Iran: US religious freedom report ‘unfounded and biased’ – Washington Examiner

Iranian officials on Wednesday accused the State Department of issuing a "biased" report condemning the regime's restrictions on religious freedom.

"The Islamic Republic of Iran considers the report as unrealistic, unfounded and biased which has been compiled only for specific political objectives," Foreign Ministry Spokesman Bahram Qassemi said on Wednesday, according to the semi-official FARS media outlet.

Iranian officials buttressed that claim by noting that Judaism is "a recognized minority" in the country. But the Secretary of State Rex Tillerson's team noted that Iran "promote[s] Holocaust denial," and, more broadly, restricts freedom of worship and bans religious minorities from trying to win converts in the Muslim community.

"Iran continues to sentence individuals to death under vague apostasy laws 20 individuals were executed in 2016 on charges that included, quote, waging war against God,'" Tillerson said Tuesday when releasing the report. "Members of the Baha'i community are in prison today simply for abiding by their beliefs."

The State Department's report on religious liberty under the Shia Muslim regime elaborated on that theme. "The government continued to harass, interrogate, and arrest Bahais, Christians, Sunni Muslims, and other religious minorities and regulated Christian religious practices closely to enforce the prohibition on proselytizing," the report said.

An American pastor with dual Iranian citizenship, for instance, was arrested and then beaten in prison on charges that his evangelization efforts "threatened the national security of Iran." He was released in the context of the implementation of the Iran nuclear deal and the Obama administration's agreement to release money that the regime claimed it had been owed in relation to a decades-old dispute over a blocked arms deal.

But the Iranians maintained that they respect religious freedom, while accusing President Trump of trying to curtail the liberties of American Muslims.

"The U.S. administration is expected to take legal and practical measures more rapidly to support the freedom of religion, specially regarding the Muslims' rights in the U.S., instead of judgment about the situation of freedom of religion in other countries," Qassemi said.

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Iran: US religious freedom report 'unfounded and biased' - Washington Examiner

Vatican envoy: Vietnam’s government must respect religious freedom – Crux: Covering all things Catholic

LA VANG, Vietnam The Vatican envoy to Vietnam called on the Southeast Asian nations communist government to respect religious freedom.

Archbishop Leopoldo Girelli, the nonresident representative of the Vatican to Vietnam, presided at the August 13 opening Mass of the Marian Congress, held at the national shrine of Our Lady of La Vang in central Vietnams Quang Tri province.

In his homily, Girelli spoke of the state of religious freedom in the country, reported ucanews.com.

In some provinces, civil authorities are anxious and complain about the Catholics and their deeds, the archbishop said during Mass, where he was joined by Vietnamese bishops and some 200 priests.

Girelli advised the gathering on the wisdom of St. Peters words: We must obey God rather than men and of Jesus Give back to Caesar what is Caesars, and to God what is Gods.

I would like to tell the Vietnamese Caesars to give to God what is Gods, he said, to which the congregation responded with a large round of applause.

Earlier this year, the Vietnamese bishops criticized the new Law on Belief and Religion, which will take effect January 1. They said abstract phrases in the law are easily abused to shift responsibility onto and condemn religious organizations when the government is dissatisfied.

At the Mass, Girelli said the local Catholic Church must be seen as something positive, rather than as something problematic for the country.

He asked the congregation to spend time praying during the congress so that they can acquire Gods presence in their lives. Only when we follow Jesus and stay in him, we are really happy, he said.

The archbishop, who is based in Singapore, pays working visits to dioceses in Vietnam, with each visit lasting only one month. All his activities must be approved by the government, ucanews.com reported.

An estimated 100,000 pilgrims including people of other faiths from Vietnam and abroad attended the three-day congress to mark the feast of the Assumption of Mary into heaven, celebrated Aug. 15.

During the event, pilgrims attended Masses, went to confession, prayed the rosary and watched cultural performances.

Mary is believed to have appeared in La Vang in 1798 to console persecuted Vietnamese Catholics. In 1961, the bishops of Vietnam declared the site a national Marian shrine.

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Vatican envoy: Vietnam's government must respect religious freedom - Crux: Covering all things Catholic

Escape artist llama makes bid for freedom on golf course – The Seattle Times

JACKSON, N.H. (AP) Maybe these golfers in New Hampshire didnt yell fore but they might have considered llama on the links.

Golfers at Eagle Mountain Golf Course in Jackson were joined Monday on the sixth fairway by a llama that escaped from his pen about 2 miles (over 3 kilometers) through some woods.

The Conway Daily Sun reports (http://bit.ly/2vDrq5N) that the pack animal, named Noir, was friendly and got in pictures with the golfers.

The fugitive is well known to local police. Officers escorted him home in June when he escaped from his electric fence enclosure. And this time, Jackson Police Chief Chris Perley again returned him to his pen with help from his owner, Russ Miller.

Miller admits the electric fence needs to be a little higher.

___

Information from: The Conway Daily Sun, http://www.mountwashingtonvalley.com

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Escape artist llama makes bid for freedom on golf course - The Seattle Times

The Morning Jolt – National Review

Well, that was a rough day, America. Id count on more of the same today. But with all its insanity and hoopla, it is this story by Alexandra DeSanctis, on Iceland having no room for babies with Down Syndrome, that frightens, enrages, and is most likely to result in Gods wrath and fury.

And now, back to the fallout of the Charlottesville Weekend. About those other matters, here are nine suggestions of worthwhile pieces and podcasts that you will find on NRO today.

1. Very fine people? David French writes in The Corner that Donald Trump Just Gave the Press Conference of the Alt-Rights Dreams.

2. Jonah Goldberg slams Conservatisms Damaging Game of Footsie with the Alt-Right.

3. Limitations of statues: Kyle Smith asks Destroying Symbols: Where Does It End? From his piece:

Once every Confederate monument in the country is down, what then? How is a statue of an ordinary rebel soldier in Durham, N.C., more offensive than a gorgeous building-sized tribute to slave-owning racist Thomas Jefferson on the Tidal Basin? We are reaching the point where, if the Washington Monument were to be blown up tomorrow, it would be anyones guess whether jihadists or the anti-fascist Left did it.

4. Related: Quin Hillyer argues in The Corner against removing all Confederate Monuments.

5. A Nobel Peace laureate dies in a Chinese prison. Here is a slice of Jianli Yangs article Liu Xiaobos Stern Warning:

Liu Xiaobo feared then that the West might repeat the same mistake as it did during the rise of the fascist Third Reich and the Communist USSR. He warned that the international community must remain vigilant in the face of the rising Chinese Communist dictatorship because the game for world dominance had changed. The Chinese Communists had also morphed into a new beast more adaptive, cunning, and deceptive.

6. Michelle Malkin wants to know Where Is the Corporate Disavowal of Black Lives Matters?

7. Will the Trump Administration give billions to West Virginias coal industry? Michael Tanner calls the plan corporate welfare that needs to be stopped.

8. On a new episode of The Editors, Rich, Charlie, Michael Brendan Dougherty, and Dan McLaughlin discuss the neo-Nazi rally in Charlottesville, Virginiaand its fallout. Listen here.

9. And in a special history edition of The Editors, Rich Lowry talks with eminent historians Victor Davis Hanson and Andrew Roberts to discuss the evacuation of British and French forces from Dunkirk at the outset of World War 2. Listen here.

Its 7AM and I am already exhausted. Only a few more days and Big Jim Geraghty will be back in the MJ saddle. Until tomorrow, God bless.

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The Morning Jolt - National Review

Cyborg: Holly Holm will run in the ring, but I will find her – Bloody Elbow

After Cris Cyborg finally won the UFC featherweight title at UFC 214, the next match-up being set-up for her is against former bantamweight champion Holly Holm. Holms striking coach Mike Winkeljohn already made his assessment of the fight, banking on the belief that his fighter would be able to pick Cyborg apart.

From her end, Cyborg is just waiting for Holm to finally agree to the fight. During a recent media scrum, she went on to address Winkeljohns previous claims, pointing out that Holm had already turned her down on a few occasions.

She already (turned me down) three times, Cyborg said. I was supposed to fight her in Curitiba (at UFC 198) and agreed to fight her at 140 pounds, and she didnt want to fight. And then I said, lets fight in Brasilia, and then she said she can fight me if I make 138 pounds, not 140. And then when Megan Anderson pulled out of (UFC 214), I said I would like to fight Holly. And then she said no, and she fights Bethe Correia.

Its easy when the coach says something, she continued. Its better if she says it herself, not her coach. And if she believes (that she can pick me apart), and her coach believes that, then lets do this fight. What are you waiting for?

Cyborg also gave props to Holms striking prowess, but believes it does not pose a danger against her.

She never knocked out one girl with a punch, Cyborg said. Her last fight with Bethe Correia (lasted) three rounds, (and it took) maybe six punches before the referee stopped the fight.

I dont think shes very aggressive. I dont think shes going to be a danger. It would be an exciting fight because I like to fight. Shes gonna run in the ring, but Im gonna find her.

Cyborg has been campaigning for the Holm fight to take place at UFC 219 for the UFCs year-end card in Las Vgeas.

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Cyborg: Holly Holm will run in the ring, but I will find her - Bloody Elbow

Cris ‘Cyborg’ explains taking high road during Joe Rogan interview … – MMAjunkie.com

RIO DE JANEIRO UFC champ Cristiane Justino had been a target of Joe Rogans verbal jabs in the past. So, when he was the one with the microphone following her title-winning UFC 214 display, the symbolism was hard to miss.

Cyborg herself, at least, was quite aware of it.

I was thinking, I said Man, Joe Rogan is going to interview me,' Justino told MMAjunkie during a media day in Rio de Janeiro on Tuesday. Im going to make some ironic play with him. You know, make all (these) ideas before the fight.

Justinos issues with Rogango a while back.While he didpublicly apologize for jokes about the champ having male genitals, made during a podcast that also featured UFC president Dana White back in 2015, he recently landed back on the champs bad side because of a later-cleared issue with the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency stemming from a test for the banned diuretic spironolactone.

Before an investigation ended with Justino beinggranted a retroactive therapeutic use exemption (TUE)and cleared of any wrongdoing,Rogan expressed skepticism around her reasons to make use of the substance. Cyborg was quick to respond to him, who she called neither a friend or a fan.

Shes also been very public about how she feels her reputation was tarnished by the past remarks made by both Rogan and White whos also admitted to the UFCs share of blame when it comes to their dealings with the Brazilian featherweight.

But, at UFC 214, she preferred to take the high road.

It was my moment there, Justino said in her native Portuguese. I think him, at that moment, interviewing me, and Dana White putting the belt on my waist, that was a response in itself. I didnt need to say anything. I think they reflected at that moment. I didnt need to say anything and ruin a special moment for me.

We did the interview normally as if he was just any other person there. Im not saying that were going to become friends. But he was doing his job, and I was doing mine.

One can understand why Justino (18-1 MMA, 3-0 UFC) wanted nothing more than to savor the moment. After all, the third-round knockoutover fellow former Invicta FC champ Tonya Evinger (19-6 MMA, 0-1 UFC)carried some meaning. After a long, turbulent road, Cyborg had not only beaten the odds in making it to the UFC she was conquering the belt of a division built around her.

Theres also the fact that Cyborg seems to have developed somewhat of a thick skin when it comes to doping accusations. In fact, that was the main argument used by inaugural womens 145-pound champ Germaine de Randamie to refuse fightingthe then obvious contender Justino following a title win over Holly Holm.

While Justino has, in fact, failed a doping test in the past she was stripped from her Strikeforce title after testing positive for an anabolic steroid in 2011 shes not only admitted to it, but has taken extra steps to prove herself a clean athlete.

Which is why the accusations, she says, look more like insurance than anything else.

Ronda (Rousey) started this, to not fight me, Justino said. And then everybody said that. But the fans are smart. The fans know. I take the same test everybody does. Its USADA. I do the same thing. If you call me a cheater, you think USADA is cheating. You think theyre doing wrong, their jobs, if you think Im a cheater. Because I do the same as everybody.

Im the first athlete (who) signed with USADA one year before I fought in the UFC. When I fought in Curitiba (at UFC 198), I (had already been working) with USADA for one year. When I fought in Invicta I fought girls who didnt have to take USADA tests. I did this to prove Im a clean athlete. I made a mistake. Everybody makes mistakes, but everybody likes to judge you.

I think (De Randamie) wanted insurance to not fight me; she didnt have an excuse. First (it was) about the doping, after (it was) the hands, after (it was) the doctor, after the family. I dont know. Any day youd interview her, she had an excuse.

For more on the UFCs upcoming schedule, check out theUFC Rumorssection of the site.

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Cris 'Cyborg' explains taking high road during Joe Rogan interview ... - MMAjunkie.com

Brand New ‘Justice League’ Images Spotlight Aquaman & Cyborg – Heroic Hollywood (blog)

After making brief cameo appearances in Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice,Aquaman and Cyborg will make their first full-fledged debut in the DCEU when Justice League arrives in theaters this fall. Now, two new images featuring Jason Momoa and Ray Fisher as their respective characters have been released online.

The images feature both DC heroes posing and ready for action with their respective emblems placed behind them.

You can check out both images below!

Are you excited to see Aquaman and Cyborg in action? Share your thoughts below!

Fueled by his restored faith in humanity and inspired by Supermans selfless act, Bruce Wayne enlists the help of his newfound ally, Diana Prince, to face an even greater enemy. Together, Batman and Wonder Woman work quickly to find and recruit a team of metahumans to stand against this newly awakened threat. But despite the formation of this unprecedented league of heroesBatman, Wonder Woman, Aquaman, Cyborg and The Flashit may already be too late to save the planet from an assault of catastrophic proportions.

Directed by Zack Snyder,Justice Leaguestars Ben Affleck, Henry Cavill, Gal Gadot, Ezra Miller, Jason Momoa, Ray Fisher, Amy Adams, Jesse Eisenberg, Amber Heard, Jeremy Irons, J.K. Simmons, Willem Dafoe, Connie Nielsen, Julian Lewis Jones and Ciarn Hinds.

Justice Leaguewill be released in theaters onNovember 17, 2017.

The Justice League isnt limited to the six members well see in Zack Snyders film later this year. The team has an expansive roster that features dozens of reserve characters ready to help the Justice League save the world on a moments notice.

With movies like theGreen Lantern CorpsandShazam in the pipelines, its clear more heroes will be introduced to the DCEU soon. The Avengers featured a small team and it only grew as more characters were introduced into the Marvel movie universe. The Justice League is gonna need all the help it can get to fight Darkseid and keep the streets safe from lower-tier villainslike Deathstroke and Joker.

Did I forget to include your favorite Justice League member? Well let me know in the comments why Fire and Firestorm are better choices.

Hit Next to learn more about ten Justice League members that should be introduced to the DCEU.

Sebastian Peris

Canadian film lover, comic book geek, political junkie and board game enthusiast.

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Brand New 'Justice League' Images Spotlight Aquaman & Cyborg - Heroic Hollywood (blog)

No swimming at two local beaches as Gert kicks up high surf – Turn to 10

by LINDSAY IADELUCA, NBC 10 NEWS

Swimming was banned at Horseneck Beach in Westport because of high surf from Hurricane Gert, Wednesday, Aug. 16, 2017. (WJAR)

It was not your typical busy August summer day Wednesday at Horseneck Beach.

"Gert sent good long ground swells. It's about 12 to 15 seconds. So with that size we get up to 6 feet surf and that's not something we normally get. It's something usually a lot flatter. As a result, we probably have some of the strongest currents we've seen all summer long," said Owen Worden, a lifeguard supervisor.

The concern of deadly rip currents closed the water to swimming. But with every storm comes onlookers and surfers looking to take advantage of the waves.

"It's pretty rough. I'd say it's about shoulder, head high and with the currents to the side. It's just sort of messy right now," said Jed Brunt, a surfer.

Brunt has 30 years on the ocean surfing experience. It still took him 10 to 15 minutes to swim past the breakers through the current.

And the swells weren't only cramping beachgoers. Boaters too were advised to take a beautiful day off from the water.

"It doesn't look like there's anything here. But once you get outside the entrance is going to get nasty, yeah," said Harry Trip. "People with inexperience don't understand that."

A former Coast Guard member and owner of F.L. Tripp and Sons marina and boat yard, Tripp said if you don't have to go out, don't.

"No, that's not the case, no, it can still effect you. The current will run faster. Push you toward the rocks faster if you have an issue. So, the best thing is not to go out,' Tripp said.

Tripp said they do tell boaters who try to go out that it's not good conditions to prevent them from entering any dangerous situations.

While Rhode Island and Massachusetts wont be hit by the storm, the weather is creating a high surf at area beaches. Authorities advise swimmers and boaters to use cation.

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No swimming at two local beaches as Gert kicks up high surf - Turn to 10

In Mauritius, Secluded Beaches, Verdant Hills and Harmony – New York Times

Were a bit like a puzzle, said Santosh, when we reunited on his turf over 15 years later. There are very distinct pieces. People have held onto their own identities but found a way to make it work, so it fits into a picture of its own.

In the end, its that compelling mosaic that lured me to Mauritiuss shores. Scouring social media would lead a prospective visitor to believe that the island ends where the resorts do. I was eager to explore what lay beyond plunge pools and bath butlers.

The volcanic isle was first discovered by the Arabs in 975; but when the Dutch landed on Mauritius in 1598, it was uninhabited aside from wildlife like the dodo, a bird famously rendered extinct by Europeans but still resplendent on Mauritian rupee notes today. The French came in the 1700s, followed by the British. With the 1835 abolition of slavery, migrants flooded in from the east: Indian indentured laborers and Chinese shopkeepers. The Indians struggles are chronicled in Port Louiss poignant Aapravasi Ghat museum, at the immigration depot turned Unesco World Heritage site where they first came ashore.

Layers of migration have left an indelible imprint; today, nearly 70 percent of Mauritiuss 1.3 million citizens are of Indian descent, with Creoles, Sino-Mauritians and Franco-Mauritians rounding out the mix. Emerging from Sir Seewoosagur Ramgoolam International Airport on a humid evening, I followed signs that read EXIT in English, French, Hindi and Chinese.

Ultimately, the uniqueness of the place is in its people, Santosh said. Weve evolved our own breed fairly distinct from the origins each one of us came from. You have people who are sort of Indian but not really Indian, sort of African but not really African.

Todays Mauritius could be a role model for racial harmony (in these troubled times, the rest of the world might want to pay attention), but the countrys cultures mingle most effortlessly in the food. Disparate culinary traditions have collided here for centuries, and the result is a cuisine simmering with Indian, French, Chinese and Creole flavors. The next morning, I left Santoshs sea-facing apartment on Trou-aux-Biches to explore Mauritiuss cultural synergy with my taste buds.

At the covered market in Quatre Bornes, a hilly burg cradled by mountains that look photoshopped into the background, I tried my first gteau piment, a deep-fried fritter made of ground chickpea flour studded with chiles. For breakfast, many people have bread, cheese and gteaux piments, my driver Raju explained, as he helped select four perfectly plump morsels for 10 rupees, about 30 cents.

With his limited English, my kindergarten French, and some Hindi thrown in, Raju and I were able to cobble together a reasonable facsimile of a conversation. We ambled through the food court, where stalls hawk everything from riz frit (fried rice) to curry agneau (lamb curry) to puri chaud (fried flatbreads); next, Raju took me to a residential street in Rose Hill, where I joined the lunch rush at the no-frills Dewa and Sons. I was there to try the national street food, dholl puri what the banh mi is to Vietnam, what a doner kebab is to Turkey, this messy lentil-potato mix slapped onto a soft puri is to Mauritius. Its as delicious as it is sloppy, spicy but not so strong as to overpower nuanced flavors redolent in turmeric and cumin.

Later that night I joined an American expat couple for a food crawl around Rue Desforges in Port Louis, gorging on poulet roti (roast chicken), mine frite (noodles) and crepes draped in Nutella and condensed milk and dusted with fresh coconut. On Gris-Gris beach the next day, I ordered a piping-hot farata (flatbread) with chicken and cheese from the Hungry Angry Girl Cabana.

For more refined fare, Santosh and his wife, Deepti, took me to Gymkhana, a members-only golf course with a restaurant serving local classics: octopus curry, dim sum and millionaires salad, an expensive local delicacy of hearts of palm paired with smoked marlin. At the elegantly appointed La Clef des Champs in Floreal, the revered chef Jacqueline Dalais serves haute-Mauritian food La cuisine Franaise qui parle Creole, she describes it, French cuisine with a Creole accent. Here in Mauritius, its a cuisine with a lot of spice. Not a lot of chile, but a lot of taste.

Santosh and Deepti also took me along to a Mauritian Muslim wedding, where beef, chicken and vegetarian variants of the local Mauritian biryani were on the menu. The festive and pleasantly disorderly setting reminded me of India, where an extra head or 20 is always welcome.

My culinary anthropology saw me crisscrossing the island, bisecting its interior from all angles and touching down fleetingly on its sandy fringes. The beaches are undoubtedly some of the most spectacular Ive seen, and the water stretched my understanding of what shades of blue can be plausibly found in nature, but I was more intrigued by Mauritiuss dense, rugged core a verdant tableau rife with visual synonyms for the color green.

A 10-minute drive unfolds more like a cinematic montage than topography: corrugated tin shacks giving way to gleaming high-rises; children cycling against the backdrop of sugar cane fields; mountains in jagged shapes seemingly culled from the mind of Picasso; a procession of hot pink and cobalt blue bungalows popping against the never-ending emerald expanse. The weather vacillates as regularly as the scenery. Wed spend two minutes barreling through a rain cloud before emerging to a glorious stretch of sunshine; thickly humid air dissipated within minutes into a crisp autumnal chill.

The lush setting brought to mind Costa Rica, save for the Bollywood blaring on the radio. In fact, Mauritius comes across as a cleaner replica of India. You momentarily forget where you are as you pass buses emblazoned with Hey Ram, candy-colored South Indian-style temples, and signs for Khoobsurat Beauty Parlour or Indira Gandhi Road. But all it takes is a glimpse of a Dodo Supermarket, Bijouterie Oomar or Trois-Bras Pooja Shop, or eavesdropping on a snatch of conversation from a sari-clad auntie speaking English with a Gallic accent, to reorient yourself.

Mauritiuss hills are also flecked with graceful colonial manors in various stages of disrepair. The alluringly ramshackle Maison Eureka is a 175-year-old Victorian-era home replete with uneven doors, a sagging roof and broad chunks of shingles absent like gap teeth. I explored a warren of rooms filled with family antiques before retiring to a veranda lined with wicker loungers for coffee. On another afternoon I explored Chteau de Labourdonnais, an immaculately preserved pile where I feasted on fish salad, Creole rougaille, and crme brle laced with local vanilla. In the former capital of Mahbourg, the National History Museum has crammed a 1772-built French country house with everything from antique beds to nautical wreckage to a dodo display. Like many museums in small countries, it strives to fit every last vestige under one roof, making for a sense of disheveled urgency as you navigate the rooms.

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In Mauritius, Secluded Beaches, Verdant Hills and Harmony - New York Times

Man drowns off Nantucket as high surf advisory is issued for southern beaches – The Boston Globe

Hurricane Gert is generating potentially life-threatening surf conditions in coastal communities in southeastern Massachusetts, Cape Cod and the Islands.

A man drowned off a Nantucket beach amid rough seas on the southern Massachusetts coast, after a high surf advisory was issued by the National Weather Service Wednesday because of Hurricane Gert hundreds of miles off shore.

The man was found off Nobadeer Beach on Nantucket shortly after 12 p.m., when around a dozen swimmers there became caught in a rip current, Nantucket police Chief William Pittman said.

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There were probably close to a dozen people at the beach outside of the lifeguard zone, Pittman said. They appeared to be in distress.

Pittman said around six to eight lifeguards on duty entered the choppy waters to assist the group of distressed swimmers when one of the lifeguards saw something or somebody in the water 300 yards away.

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The lifeguard swam out and found that an individual was face down in the water, floating, Pittman said.

Temperatures will be in the 80s, humidity will be largely absent, and cooling breezes will define Wednesdays sunny weather.

The lifeguard brought the man back to shore and attempted to perform CPR. The man was then transported to Nantucket Cottage Hospital, where he died, Pittman said. The identity of the man was not released.

None of the other swimmers off the southern Nantucket beach required medical attention, and all made it to shore safely with lifeguards help despite the very strong rip current that was pulling them out and 12-foot waves, Pittman said.

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The incident came on a day when southern-facing Massachusetts beaches were under a high surf advisory because of fallout from Hurricane Gert, located more than 400 miles southeast of Massachusetts, the National Weather Service said.

The tropical weather system has been generating potentially life-threatening surf conditions in coastal communities in southeastern Massachusetts, Cape Cod, and the Islands, the service said Wednesday.

Horseneck Beach State Reservation in Westport was closed to swimmers around 11:45 a.m. Wednesday, and Gooseberry Island was closed for the day, according to the Department of Conservation and Recreation.

On Nantucket, multiple beaches on the south side of the island had reported double red flag conditions, leading to beach closures, according to town officials. Dionis, Miacomet, Sconset, and Surfside beaches were reported closed by 10:24 a.m. Nobadeer Beach was reported at double red flag status by 11 a.m., Cisco Beach at 11:16 a.m., and Madaket Beach by 12:20 p.m.

We urge beach goers to refrain from entering the water along the southshore today, the Nantucket Harbormaster tweeted at the time of the Madaket Beach closure.

The hurricane is expected to remain in the middle of the Atlantic Ocean, moving in a northeasterly direction at some 21 miles an hour with sustained winds of 90 miles an hour, forecasters wrote.

But as it travels, Hurricane Gert is creating powerful wave systems that will steadily hammer south-facing beaches in Massachusetts and the region as a whole, forecasters wrote.

Waves & swell are increasing across the southern waters early this morning as Hurricane Gert passes south and east of the region, forecasters wrote on social media. The waves & swells will result in high surf & strong rip current along the south coast.

A high surf advisory is in effect until 8 p.m. Wednesday for southeastern Massachusetts and Cape coastal communities.

High surf and dangerous rip currents will result in the potential for life-threatening conditions for all people entering the surf, forecasters wrote. Use caution if heading to the beach and when in doubt, dont go out.

The weather service has posted tips on how swimmers and beachgoers can handle the rip tide.

Do not attempt to swim directly into a rip tide because it can exhaust and drown even the strongest swimmer.

Heed the advice from lifeguards.

Stay away from rocky shores or jetties that are routinely hammered by turbulent waves.

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Man drowns off Nantucket as high surf advisory is issued for southern beaches - The Boston Globe

Realtors Association of the Palm Beaches and Greater Ft. Lauderdale Realtors Named Top Fundraising Team By … – Palm Beach Post

WEST PALM BEACH, FLORIDA (August 15, 2017) The Realtors Association of the Palm Beaches (RAPB) and Greater Fort Lauderdale Realtors (GFLR) were recently recognized as the Top Fundraising Team by Habitat for Humanity Palm Beach County. The group surpassed their fundraising goal with a donation of more than $5,200. In addition, team captain, Kim Flossie, was awarded the Pink Hammer Top Individual Fundraising Award.

Pictured from L-R are: Dionna Hall, CEO of the RAPB+GFLR, with her children Ethan and Emersyn; Jessica Wittenbrink; Kim Flossie; Kathy Manning; Renee Sandel and Mark Martinez.

The RAPB Community Outreach Taskforce created a team of Realtors, affiliates and staff members to create the Tutus and Tool Belts team that raised money and helped complete construction on the roof of a home. Built by many hands, the 2017 Women Build Home was dedicated to the Marte family.

The Realtors Association of the Palm Beaches (RAPB), together with Greater Fort Lauderdale Realtors (GFLR), is the 3rd largest local real estate association in the country. As one unified voice, RAPB + GFLR represent 25,000 Realtors, 30,000 MLS subscribers, and 5 regional boards across South Florida and the Treasure Coast. For more information, visitwww.rapb.com andwww.gflr.com.

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Realtors Association of the Palm Beaches and Greater Ft. Lauderdale Realtors Named Top Fundraising Team By ... - Palm Beach Post

Why You Should Visit Malta: Rustic Beauty, Hidden Beaches, and No Crowds – Vogue.com

Blinded by the allure and glamour of the Amalfi Coast and the rustic beauty of the Balearic Islands, Maltathe tiny Mediterranean island just 50 miles south of Sicilyprobably hasnt creeped its way onto your travel bucket list. You may think that the other seaside destinations are far more compelling based on the proliferation of Amalfi shots on your Instagram feed and complete lack of Malta geotags. And thats understandable. You havent seen much of this tiny slice of Mediterranean heaven on Instagram and thats a damn shame.

Theres an alluring laid-back feel and modest beauty to this small Mediterranean island and plenty of activities (or stunning spots to sit and do nothing) to fill your days and impress your followers. Whether youre plunging into Sliemas Ballutta Bay for an afternoon dip in the middle of the city, exploring the old, narrow streets of Valletta and Mdina, or jumping off cliffs with the locals into the country's many natural pools, youll leave Malta wanting more.

As a visitor, what will strike you the most about Malta is that its virtually untouched by other tourists. Dont expect to see loads of tour busses or swarms of tour groups filling the streets. And if youre a history buff, or just love marveling at stunning architecture, youre in for a treat. Malta has been colonized again and again, by the Phoenicians, Romans, Moors, Normans, Sicilians, Spanish, Knights of St. John, the French, and the British before it claimed its independence in 1964its a fascinating history thats visible around every corner. You can easily spend hours wandering and taking in the citys medieval and Baroque buildings and prehistoric temples.

So before you book your trip to the popular, crowded beaches of Mykonos , you might want to give Malta a shot.

Apartments in St. Julian, Malta Photo: Alamy

To Stay: Go the Airbnb route in either of the central, more modern towns like St. Julians and Sliema. Lined with bars and nightclubs, St. Julians makes for a rowdier scene with partygoers flooding the streets into the wee hours, so if you want to be in the line of fire, St. Julians is your spot. Stay in the neighboring town of Sliema for a quieter and more relaxed vibe. Pro tip: Make sure you inquire about parking space, as youll need to rent a car to get around. The bus system is unreliable and taxis are scarce when you get to the more rural areas.

The entrance to Legligin, a tradiitonal Maltese restaurant Photo: Courtesy of Monica Mendal

To Eat and Drink: The best and most authentic Maltese restaurants are in the countrys tiny walled capital, Valletta. Hop on the sunset ferry from Sliema and cruise over for a late afternoon stroll through the treasure trove of beautiful Baroque architecture, saving time for a visit to St. Johns Co-Cathedral before dinner. If youre an adventurous eater and want to try the traditional Maltese dishes (and a great selection of Maltese wine), Legligin is not to be missed. Tucked away in a small downstairs cellar, youll want to book ahead. The owner, Chris, does much of the cooking himself, offering an authentic (and extensive!) Maltese tasting menu for just 27 euros per person. Some highlights include traditional aioli and dip made from local sun-dried tomatoes, capers, garlic, olives, olive oil, and anchovies, grilled quail breast served with Maltese summer salad with the local rocket, tender octopus with herbs and garlic, pork casserole, and rabbit in wine, garlic, and tarragon. Fair warning: Dont fill up on the bread. If youre looking for more of a fine-dining experience and a straightforward Mediterranean menu, head over to Rampilla . The restaurant is housed in an old 16th-century bastion that was originally built by the Knights of St. John to guard the newly constructed Valletta and from the terrace, it offers beautiful views of the city gate and bridge. For a digestif after dinner, Bridge Bar really comes to life on Fridays with live jazz sessions on the steps of St. Ursola Street with scenic views of the Grand Harbour.

St. Peters Pool in Malta Photo: Alamy

To Do/See: Malta offers an abundance of rocky beaches and natural swimming pools. Arguably the most Instagram-worthy natural pool in Malta is St. Peters Pool on Delimara promontory. Depending on where your GPS leads you, youll probably have parked on a cliff. Navigating your way along the cliff with the help of vague signs, youll see some impressive teaser views of the sea. Eventually youll spot the stairs that lead you down to a Mediterranean playground. Although popular among locals and tourists, because of the remote location, its rarely too crowded and you can always find a spot on the dusty limestone. At St. Peters, you can swim among the locals in the crystal clear water and even cliff dive. Once youve had enough sun, head to Marsaxlokk, Maltas traditional fishing village, for lunch and views of the colorful fishing boats.

Half a mile from the popular tourist trap, Blue Grotto, is Ghar Lapsi, a small secluded inlet untouched by tourists. The natural pool opens up to deep, clear water, making it one of the most idyllic spots in Malta for snorkeling and diving. While on the west side, finish the day with a sunset at Dingli Cliffs. Take a day trip to Maltas sister islands of Comino and Gozo by renting a boat. Cruise over to Cominos breathtaking Blue Lagoon, explore the hidden caves en route to Gozo then anchor up in Gozos southwest village of Xlendi for a seafood lunch before heading back.

If you manage to tire of the rocky beaches and natural swimming pools, but want something more luxe than a public beach, hit Baia Beach Club for a fuss-free day of relaxation. While a private club, nonmembers are able to reserve sun loungers for the day with a (well worth it) restaurant reservation at the club. Otherwise, sun loungers are available on a first-come-first-serve basis. Swim in the clear water, order refreshing cocktails, eat good food, and then use the clubs showers to get ready for your next stop.

Slow your adventure-packed trip down with a visit to Maltas Silent City of Mdina. Founded by the Phoenicians 4,000 years ago, it is the oldest city in Malta. Very few cars are permitted inside Mdinas monochromatic walls. Get lost walking around the narrow streets among the residences that house just 300 inhabitants as well as beautiful Baroque and medieval architecture. Mdina is the perfect place to slow down and catch your breath.

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Why You Should Visit Malta: Rustic Beauty, Hidden Beaches, and No Crowds - Vogue.com

‘Sheer Abuse’ Of Town Beaches As Litter Piles Up Sparks Crackdown: Supervisor – Patch.com


Patch.com
'Sheer Abuse' Of Town Beaches As Litter Piles Up Sparks Crackdown: Supervisor
Patch.com
SOUTHOLD, NY The sight is familiar after summer weekends in Southold: Trash cans overflowing at local beaches and road ends, garbage spilling out onto the sand. And the cost of cleanup to Southold Town is proving too high, Southold Town Supervisor ...

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'Sheer Abuse' Of Town Beaches As Litter Piles Up Sparks Crackdown: Supervisor - Patch.com

Couple to wed during ‘rare and wonderful’ total solar eclipse – ABC News

As the skies darken, temperatures drop and an eerie quietness fills the air during the total solar eclipse on Aug. 21, bride Samantha Adams and groom Cameron Kuhn will be saying I do.

The couple is holding their midday wedding ceremony in the path of totality in St. Joseph, Missouri.

It is perfect. It is totally 100 percent us, the astronomy-loving bride told ABC News.

Adams, 28, had already been over the moon about the upcoming total solar eclipse, the first in the contiguous U.S. in 38 years, when Kuhn proposed on Sept. 15, 2016, but it wasnt until they started discussing potential dates for their ceremony that she realized how much shed love to merge the two special occasions.

I was telling everybody about this eclipse coming up, the bride recalled. He was not surprised he was marrying someone that wanted to get married during an eclipse, on a Monday.

Ever since Adams was in third grade, she said shes been mind-boggled by space, even wanting to become an astronaut until seven knee surgeries derailed those plans.

Since then its completely fascinated me, she explained. We were told to pick a planet to do a report on and I picked Jupiter and it was the first time I started reading into space and once I realized the planets were out there and we were all suspended in this solar system, I couldnt wrap my head around it but I loved that. It completely fascinated me.

The bride-to-be even has a tattoo on her forearm of a minimalistic version of the Voyager Spacecraft.

Jutting out of it are all the planets and at the end of that is a pulsar map, a map of how you can find us in the Milky Way, she added.

Kuhn, 27, said its amazing how well the eclipse worked out for their upcoming nuptials.

While Sammy is undoubtedly more interested in astronomy, I've always liked the northern lights and dark starry skies, said the groom. We'd talked about someday road tripping to see a full eclipse but never imagined we'd get to merge our special day with such an awe-inspiring event.

The bride is sticking with the solar eclipse theme throughout the entire celebration, highlighting it with every decoration, bridal outfit accessory and party favor for her guests.

The couples save-the-date cards and formal invitations both reflect the solar eclipse theme. Adams, a graphic artist, designed them herself to help her guests get excited to take part in both epic events happening at once.

Were both pretty excited about how the ceremony will be customized for him and me. Were not very traditional, the bride said, adding there will be readings from her favorite book, The Count of Monte Cristo as well as from her favorite astrophysicist, Carl Sagan.

After their vows, the bride and groom have timed it perfectly to have their guests put on their glasses to join them in observing the suns special moment hiding behind the moon.

We will ask all of our guests to step out from under the pavilion and get their glasses on so we can start watching the beginning of the eclipse before totality, said Adams. The moon will be shading during this whole time but when totality hits, we can take off our glasses and take in the ambiance.

It will be much darker and much cooler. A lot of neat things will happen in those two minutes, she added. They say it confuses animals. Nocturnal animals start creeping out. Youll start hearing crickets. Because of the quick change in temperature, youll feel a breeze go through. Usually, theres this kind of eerie quietness. Its really surreal and Im really looking forward to it.

I have my shoes for both the reception and ceremony, she said of the outer space-inspired heels and lace-up flats.

My hair will be dyed blue and fuchsia and a little bit of turquoise, Adams continued. I got some hair extensions to give it more volume. I have a star metal hair piece that will wrap around the top of my head.

Adams bouquet will be white roses with glitter and rhinestones on them, with cascading blue and purple Dendrobiums pouring out of the roses so theyre spacey-looking.

The bride and her family have been crafting galactic-themed centerpieces such as glitter-filled Mason jars and fuchsia-colored tea light candle holders to help illuminate the tables.

They also ordered 500 origami silver stars that will light up for an out-of-this-world experience.

Kuhn said he never imagined theyd get to merge their special day with such an awe-inspiring event, but hes thrilled his space-obsessed fiance is getting the wedding of her dreams.

I can't think of a more genuine and interesting person to be in the spotlight surrounding something as rare and wonderful as an eclipse, the groom said of his beautiful bride-to-be.

In that moment, Im going to be crying for happiness and for thankfulness and just being appreciative, Adams added of her grooms love for her. Ill allow myself to take in that moment and feel that joy.

The couple is honeymooning in Colorado to continue their stargazing.

"Were hitting the road with our dog to stay in a cabin for five days," said Adams. "We got a big enough cabin that well be alone with our pup for two days then we have a bunch of friends that are going to meet us to stay with us for a few days."

To watch this couples magical total solar eclipse wedding, tune into ABC News on Monday, Aug. 21, at 1 p.m. EST.

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Couple to wed during 'rare and wonderful' total solar eclipse - ABC News

Seeing Einstein’s hand in stars orbiting a supermassive black hole – SYFY WIRE (blog)

Sitting in the middle of our Milky Way galaxy is a monster black hole. And by middle, I mean the exact center of the galaxy; it probably formed at the same time as the galaxy, itself, billions of years ago, and grew large as the galaxy did, too. It sits right there at the core, like a drain in the middle of a vast bathtub, mostly minding its own business but occasionally eating the odd star or gas cloud.

We think every big galaxy has one of these supermassive black holes in their hearts. Mostly, those are detected because they have disks of gas swirling madly around them, and observations can detect the motion of the gas via the Doppler shift as it orbits (we dont usually see the disks themselves, which are too small).

But our galaxy is different. Were in it, so were close to the black hole, and we have a better view. Not too close; were still halfway out to the edge of the galaxy, so were safe! But there are a few dozen stars that orbit the black hole far more closely, and because of our closer seat we can actually see them move as they do!

As an aside, this is one of the all-time coolest things I know about astronomy. It takes the Sun over two hundred million years to circle the galaxy once, but these stars are so close to the center, so close to the black hole, that they only take decades. That means that we can literally see them move year after year:

Scientifically, this is a very big deal. Weve known for centuries that if you can observe an object orbiting a more massive object, you can calculate the mass of that second object. If you know the first objects orbital velocity (how fast its moving as it goes around) you can also calculate the distance to them.

So, if we observe the stars orbiting that black hole in the center of the Milky Way (astronomers call it Sgr A*, literally pronounced Sagittarius A star or Saj A star if you feel more informal about it), we can, in principle, figure out the mass of the black hole and our distance from it.

Not that thats easy...but its been done. Powerful telescopes observing in the infrared (to make it easier to see the stars through all the dust and muck toward the center of the galaxy) have been able to watch these stars in their orbits, and also measure their Doppler shifts. That gives their velocities, too.

Using this method, weve been able to measure the mass of the black hole as being around 4 million times that of the Sun, and its distance as about 26,000 light years.

As amazing as that is, a team of astronomers decided they might be able to do more.

One of the stars orbiting the black hole is called S2. Its orbit brings it pretty close to Sgr A*, a hair-raising 18 billion kilometers, the equivalent of four times the distance from the Sun to Neptune. When its at that point in its orbit its screaming through space at the colossal speed of 6000 kilometers per second, 0.02 times the speed of light.

This is so close to the black hole that Einsteinian relativistic effects can kick in. There are quite a few, but one, in particular, is very interesting. If an object is in an elliptical orbit around something massive, the orientation of that ellipse will rotate over time. In other words, if you draw a line through the long axis of the ellipse, that line will rotate a little bit every time the object orbits. The effect is strongest at periapsis, the point when the orbiting object is closest to the object it orbits.

We actually have measured this effect; Mercurys orbit does this. The effect is tiny, and difficult to measure, because the Sun isnt very massive (in the relativistic sense) and mercury doesnt get that close. But we do see it, and its exactly as Einsteins equations of General Relativity predict.

This new team of astronomers thought that perhaps they could see this effect as the star S2 orbits Sgr A*. They looked at the observational data from 2002 (when S2 was last at periapsis) to 2015 and found that S2 maybe, barely, shows this effect. Their results certainly are at least consistent with what Einstein predicted.

Thats amazing. This has never been seen on this scale, before. And while their results are a touch iffy, well know better soon enough: S2 reaches periapsis once again sometime between April and July 2018 (the orbital characteristics arent perfectly known, so theres a bit of uncertainty there). During that time, telescopes will be peering intently at the center of our galaxy, very carefully measuring the position of the star.

...and a few others. S2 is just the nearest bright star to Sgr A*. Theres another thats closer but fainter, and harder to get accurate positions for it, but quite a few other stars have been seen orbiting the black hole as well. The team looked at them too, and by calculating their orbits were able to narrow down the mass and distance to the black hole: 4.15 million times the mass of the Sun, and at a distance from us of 26,700 light years (with some small uncertainties).

Again being able to do this is, quite simply, incredible, in the awe-inspiring sense of the word. Scientifically, its amazing enough; we know that there are characteristics of these supermassive black holes that seem to correlate with the galaxy around them (the way stars orbit the center, for example, seems to scale with the mass of the black hole), so being able to nail down the mass and distance our own local supermassive beastie is stunning.

But the fact of the matter is that its astonishing that we can do this at all. This is a ridiculously finicky set of observations coupled with ridiculously complicated mathematics describing the overall shape and character of space itself.

Yet, we can make these observations, and we can apply that math, and we can couple them to discover what a hole in spacetime 260 quadrillion kilometers away is doing as it tosses around multiple-octillion ton stars.

Why do we do this? Because were curious. Because were smart. Because we want to discover, and, most importantly, to understand.

This has driven us to investigate the Universe, itself...and to know our place in it.

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Seeing Einstein's hand in stars orbiting a supermassive black hole - SYFY WIRE (blog)

Check It Out: Eclipse party to cover the basics of astronomy – The Advocate

On Monday, the Slidell Branch of the St. Tammany Parish Library will be the place to be for astronomy lovers of all ages with a solar eclipse viewing party from 11:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. and a virtual trip through the galaxy at Armchair Astronomy at 6 p.m.

The viewing party will be held in the Herb Garden of the Slidell branch, 555 Robert Blvd., and will include crafts and an astronomy presentation before the eclipse begins. Eclipse glasses will be handed out for safe viewing. Participants should bring blankets and chairs to enjoy Mother Natures show.

Armchair astronomers can watch beautiful images of galaxies, planets and stars while learning about library resources that can help amateur astronomers on their learning journey.

For information about these programs, call (985) 646-6470.

LIT WITS BOOK CLUB: The club will discuss Hidden Figures by Margot Lee Shetterly at 10:30 a.m. Wednesday at the Abita Springs Library, 71683 Leveson St. For information about the club, call (985) 893-6285.

INTERMEDIATE INTERNET: Adults who already know the basics of using the internet can build on their skills at 12:30 p.m. Wednesday at the Covington Library, 310 W. 21st Ave. For information, call (985) 893-6280.

CHAPTER CHAT BOOK CLUB: The club will discuss Oleander Girl by Chitra Divakaruni at 2 p.m. Thursday at the Slidell Library, 555 Robert Blvd. For information about the club, call librarian Noelle Williams at (985) 646-6470.

COLLEGE FINANCIAL PLANNING: Teens and their parents can learn the ins and outs of college financial aid at 6:30 p.m. Thursday at the Causeway Library, 3457 U.S. 190, Mandeville. For information, call (985) 626-9779.

TRUTH BE TOLD BOOK CLUB: The club will discuss Lab Girl by Hope Jahren at 1 p.m. Tuesday at the Covington Library, 310 W. 21st Ave. For information about the club, call branch manager Sue Ryan at (985) 893-6280.

BAYOU BOOKMARKERS BOOK CLUB: The club will discuss The Tigers Wife by Tea Obreht at 6:30 p.m. Tuesday at the Lacombe Library, 28027 U.S. 190. For information about the club, call branch manager Rhonda Spiess at (985) 882-7858.

DROP-IN TECH HELP: Adults can get one-on-one help with downloading the librarys free apps at noon Wednesday at the Madisonville Library, 1123 Main St. For information, call (985) 845-4819.

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Check It Out: Eclipse party to cover the basics of astronomy - The Advocate

Tidally-Locked Planets More Common than Previously Thought, Astronomer Says – Sci-News.com

Dr. Rory Barnes, an assistant professor in the Department of Astronomy and Astrobiology Program at the University of Washington, arrived at this finding by questioning the long-held assumption that only those stars that are much smaller and dimmer than our Sun could host tidally-locked planets.

This artists conception shows a hypothetical tidally-locked planet with two moons orbiting in the habitable zone of a red dwarf star. Image credit: D. Aguilar / Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics.

Tidal locking results when there is no side-to-side momentum between a body in space and its gravitational partner and they become fixed in their embrace.

Tidally-locked bodies such as the Earth and the Moon are in synchronous rotation, meaning that each takes exactly as long to rotate around its own axis as it does to revolve around its host star or gravitational partner.

The Moon takes 27 days to rotate once on its axis, and 27 days to orbit the Earth once.

Earths only permanent natural satellite is thought to have been created by an object the size of Mars, known as Theia, slamming into the proto-Earth at an angle that set the world spinning initially with approximately 12-hour days.

The possibility of tidal locking is an old idea, but nobody had ever gone through it systematically, Dr. Barnes said.

In the past, researchers tended to use that 12-hour estimation of Earths rotation period to model exoplanet behavior, asking, for example, how long an Earth-like exoplanet with a similar orbital spin might take to become tidally locked.

What I did was say, maybe there are other possibilities you could have slower or faster initial rotation periods.

You could have planets larger than Earth, or planets with eccentric orbits so by exploring that larger parameter space, you find that in fact the old ideas were very limited, there was just one outcome there,

He said: planetary formation models, however, suggest the initial rotation of a planet could be much larger than several hours, perhaps even several weeks.

And so when you explore that range, what you find is that theres a possibility for a lot more exoplanets to be tidally locked.

For example, if Earth formed with no moon and with an initial day that was 4 days long, one model predicts Earth would be tidally locked to the Sun by now.

The results of this work suggest that the process of tidal locking is a major factor in the evolution of most of the potentially habitable exoplanets to be discovered in the near future.

Being tidally locked was once thought to lead to such extremes of climate as to eliminate any possibility of life, but astronomers have since reasoned that the presence of an atmosphere with winds blowing across a planets surface could mitigate these effects and allow for moderate climates and life.

I also considered the planets that will likely be discovered by NASAs next planet-hunting satellite, the Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS), and found that every potentially habitable planet it will detect will likely be tidally locked, Dr. Barnes said.

The results will be published in the journal Celestial Mechanics and Dynamical Astronomy, but have been published on arXiv.org ahead of time.

_____

Rory Barnes. 2017. Tidal Locking of Habitable Exoplanets. Celestial Mechanics and Dynamical Astronomy, in press; arXiv: 1708.02981

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Tidally-Locked Planets More Common than Previously Thought, Astronomer Says - Sci-News.com

An App To Help The Blind ‘See’ The Eclipse – Science Friday

Its a question solar astrophysicist Henry TraeWinter started thinking about several months ago after a blind colleague asked him to describe what an eclipse was like.

I was caught completely flat-footed, Winter said. I had no idea how to communicate what goes on during an eclipse to someone who has never seen before in their entire life.

Winter remembered a story a friend told him about how crickets can start to chirp in the middle of the day as the moon covers the sun during an eclipse. So, he told his colleague that story.

The reaction that she had was powerful, and I wanted to replicate that sense of awe and wonder to as many people as I could across the country, Winter said.

[Learn about some of the experiments that will be conducted during the Great American Eclipse.]

So Winter, who works at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics in Cambridge, Massachusetts, decided to build an app to do just that: help blind people experience this summers eclipse.

[The blind] community has been traditionally left out of astronomy and astrophysics, Winter said, and I think that that is a glaring omission that its time to answer.

Eclipse Soundscapes, which launched for iPads and iPhones Thursday, features real-time narration of different aspects of the eclipse timed for the users location.

A rumble map allows users to hear and feel the phenomenawhen they touch photos of previous eclipses.

Dark areas in the photos, like the solid black face of the moon, are silent when you touch them. Wispy strands of sunlight radiating out from behind the moon emit lower hums. And touching brighter areas, like the shards of light that peek out from behind the moons valleys, produce higher frequencies.

The sounds are paired with vibrations, soft for darker areas and more intense for brighter spots.

We managed to create frequencies that resonate with the body of the phone, said the apps audio engineer Miles Gordon, so the phone is vibrating entirely using the speaker.

[Need a last minute plan for the eclipse? No problem.]

The goal of this app is not to give someone whos blind or visually impaired the exact same experience as a sighted person, Winter said. What I hope this is, is a prototype, a first step, something we can learn from to make the next set of tools.

Other tools exist to allow blind people to experience the eclipse, including tactile maps and books, but its still understood largely as visual phenomena.

Less well-known are the changes in temperature, weather patterns and wildlife behaviors that accompany total eclipses.

Chancey Fleet, the colleague who first asked Winter to describe an eclipse at a conference months ago, was skeptical when she learned about his idea for an app.

The first time I heard that blind people were being asked to pay attention to the eclipse, I kind of laughed to myself, and tried to contain my really dismissive reaction, said Fleet, whos an accessible technology educator at a library in New York. It almost sounds like a joke.

But after learning about the sounds associated with the eclipse, shes interested in trying out Winters app.

Im looking forward to experiencing it for myself, and not just hearing or reading about it, Fleet said. Nothing is ever just visual, really. And [this] just proves that point again.

The app development team has gotten help from Wanda Diaz Merced, an astrophysicist who is blind, to make sure the software is easy to navigate.

She believes the app will show people that theres more to an eclipse than spooky midday darkness.

People will discover, Oh, I can also hear this!Diaz Merced said. And, I can also touch it!'

She also sees the app as a tool to get more blind kids interested in science.

That is very, very, very important, she said.

The Eclipse Soundscapes team, which is backed by a grant from NASA, has recruited the National Park Service, Brigham Young University and citizen scientists to record audio of how both people and wildlife respond during the eclipse.

Phase two of the project is to build an accessible database for those recordings, so blind people can easily access them.

Thats the element of the project Diaz Merced is most excited about from a scientific standpoint.

[How to throw an eclipse party thats out of this world.]

After she lost her sight in her late 20s, she had to build her own computer program to convert telescope data to sound files so she could continue her research (heres her TED talk).

She hopes this project spurs more interest in making data accessible to researchers like her.

What I do hope is that databases in science will use [this] database model for us to be able to have meaningful access to the information, Diaz Merced said. And that perhaps through [the] database, we will not be segregated.

In that way, she hopes the impact of the eclipse will last much longer than a day.

Continued here:

An App To Help The Blind 'See' The Eclipse - Science Friday

3 solar eclipse experts to speak in Ketchum – Twin Falls Times-News

KETCHUM Three solar eclipse experts will speak in Ketchum days leading up to the big event. All presentations are free and open to the public.

Eclipse chaser Leona Rice and astronomer Carolyn Rankin-Mallory will speak at noon on Saturday in Town Square. Rice was elected to the California legislature for three terms and retired after 20 years as executive director of The Doctors Company Foundation. Rankin-Mallory was recently a member of the NASA team that discovered 17 previously unknown stars and divides her time between NASA research participation and college teaching.

Astronomer Jeff Silverman will speak at noon on Sunday in Town Square. Silverman is a data scientist, but was a National Science Foundation Astronomy and Astrophysics Postdoctoral Fellow at the University of Texas at Austin. He received his PhD. in astrophysics at the University of California at Berkeley, working on observations of exploding stars and dark energy. He is heavily involved in science communication and public outreach programs. Silverman will also speak on Monday at the viewing party hosted by the cities of Ketchum and Sun Valley at Festival Meadow.

The partial phase of the eclipse will begin at 10:12 a.m. on Monday, with full totality beginning at 11:29 a.m. and lasting for over a minute. Special viewing glasses are needed to provide adequate protection for those wishing to look directly at the sun during the eclipse.

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3 solar eclipse experts to speak in Ketchum - Twin Falls Times-News

Missions to probe exoplanets, galaxies, and cosmic inflation vie for $250 million NASA slot – Science Magazine

SPHEREx would map hundreds of millions of galaxies to look for signs of cosmic inflation, a rapid expansion just after the big bang.

NASA JPL

By Daniel CleryAug. 16, 2017 , 9:00 AM

From exoplanet atmospheres to the dynamics of galaxies to the stretch marks left by the big bang, the three finalists in a $250 million astrophysics mission competition would tackle questions spanning all of space and time. Announced last week by NASA, the three missionswhittled down from nine proposalswill receive $2 million each to develop a more detailed concept over the coming 9 months, before NASA selects one in 2019 to be the next mid-sized Explorer. A launch would come after 2022.

Explorer missions aim to answer pressing scientific questions more cheaply and quickly than NASAs multibillion-dollar flagships, such as the Hubble and James Webb (JWST) space telescopes, which can take decades to design and build. The missions are led by scientists, either from a NASA center or a university, and NASA has launched more than 90 of them since the 1950s. Some Explorers have had a big scientific impact, including the Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe, which last decade mapped irregularities in the cosmic microwave background (CMB), an echo of the universe as it was 380,000 years after the big bang; and Swift, which is helping unravel the mystery of gamma-ray bursts that come from the supernova collapse of massive stars.

One finalist, the Spectro-Photometer for the History of the Universe, Epoch of Reionization, and Ices Explorer (SPHEREx), will map galaxies across a large volume of the universe to find out what drove inflation, a pulse of impossibly fast expansion just after the big bang. The physics behind inflation is unclear, says Principal Investigator Jamie Bock of the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena, and it happened at energy scales too high for earthbound particle accelerators to investigate. The prevailing theory is that a short- lived quantum field, mediated by a hypothetical particle called an inflaton, pushed the universes rapid growth. But rival theories hold that multiple fields were involved. Those fields would have interfered with each other, leaving irregularities in the distribution of matter across the universe that would differ statistically from the distribution expected in conventional inflation.

By mapping hundreds of millions of galaxies across a huge volume of space, SPHEREx should be 10 times more sensitive to this cosmic lumpiness than the best maps of the CMBperhaps sensitive enough to distinguish between the two inflation scenarios. The all-sky infrared survey should also map out the history of light production by galaxies andcloser to homethe distribution of ices in embryonic planetary systems. SPHEREx is more powerful than the sum of its parts, Bock says.

The Arcus mission will also study distant galaxies but in x-rays, in search of what makes galaxies themselves tick. Powerful radiation from supermassive black holes at the center of most large galaxies creates winds that can blow gas out of the galaxies, halting star formation. But astronomers are unsure whether the gas falls back in to restart star formation because they cannot see it. This expelled matter has got to be out there somewhere, says Principal Investigator Randall Smith of the Harvard Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics in Cambridge, Massachusetts. He says Arcus will be able to see the winds by using more distant x-ray sources as backlights.

The project draws heavily from a past mission that never flew: the International X-ray Observatory. When NASA withdrew from that project in 2012, U.S. researchers continued to develop the optics required to focus x-rays, which simply pass through flat mirrors. Based on sophisticated metal honeycombs that focus the high-energy photons by deflecting them at shallow angles, Arcuss optics should turn as many as 40% of the incoming photons into a usable spectrumup from 5% in NASAs current flagship Chandra X-ray Observatory. That should give the mission the resolution to see the expelled gas and measure its movement and temperature.

The third contender, the Fast Infrared Exoplanet Spectroscopy Survey Explorer (FINESSE), aims to probe the origins and makeup of the atmospheres around exoplanets. The probe will gather light shining through a planets atmosphere as it passes in front of its star as well as light reflected off its dayside surface, just before it passes behind. This will reveal both the signatures of atmospheric ingredients such as water, methane, and carbon dioxide, and also how heat flows from the planets dayside to its nightside. With greater knowledge of the composition of exoplanet atmospheres and their dynamics, astronomers hope to figure out which formation theories can explain the diversity of planet types revealed over the past 2 decades.

The 6.5-meter JWST will be able to scrutinize exoplanet atmospheres in more detail, but its many other roles could limit it to studying fewer than 75 exoplanets. FINESSE will have the luxury of analyzing up to a thousand planets, albeit with a smaller 75-centimeter telescope. Is our solar systems formation scenario exceptional or typical? asks Principal Investigator Mark Swain of NASAs Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena. Some questions can only be answered by statistical samples. We need hundreds of planets.

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Missions to probe exoplanets, galaxies, and cosmic inflation vie for $250 million NASA slot - Science Magazine