amazing that the extreme big and the extreme small of the universe are actually in the same form: Planets orbiting the sun is somewhat like electrons orbiting the nucleus.

I think of the image I saw on one of the monitors in the telescopes control room: two swirling distant galaxies in a long and slow process of merging together. Isnt that image somewhat similar to the image of two single-celled organisms merging into a multicellular one under the microscope? Not usually familiar to us lay people, those two images are both beauties at another scale, wonders in different corners of the world.

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An observatory higher than the sky | Astronomy.com - Astronomy Magazine

Summer Astronomy, Minimoon & Saturn Opposition 2017 – Universe Today


Universe Today
Summer Astronomy, Minimoon & Saturn Opposition 2017
Universe Today
Summertime astronomy leaves observers with the perennial question: when to observe? Here in Florida, for example, true astronomical darkness does not occur until 10 PM; folks further north face an even more dire situation. In Alaska, the game in late ...

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Summer Astronomy, Minimoon & Saturn Opposition 2017 - Universe Today

Astronomers find planet hotter than most stars – Astronomy Now Online

This artists concept shows planet KELT-9b orbiting its host star, KELT-9. It is the hottest gas giant planet discovered so far. Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech

A newly discovered Jupiter-like world is so hot, its being vaporized by its own star.

With a dayside temperature of more than 7,800 degrees Fahrenheit (4,600 Kelvin), KELT-9b is a planet that is hotter than most stars. But its blue A-type star, called KELT-9, is even hotter in fact, it is probably unraveling the planet through evaporation.

This is the hottest gas giant planet that has ever been discovered, said Scott Gaudi, astronomy professor at The Ohio State University in Columbus, who led a study on the topic. He worked on this study while on sabbatical at NASAs Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, California. The unusual planet is described in the journal Nature and at a presentation at the American Astronomical Society summer meeting this week in Austin, Texas.

KELT-9b is 2.8 times more massive than Jupiter, but only half as dense. Scientists would expect the planet to have a smaller radius, but the extreme radiation from its host star has caused the planets atmosphere to puff up like a balloon.

Because the planet is tidally locked to its star as the moon is to Earth one side of the planet is always facing toward the star, and one side is in perpetual darkness. Molecules such as water, carbon dioxide and methane cant form on the dayside because it is bombarded by too much ultraviolet radiation. The properties of the nightside are still mysterious molecules may be able to form there, but probably only temporarily.

Its a planet by any of the typical definitions of mass, but its atmosphere is almost certainly unlike any other planet weve ever seen just because of the temperature of its dayside, Gaudi said.

The KELT-9 star is only 300 million years old, which is young in star time. It is more than twice as large, and nearly twice as hot, as our Sun. Given that the planets atmosphere is constantly blasted with high levels of ultraviolet radiation, the planet may even be shedding a tail of evaporated planetary material like a comet.

KELT-9 radiates so much ultraviolet radiation that it may completely evaporate the planet, said Keivan StasSun, a professor of physics and astronomy at Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tennessee, who directed the study with Gaudi.

But this scenario assumes the star doesnt grow to engulf the planet first.

KELT-9 will swell to become a red giant star in a few hundred million years, said Stassun. The long-term prospects for life, or real estate for that matter, on KELT-9b are not looking good.

The planet is also unusual in that it orbits perpendicular to the spin axis of the star. That would be analogous to the planet orbiting perpendicular to the plane of our solar system. One year on this planet is less than two days.

KELT-9b is nowhere close to habitable, but Gaudi said theres a good reason to study worlds that are unlivable in the extreme.

As has been highlighted by the recent discoveries from the MEarth collaboration, the planet around Proxima Centauri, and the astonishing system discovered around TRAPPIST-1, the astronomical community is clearly focused on finding Earth-like planets around small, cooler stars like our Sun. They are easy targets and theres a lot that can be learned about potentially habitable planets orbiting very low-mass stars in general. On the other hand, because KELT-9bs host star is bigger and hotter than the Sun, it complements those efforts and provides a kind of touchstone for understanding how planetary systems form around hot, massive stars, Gaudi said.

The KELT-9b planet was found using one of the two telescopes called KELT, or Kilodegree Extremely Little Telescope. In late May and early June 2016, astronomers using the KELT-North telescope at Winer Observatory in Arizona noticed a tiny drop in the stars brightness only about half of one percent which indicated that a planet may have passed in front of the star. The brightness dipped once every 1.5 days, which means the planet completes a yearly circuit around its star every 1.5 days.

Subsequent observations confirmed the signal to be due to a planet, and revealed it to be what astronomers call a hot Jupiter the kind of planet the KELT telescopes are designed to spot.

Astronomers at Ohio State, Lehigh University in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania, and Vanderbilt jointly operate two KELTs (one each in the northern and southern hemispheres) to fill a large gap in the available technologies for finding exoplanets. Other telescopes are designed to look at very faint stars in much smaller sections of the sky, and at very high resolution. The KELTs, in contrast, look at millions of very bright stars at once, over broad sections of sky, and at low resolution.

This discovery is a testament to the discovery power of small telescopes, and the ability of citizen scientists to directly contribute to cutting-edge scientific research, said Joshua Pepper, astronomer and assistant professor of physics at Lehigh University in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania, who built the two KELT telescopes.

The astronomers hope to take a closer look at KELT-9b with other telescopes including NASAs Spitzer and Hubble space telescopes, and eventually the James Webb Space Telescope, which is scheduled to launch in 2018. Observations with Hubble would enable them to see if the planet really does have a cometary tail, and allow them to determine how much longer that planet will survive its current hellish condition.

Thanks to this planets star-like heat, it is an exceptional target to observe at all wavelengths, from ultraviolet to infrared, in both transit and eclipse. Such observations will allow us to get as complete a view of its atmosphere as is possible for a planet outside our solar system, said Knicole Colon, paper co-author who was based at NASA Ames Research Center in Californias Silicon Valley during the time of this study.

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