Get Ready for the 2020 Election Recount – The Bulwark

If you thought the 36-day national agony over hanging chads in the 2000 presidential election was bad, imagine what President Trump might do if the 2020 election is too close to call on Election Night. Hes already preparing the script for a remake of the 2000 election with his own authoritarian twist.

By now, its easy to ignore Trumps angry, conspiracy-laced tweets about a rigged election. We shouldnt, though, because it very well could be a preview of whats to come. For example, heres a tweet from last Friday:

Hes right about one thing. Election results are likely to be delayed this year. Coronavirus concerns have prompted states to expand mail-in voting options, and millions of Americans have taken up the offer. Those ballots take much longer to count than in-person votes. When the 2000 election became too close to call, everything came down to a trio of Florida counties where lawyers wrangled over butterfly ballots, miscounts, undervotes, overvotes, hanging chad, swinging chad, tri chad, dimpled chad, and pregnant chad, too. This time, President Trump is already questioning ballots three months before a single vote is cast.

So, go on and get your anti-anxiety meds ready because the stage is set for a democratic crisis far worse than what we lived through in 2000. This time around, Trump has every lever of the federal government at his disposal. Smear merchants and bots will drive social media discussion, not James Baker and Warren Christopher in the courtrooms. Forget the so-called Brooks Brothers riot by a bunch of GOP staffers on a floor of a drab bureaucratic building in Miami. This time around, the Proud Boys and Antifa will be warring in the streets. Do you feel the walls closing in yet?

Good. All the better to prepare.

The 2020 stage is a tinderbox compared to 2000. As of today, over 138,000 Americans have died from COVID-19. The commander-in-chief Republican candidate is egging on his base in speeches and tweets depicting his opponents as radical left mobsters hell-bent on destroying the country. Pro-gun activists have swarmed state capitols to protest pandemic lockdowns. Mass protests and violence have broken out in cities across America in the wake of the killing of George Floyd. To top it all off, President Trump deployed soldiers to gas peaceful protesters in Lafayette Square. And for what? A freaking photo op.

Even if one took Trumps thuggery out of the question, the 2020 election would look different from normal elections, given the widespread use of mail-in ballots. In 2016, nearly a quarter of Americas votes were cast by mail. This year, some observers have estimated that as much as half of the electorate will vote by mail in November. Certainly the rate of voting by mail shot up during the primaries.

Despite Trumps criticisms of vote-by-mail efforts, Democrats are pushing them to great success.

In Florida, a state where Trump only beat Clinton by just 112,911 votes49 to 48 percentto notch 29 electoral votes, Democrats currently have a 400,000-voter advantage over Republicans when it comes to vote-by-mail enrollment ahead of the states August primary.

Dont look now, but the president is already questioning the results from Pennsylvania, another state where the number of mail-in ballots skyrocketed and Trump won by a slim 44,292 vote margin (48 to 47 percent) in 2016.

During the Keystone States primary, Democratic Governor Tom Wolf expanded vote-by-mail options to allow no-excuse absentee voting. As a result, 1.5 million people voted by mail last month. Thats 17 times the number of voters (about 84,000) who voted absentee in 2016.

The Trump campaign, along with the Republican National Committee and four Republican members of Congress representing western Pennsylvania districts, filed a lawsuit arguing that ballots dropped off at collection sites, rather than sent through the post office or delivered by hand to county elections offices, should be disqualified. The lawsuit stated that the Pennsylvania system gives fraudsters an easy opportunity to engage in ballot harvesting, manipulate or destroy ballots, manufacture duplicitous votes, and sow chaos.

The primary lesson of the 2000 presidential contest is that campaigns dont necessarily end on Election Night.

Say what you want about Al Gores pathetic scattershot search for more votes after the news networks blew their calls on Election Night. Bush could have rested on his laurels as the declared winner. He secured his victory because his team didnt stop their campaign after the ballots were cast. The Bush campaigns three-pronged efforts to mount a full-fledged political, legal, and persuasion offensive is why he became president. The final Supreme Court decision was only the climax.

If put in a similar position to fight for the presidency, its safe to predict that Trump would act far more aggressively than either Bush or Gore ever dreamed.

One of the more memorable aspects of the 2000 recount was the Brooks Brothers riot where the Bush campaign flew GOP staffers to protest the recount proceedings in Miami-Dade County, Florida. At issue was whether there would be a new standard for counting undervotes, and local officials sought to take discussions to an upper floor of the building, where the protesters would not be able to observe. At that point, the Republicans erupted and followed them up. Crammed into the smaller space, unable to see what was happening, they got angry. They yelled that Democrats were stealing the election. They banged doors. They roughed up a Democratic staffer in possession of a sample ballot.

And it worked. Hours later, the officials surrendered. Canvassing board chairman Lawrence King Jr., a circuit court judge, said that when the board agreed to count votes, It became evidently clear that we were in a different situation . . . than we were this morning when we made that decision. . . . A radically different situation.

Whether one agrees with the recount or not, its stunning to consider that a mild protest was all it took for protesters to shut it down in Miami.

Rory Cooper, a GOP staffer who participated in the so-called riot, said to watch out for flashpoints where lawyers and protesters can descend, as they did in Miami-Dade. There are going to be performative acts on each side to show who is winning and losing, he told me. Like everything with Trump, though, it would be far more jarring. He predicted mini earthquakes every day, rather than the ongoing rumble of a recount.

But could things actually turn violent this time?

For answers on that, I spoke to Rachel Brown, the founder and director of Over Zero, a non-profit dedicated to preventing identity-based violence and other forms of group-based harm, who studies how communication can increase or decrease the chances of violence. She said that with the type of rhetoric we see around this election, we need to be proactive about preventing violenceboth pre-election and post-election. When it comes to post-election violence, she said, there will be a results waiting period and it will be important to see how politicians handle themselves and how this period is discussed in the media.

Do they question the results in broad, big terms or specific complaints that can be remedied? Brown said. There will be real grievances if there are procedural challenges, and its important that those issues are addressed through proper legal channels quickly. For this to work, there has to be lots of communicationabout what has happened and how it gets resolved.

Media needs to be educated on state-by-state procedures and have the knowledge about how to manage expectations and help people be patient through such a new process, Brown cautioned. Be aware of any preemptive declarations the election is illegitimate, preemptive declarations of victory, and any excessive use of state forcefor example, if peaceful protesters are met with force. And the propensity for violence can rise, she added, when voters feel like the stakes are zero sum.

Uh-oh. That sounds exactly like President Trump and his supporters.

If you are feeling masochistic, imagine how Trump will act if hes in a position to question the results on Election Night, whether he be trying to close a tight gap or disqualify votes and maintain a lead. Governor George Bush would have never tweeted: The lyin fake news tried to steal the election from me and then Democrats invented a HOAX about uncounted ballots. I WON. SHUT DOWN THE FRAUD. But, President Trump sure would.

And just think of what else he could do.

If he was ahead would he find a way, through mass revolt and state intervention to stop counting the mailed-in ballots he told us were rigged all along? Might an allied Republican governor confiscate them and plunge them into circular files never to be seen? If Trump is down, could he convince Republican state legislators to preemptively certify him the winner, even in defiance of a Democratic governor, to notch Electoral College votes? Would President Trump and Attorney General Bill Barr invoke the Insurrection Act to deploy active duty military to help them do it?

Given the possible scenarios, a contentious Supreme Court ruling may be the least of our worries.

The 2020 election is our countrys last, best hope to stop President Trump. Still, there are no guarantees if he contests the outcome. Those who wish to defeat Trump need to make it a blowout. This election cant be too close to call.

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Get Ready for the 2020 Election Recount - The Bulwark

CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: Pantheism

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(From Greek pan, all; theos, god).

The view according to which God and the world are one. The name pantheist was introduced by John Toland (1670-1722) in his "Socinianism truly Stated" (1705), while pantheism was first used by his opponent Fay in "Defensio Religionis" (1709). Toland published his "Pantheisticon" in 1732. The doctrine itself goes back to the early Indian philosophy; it appears during the course of history in a great variety of forms, and it enters into or draws support from so many other systems that, as Professor Flint says ("Antitheistic Theories", 334), "there is probably no pure pantheism". Taken in the strictest sense, i.e. as identifying God and the world, Pantheism is simply Atheism. In any of its forms it involves Monism, but the latter is not necessarily pantheistic. Emanationism may easily take on a pantheistic meaning and as pointed out in the Encyclical "Pascendi dominici gregis", the same is true of the modern doctrine of immanence.

These agree in the fundamental doctrine that beneath the apparent diversity and multiplicity of things in the universe there is one only being absolutely necessary, eternal, and infinite. Two questions then arise: What is the nature of this being? How are the manifold appearances to be explained? The principal answers are incorporated in such different earlier systems as Brahminism, Stoicism, Neo-Platonism, and Gnosticism, and in the later systems of Scotus Eriugena and Giordano Bruno.

Spinoza's pantheism was realistic: the one being of the world had an objective character. But the systems that developed during the nineteenth century went to the extreme of idealism. They are properly grouped under the designation of "transcendental pantheism", as their starting-point is found in Kant's critical philosophy. Kant had distinguished in knowledge the matter which comes through sensation from the outer world, and the forms, which are purely subjective and yet are the more important factors. Furthermore, he had declared that we know the appearances (phenomena) of things but not the things-in-themselves (noumena). And he had made the ideas of the soul, the world, and God merely immanent, so that any attempt to demonstrate their objective value must end in contradiction. This subjectivism paved the way for the pantheistic theories of Fichte, Schelling, and Hegel.

Fichte set back into the mind all the elements of knowledge, i.e. matter as well as form; phenomena and indeed the whole of reality are products of the thinking Ego-not the individual mind but the absolute or universal self-consciousness. Through the three-fold process of thesis, antithesis, and synthesis, the Ego posits the non-Ego not only theoretically but also for practical purposes, i.e. for effort and struggle which are necessary in order to attain the highest good. In the same way the Ego, free in itself, posits other free agents by whose existence its own freedom is limited. Hence the law of right and all morality; but hence also the Divine being. The living, active moral order of the world, says Fichte, is itself God, we need no other God, and can conceive of no other. The idea of God as a distinct substance is impossible and contradictory. Such, at any rate, is the earlier form of his doctrine, though in his later theorizing he emphasizes more and more the concepts of the Absolute as embracing all individuals within itself.

According to Schelling, the Absolute is the "identity of all differences"-object and subject, nature and mind, the real order and the ideal; and the knowledge of this identity is obtained by an intellectual intuition which, abstracting from every individual thinker and every possible object of thought, contemplates the absolute reason. Out of this original unity all things evolve in opposite directions: nature as the negative pole, mind or spirit as the positive pole of a vast magnet, the universe. Within this totality each thing, like the particle of a magnet, has its nature or form determined according as it manifests subjectivity or objectivity in greater degree. History is but the gradual self-revelation of the Absolute; when its final period will come to pass we know not; but when it does come, then God will be.

The system of Hegel has been called "logical pantheism", as it is constructed on the "dialectical" method; and "panlogismus", since it describes the entire world-process as the evolution of the Idea. Starting from the most abstract of notions, i.e. pure being, the Absolute develops first the various categories; then it externalizes itself, and Nature is the result; finally it returns upon itself, regains unity and self-consciousness, becomes the individual spirit of man. The Absolute, therefore, is Mind; but it attains its fulness only by a process of evolution or "becoming", the stages of which form the history of the universe.

These idealistic constructions were followed by a reaction due largely to the development of the natural sciences. But these in turn offer, apparently, new support to the central positions of pantheism, or at any rate they point, it is claimed, to that very unity and that gradual unfolding which pantheism has all along asserted. The principle of the conservation of energy through ceaseless transformations, and the doctrine of evolution applied to all things and all phenomena, are readily interpreted by the pantheist in favour of his own system. Even where the ultimate reality is said to be unknowable as in Herbert Spencer's "Synthetic Philosophy", it is still one and the same being that manifests itself alike in evolving matter and in the consciousness that evolves out of lower material forms. Nor is it surprising that some writers should see in pantheism the final outcome of all speculation and the definitive expression which the human mind has found for the totality of things.

This statement, in fact, may well serve as a summary of the pantheistic doctrine:

The Church has repeatedly condemned the errors of pantheism. Among the propositions censured in the Syllabus of Pius IX is that which declares: "There is no supreme, all-wise and all-provident Divine Being distinct from the universe; God is one with nature and therefore subject to change; He becomes God in man and the world; all things are God and have His substance; God is identical with the world, spirit with matter, necessity with freedom, truth with falsity, good with evil, justice with injustice" (Denzinger-Bannwart, "Ench.", 1701). And the Vatican Council anathematizes those who assert that the substance or essence of God and of all things is one and the same, or that all things evolve from God's essence (ibid., 1803 sqq.).

To our perception the world presents a multitude of beings each of which has qualities activities, and existence of its own, each is an individual thing. Radical differences mark off living things from those that are lifeless; the conscious from the unconscious human thought and volition from the activities of lower animals. And among human beings each personality appears as a self, which cannot by any effort become completely one with other selves. On the other hand, any adequate account of the world other than downright materialism includes the concept of some original Being which, whether it be called First Cause, or Absolute, or God, is in its nature and existence really distinct from the world. Only such a Being can satisfy the demands of human thought, either as the source of the moral order or as the object of religious worship. If, then, pantheism not only merges the separate existences of the world in one existence, but also identifies this one with the Divine Being, some cogent reason or motive must be alleged in justification of such a procedure. Pantheists indeed bring forward various arguments in support of their several positions, and in reply to criticism aimed at the details of their system; but what lies back of their reasoning and what has prompted the construction of all pantheistic theories, both old and new, is the craving for unity. The mind, they insist, cannot accept dualism or pluralism as the final account of reality. By an irresistible tendency, it seeks to substitute for the apparent multiplicity and diversity of things a unitary ground or source, and, once this is determined, to explain all things as somehow derived though not really separated from it.

That such is in fact the ideal of many philosophers cannot be denied; nor is it needful to challenge the statement that reason does aim at unification on some basis or other. But this very aim and all endeavours in view of it must likewise be kept within reasonable bounds: a theoretical unity obtained at too great a sacrifice is no unity at all, but merely an abstraction that quickly falls to pieces. Hence for an estimate of pantheism two questions must be considered:

It has often been claimed that pantheism by teaching us to see God in everything gives us an exalted idea of His wisdom, goodness, and power, while it imparts to the visible world a deeper meaning. In point of fact, however, it makes void the attributes which belong essentially to the Divine nature For the pantheist God is not a personal Being. He is not an intelligent Cause of the world, designing, creating and governing it in accordance with the free determination of His wisdom. If consciousness is ascribed to Him as the one Substance, extension is also said to be His attribute (Spinoza), or He attains to self-consciousness only through a process of evolution (Hegel). But this very process implies that God is not from eternity perfect: He is forever changing, advancing from one degree of perfection to another, and helpless to determine in what direction the advance shall take place. Indeed, there is no warrant for saying that He "advances" or becomes more "perfect"; at most we can say that He, or rather It, is constantly passing into other forms. Thus God is not only impersonal, but also changeable and finite-which is equivalent to saying that He is not God.

It is true that some pantheists, such as Paulsen, while frankly denying the personality of God, pretend to exalt His being by asserting that He is "supra-personal." If this means that God in Himself is infinitely beyond any idea that we can form of Him, the statement is correct; but if it means that our idea of Him is radically false and not merely inadequate, that consequently we have no right to speak of infinite intelligence and will, the statement is simply a makeshift which pantheism borrows from agnosticism Even then the term "supra-personal" is not consistently applied to what Paulsen calls the All-One; for this, if at all related to personality, should be described as infra-personal.

Once the Divine personality is removed, it is evidently a misnomer to speak of God as just or holy, or in any sense a moral Being. Since God, in the pantheistic view, acts out of sheer necessity--that is, cannot act otherwise--His action is no more good than it is evil. To say, with Fichte, that God is the moral order, is an open contradiction; no such order exists where nothing is free, nor could God, a non-moral Being, have established a moral order either for Himself or for other beings. If, on the other hand, it be maintained that the moral order does exist, that it is postulated by our human judgments, the plight of pantheism is no better; for in that case all the actions of men, their crimes as well as their good deeds, must be imputed to God. Thus the Divine Being not only loses the attribute of absolute holiness, but even falls below the level of those men in whom moral goodness triumphs over evil.

No such claim, however, can be made in behalf of the moral order by a consistent pantheist. For him, human personality is a mere illusion: what we call the individual man is only one of the countless fragments that make up the Divine Being; and since the All is impersonal no single part of it can validly claim personality. Futhermore, since each human action is inevitably determined, the consciousness of freedom is simply another illusion, due, as Spinoza says, to our ignorance of the causes that compel us to act. Hence our ideas of what "ought to be" are purely subjective, and our concept of a moral order, with its distinctions of right and wrong, has no foundation in reality. The so-called "dictates of conscience" are doubtless interesting phenomena of mind which the psychologist may investigate and explain, but they have no binding force whatever; they are just as illusory as the ideas of virtue and duty, of injustice to the fellow-man and of sin against God. But again, since these dictates, like all our ideas, are produced in us by God, it follows that He is the source of our illusions regarding morality a consequence which certainly does not enhance His holiness or His knowledge.

It is not, however, clear that the term illusion is justified; for this supposes a distinction between truth and error-a distinction which has no meaning for the genuine pantheist; all our judgments being the utterance of the One that thinks in us, it is impossible to discriminate the true from the false. He who rejects pantheism is no further from the truth than he who defends it; each but expresses a thought of the Absolute whose large tolerance harbours all contradictions. Logically, too, it would follow that no heed should be taken as to veracity of statement, since all statements are equally warranted. The pantheist who is careful to speak in accordance with his thought simply refrains from putting his philosophy into practice. But it is none the less significant that Spinoza's chief work was his "Ethics", and that, according to one modern view, ethics has only to describe what men do, not to prescribe what they ought to do.

In forming its conception of God, pantheism eliminates every characteristic that religion presupposes. An impersonal being, whatever attributes it may have, cannot be an object of worship. An infinite substance or a self-evolving energy may excite fear but it repels faith and love. Even the beneficent forms of its manifestation call forth no gratitude, since these result from it by a rigorous necessity. For the same reason, prayer of any sort is useless, atonement is vain and merit impossible. The supernatural of course disappears entirely when God and the world are identified.

Recent advocates of pantheism have sought to obviate these difficulties and to show that, apart from particular dogmas, the religious life and spirit are safeguarded in their theory. But in this attempt they divest religion of its essentials, reducing it to mere feeling. Not action, they allege, but humility and trustfulness constitute religion. This, however is an arbitrary procedure; by the same method it could be shown that religion is nothing more than existing or breathing. The pantheist quite overlooks the fact that religion means obedience to Divine law; and of this obedience there can be no question in a system which denies the freedom of man's will. According to pantheism there is just as little "rational service" in the so-called religious life as there is in the behaviour of any physical agent. And if men still distinguish between actions that are religious and those that are not, the distinction is but another illusion.

Belief in a future life is not only an incentive to effort and a source of encouragement; for the Christian at least it implies a sanction of Divine law, a prospect of retribution. But this sanction is of no meaning or efficacy unless the soul survive as an individual. If, as pantheism teaches, immortality is absorption into the being of God, it can matter little what sort of life one leads here. There is no ground for discriminating between the lot of the righteous and that of the wicked, when all alike are merged in the Absolute. And if by some further process of evolution such a discrimination should come to pass, it can signify nothing, either as reward or as punishment, once personal consciousness has ceased. That perfect union with God which pantheism seems to promise, is no powerful inspiration to right living when one considers how far from holy must be a God who continually takes up into Himself the worst of humanity along with the best--if indeed one may continue to think in terms that involve a distinction between evil and good.

It is therefore quite plain that in endeavouring to unify all things, pantheism sacrifices too much. If God, freedom, morality and religion must all be reduced to the One and its inevitable processes, there arises the question whether the craving for unity may not be the source of illusions more fatal than any of those which pantheism claims to dispel. But in fact no such unification is attained. The pantheist uses his power of abstraction to set aside all differences, and then declares that the differences are not really there. Yet even for him they seem to be there, and so from the very outset he is dealing with appearance and reality; and these two he never fuses into one. He simply hurries on to assert that the reality is Divine and that all the apparent things are manifestations of the infinite, but he does not explain why each manifestation should be finite or why the various manifestations should be interpreted in so many different and conflicting ways by human minds, each of which is a part of one and the same God. He makes the Absolute pass onward from unconsciousness to consciousness but does not show why there should be these two stages in evolution, or why evolution, which certainly means becoming "other", should take place at all.

It might be noted, too, that pantheism fails to unify subject and object, and that in spite of its efforts the world of existence remains distinct from the world of thought. But such objections have little weight with the thorough-going pantheist who follows Hegel, and is willing for the sake of "unity" to declare that Being and Nothing are identical.

There is nevertheless a fundamental unity which Christian philosophy has always recognized, and which has God for its centre. Not as the universal being, nor as the formal constituent principle of things, but as their efficient cause operating in and through each, and as the final cause for which things exist, God in a very true sense is the source of all thought and reality (see St. Thomas, "Contra Gentes", I). His omnipresence and action, far from eliminating secondary causes, preserve each in the natural order of its efficiency-physical agents under the determination of physical law and human personality in the exercise of intelligence and freedom. the foundation of the moral order. The straining after unity in the pantheistic sense is without warrant, the only intelligible unity is that which God himself has established, a unity of purpose which is manifest alike in the processes of the material universe and in the free volition of man, and which moves on to its fulfilment in the union of the created spirit with the infinite Person, the author of the moral order and the object of religious worship.

APA citation. Pace, E. (1911). Pantheism. In The Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company. http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/11447b.htm

MLA citation. Pace, Edward. "Pantheism." The Catholic Encyclopedia. Vol. 11. New York: Robert Appleton Company, 1911. <http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/11447b.htm>.

Transcription. This article was transcribed for New Advent by Tomas Hancil.

Ecclesiastical approbation. Nihil Obstat. February 1, 1911. Remy Lafort, S.T.D., Censor. Imprimatur. +John Cardinal Farley, Archbishop of New York.

Contact information. The editor of New Advent is Kevin Knight. My email address is webmaster at newadvent.org. Regrettably, I can't reply to every letter, but I greatly appreciate your feedback especially notifications about typographical errors and inappropriate ads.

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CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: Pantheism

Fordham sanctions student over posts about David Dorn, Second Amendment, and Tiananmen Square – Washington Examiner

A student at Fordham University has been sanctioned by the school for a series of social media posts supporting conservative causes that university officials say violated its code of conduct.

Austin Tong, a senior, received a letter on Tuesday relaying the result of a student conduct hearing regarding two Instagram posts he made in recent weeks.

One of the posts shows Tong holding a rifle with a caption that read, "Don't tread on me." The other is a photo of retired St. Louis Police Capt. David Dorn, a veteran of the force killed during rioting in the city following the death of George Floyd. The caption on the post about Dorn read, "Ya'll are hypocrites."

In the post with the rifle, Tong included the hashtag: #198965, a reference to the Tiananmen Square Massacre.

In its judgment, Fordham said Tong violated two areas of the student conduct policy that he agreed to when he enrolled at the school, which prohibit threats, intimidation, and "bias and/or hate crimes."

Dean of Students Keith Eldredge admonished Tong for his posts, writing: It is reported that on June 3 and 4 and in the recent past you made several posts on social media related to the current racial issues in the country and political issues in China.

Tong was informed that as part of the sanctions leveled against him, he would not be permitted to represent the university in an official extracurricular capacity, and his access to on-campus facilities will be restricted, meaning he will need to take classes online. He will also be required to have meetings with university administration and pen a letter of apology.

For too long, students have simply accepted being silenced by their schools and leftist mobs, Tong told Young America's Foundation. I think this says that students of all backgrounds and beliefs need to rally together to protect everyones right to speak, because it will only get worse if we remain indifferent.

Tong told the organization he will consider taking legal action against the school if it doesn't rescind the sanctions.

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Fordham sanctions student over posts about David Dorn, Second Amendment, and Tiananmen Square - Washington Examiner

Page A2 | E-Edition – The Times and Democrat

PATRICK SEMANSKY, ASSOCIATED PRESS

U.S. Supreme Court Associate Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg speaksduring a discussion on the 100th anniversary of the ratification ofthe 19th Amendment on Feb. 10 at Georgetown University Law Centerin Washington.

WASHINGTON President Donald Trump and Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell have tried to make it clear: Given the chance, they would push through a Supreme Court nominee should a vacancy occur before Election Day.

The issue has taken on new immediacy with the disclosure Friday that Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg is receiving chemotherapy for a recurrence of cancer after four earlier bouts with the disease. The 87-year-old liberal, who apologized in 2016 for her pointed public criticism of Trump during his first campaign, says she has no plans to retire.

The development has focused even more on what's at stake this election, with the winner in position to help shape the trajectory of the court for years to come.

Trump administration officials have underscored that Trump would not hesitate to fill an opening before voters have their say Nov. 3, less than four months away, on whether to give him a second term.

Four years ago, also in a presidential election year, the GOP-controlled Senate refused to vote when President Barack Obama, a Democrat, nominated Merrick Garland, a federal judge, to succeed Justice Antonin Scalia after his death in February. Nine months before that year's election, McConnell said voters should determine who would nominate the person to fill that seat.

Fast forward to this past week. Trump's chief of staff, Mark Meadows, told reporters: I cant imagine that if he had a vacancy on the Supreme Court that he would not very quickly make the appointment and look for the Senate to take quick action."

Meadows spoke shortly after the court said Ginsburg was briefly hospitalized, but before the justice announced she had a recurrence of cancer and has been treated with chemotherapy since May 19.

Ginsburg is the oldest justice, followed by Stephen Breyer, 81, Clarence Thomas, 72, and Samuel Alito, 70.

Trump sees his efforts at reshaping the judiciary as a signature achievement of his presidency. Last month he marked his 200th judicial appointment. Earlier in his term, he won confirmation of Neil Gorsuch and Brett Kavanaugh to the high court.

The president has sought to remind fellow Republicans that should he win a second term, he would have the chance to push the Supreme Court and lower courts further to the right.

Last month, after the court rejected his administrations attempt to end an Obama-era program that provided legal protections to roughly 650,000 immigrants illegally brought to the United States as children, Trump said more needed to be done to push the court to the right.

He said he would release a "new list of Conservative Supreme Court Justice nominees" by Sept. 1. "Based on decisions being rendered now, this list is more important than ever before (Second Amendment, Right to Life, Religous Liberty, etc.) VOTE 2020!" he tweeted.

Carl Tobias, a University of Richmond law school professor, said Republicans have shown no consistency between their refusal to give Garland a hearing and their insistence it would be proper to move forward on a vacancy during the waning days of a potentially lame-duck presidency.

Tobias said Trump and Republicans are calculating that playing up their commitment to adding another conservative justice is such an attractive pitch to base voters that its worth risking being labeled hypocrites by their opponents.

Leading Republicans, including the Senate Judiciary Committee chairman, Republican Lindsey Graham of South Carolina, now say its OK to consider an election-year appointment when the Senate and the White House are held by the same party.

McConnell was even more blunt. Yeah, wed fill it, he said in a February interview.

At least one key Republican has expressed reservations.

In 2018, Iowa Sen. Chuck Grassley said that if he were still the committee chairman in 2020 and there were a Supreme Court vacancy, he would not take up the nomination. But Grassley, who now heads the Senate Finance Committee, said if there were a different chairman that person would have to make the call.

Sen. Joni Ernst, R-Iowa, who is facing reelection, told Iowas PBS station on Friday that she would support taking up a Trump nominee in November or December after the 2020 election and before the start of the next Senate session.

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Page A2 | E-Edition - The Times and Democrat

Letter: Irons’ letter missed the mark – Opinion – HollandSentinel.com

SundayJul19,2020at12:01AM

Kerry Irons letter to the editor of July 14th ("Character issue in Park Twp. race") is a disgusting shot at Jim Chiodo. It is an obvious attempt by someone who does not even live in Park Township to taint the race.

In addition, take a look at Irons list of grievances beyond the distortions. People lose elections all the time only to return and, in notable cases, return to be congressmen, senators and U.S. presidents. Banned from web forums? Guess who else has been victims of such moves; the current president of the U.S. and several leading conservative national VIPs. My own conservative Facebook shares have been recently taken down.

Lastly, take a look at the rest. Chiodo dares to exercise his Second Amendment rights, his widely held conservative views on global warming, and for Mr. Irons, Jims worst sin criticizing Black Lives Matter which the new leftist cancel culture just cannot tolerate.

Jim Chiodos "crimes" are really summed up in this; he is an unabashed vocal conservative, believes in the U.S. Constitution and the Bill of Rights.

Jane Ashby

Holland

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Letter: Irons' letter missed the mark - Opinion - HollandSentinel.com

Trump joins Hagerty in tele-town hall as early voting begins – Alton Telegraph

Kimberlee Kruesi, Associated Press

Republican U.S. Senate candidate Bill Hagerty speaks to supporters on Friday, July 17, 2020, after casting an early voting ballot at the Nashville Public Library Bellevue Branch in Nashville, Tenn.

Republican U.S. Senate candidate Bill Hagerty speaks to supporters on Friday, July 17, 2020, after casting an early voting ballot at the Nashville Public Library Bellevue Branch in Nashville, Tenn.

Photo: Jonathan Mattise, AP

Republican U.S. Senate candidate Bill Hagerty speaks to supporters on Friday, July 17, 2020, after casting an early voting ballot at the Nashville Public Library Bellevue Branch in Nashville, Tenn.

Republican U.S. Senate candidate Bill Hagerty speaks to supporters on Friday, July 17, 2020, after casting an early voting ballot at the Nashville Public Library Bellevue Branch in Nashville, Tenn.

Trump joins Hagerty in tele-town hall as early voting begins

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) President Donald Trump on Friday once again threw support behind his former U.S. Ambassador to Japan Bill Hagerty, a Republican running in the primary for an open U.S. Senate seat in Tennessee.

Hagerty, 59, has frequently touted Trump's endorsement ever since the president broke the news the former ambassador was running for political office nearly a year ago.

Ill never forget I went to Japan and he knew every person over there, he knew the businessmen, he could pronounce those names I had a hard time with, Trump said in a tele-town hall with Hagerty. I had a very hard time pronouncing those names.

Trump encouraged Tennesseans to vote early, warning that it was critical to elect senators in office who would vote in favor of the judges he appoints.

Your Second Amendment is under siege. If I werent here I dont think you would have a Second Amendment," Trump added while praising Hagerty's support of law enforcement. You would certainly have a very weak one.

Hagerty's main opponent in the Senate primary is trauma surgeon Manny Sethi, who is also seeking the position being vacated by outgoing Republican Sen. Lamar Alexander. The two candidates have recently increased attacks on one another as early voting kicked off Friday.

In a recent ad, Sethi attacked Hagerty's past political donations to Republican Mitt Romney the only Republican to vote to convict the president during his impeachment trial.

Why is the establishment attacking a nice guy like me? Sethi asks. Well, folks are finding out that Bill Hagertys endorsed by Mitt Romney."

Romney has not publicly endorsed Hagerty since the former ambassador joined the race, but Romney had previously supported the idea, according to the Wall Street Journal in mid-2019.

Meanwhile, Hagerty criticized Sethi in an ad as a liberal elitist.

I volunteered full-time for six months when nobody else was supporting President Trump, certainly not Manny Sethi didnt lift a finger, didnt donate a dime back in 2016 to help President Trump get elected, Hagerty told The Associated Press on Friday.

Early voting ahead of the Aug. 6 primary will be open Monday through Saturday until Aug. 1.

For those who do not want to vote in person, a judge is giving all eligible voters the option to vote absentee during the pandemic. Absentee ballots can be requested until July 30. First-time voters can only vote absentee if they have shown ID at a county election office.

___

Associated Press writer Jonathan Mattise in Nashville, Tennessee, contributed to this report.

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Trump joins Hagerty in tele-town hall as early voting begins - Alton Telegraph

Fence to go up around Kentucky Governor’s Mansion in response to Beshear effigy – Courier Journal

An effigy of Gov. Andy Beshear was hanged from a tree outside the Kentucky state Capitol during a Memorial Day weekend protest. Louisville Courier Journal

In response to an effigy of Gov. Andy Beshear gettinghanged from a tree outside the state Capitol in May, afence is going uparound the Kentucky Governor's Mansion "for the safety of the current and future first families."

Crystal Staley, a spokeswoman for Beshear, said the Kentucky State Police executive security team requested the fence be put up after attendees of a Second Amendment rally on May 24 hanged the effigy on Capitol grounds.

A request for bids for the installation of the security fence was sent out July 8, and contractors have until July 20 to make their bids, said Jill Midkiff, a spokeswoman for the stateFinance and Administration Cabinet.

The fence will be 4 feet tall in most places, except for one area where it will be 5feet, according to state procurement documents.

Midkiff told The Courier Journal that "we cannot provide an estimated value of the contract" until the bids are received.

"Due to the historic nature of the mansion, the security fencing installed must maintain the integrity of the mansions exterior," Midkiff wrote in an email.

"The initial cost of the installation will be paid out of the Department for Facilities and Support Services budget. The private Kentucky Executive Mansion Foundation indicates they plan to vote on the possible reimbursement of this expenditure," Midkiff added."It is believed that Kentuckys Governors Mansion may be the only Executive Mansion in the United States that does not currently have security fencing."

The Second Amendment rally in May, which drew a crowd of more than100 people outside the Capitol in Frankfort, beganas a celebration ofconstitutional rights.

But it eventually turned into a protest of the Beshear administration and the Democratic governor'scoronavirus-related restrictions.

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Near the end of the rally, organizers led the remaining attendees to the Governor's Mansion to attempt to deliver a request for Beshear to resign, with the group chanting, "Come out Andy" and "Resign Andy."

From May: Beshear hanged in effigy as Second Amendment supporters rally at Capitol

More: Kentucky state senator announces he has tested positive for the coronavirus

No one came to the door, as several statetroopers monitoring the rally got out of their vehicles to observethe group but not intervene.

The crowd returned to the Capitol, and an effigy ofBeshear was hanged from a tree while God Bless the U.S.A. played over a loud speaker.

The effigy bore a sign that read, sic semper tyrannis, which means thus always to tyrants." John Wilkes Booth shouted the phrase after assassinating President Abraham Lincoln in 1865.

Staley told The Courier Journal that the "group ofarmed demonstrators crossed over barriers to stand on the front porch of the mansion, just a window pane away from where the Governor and First Lady raise their two young children, and chanted for him to come outside."

As a result of the group also hanging Beshear in effigy, Staley said the Kentucky State Police executive security team "requested a fence be built for the safety of the current and future first families."

The effigy brought swift condemnation from Democrats and Republicans.

In addition, the man who was captured on video hoisting the effigy of Beshear from the tree, identified as the president of the Kentucky ThreePercenters group, was later fired from his job at an auto dealership.

A few days after the rally, Beshear denounced the "mob" that carried out "acelebrationof assassination on our Capitol grounds" and chanted "on the other side of the glass from where I raisemy kids."

"I will not be afraid," the governor said."I will not be bullied.And I will not back down."

Reach Billy Kobin at bkobin@courierjournal.com. Support strong local journalism by subscribing today: courier-journal.com/subscribe.

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Right-Wing Domestic Terrorism Has Increased By More Than 300% Since Trump Took Office: Report – Law & Crime

President Donald Trump walks between columns outside the White House.

According to a recent report, deaths attributable to so-called right-wing domestic terrorists have increased by more than 300% since President Donald Trump took office in 2017.

A database compiled by the Type Media Centers David Neiwert and based on government interpretations of ideological motivations showed that at least 87 people were killed by far-right terrorists during Trumps first three years in office. That number swells to 145 dead in three years if the 58 people killed by Stephen Paddock during the Las Vegas massacre in October 2017 are added in.

The Type Media Center was formerly known as The Nation Institute and was previously attached to The Nation magazine.

From 2013 through 2016, right-wing terrorists in the United States killed some 46 people.

Conversely, Neiwert notes, only 17 people have died due to domestic Islamic terrorism over the past three years. Left-wing domestic terrorism barely registered during the time span; only four such deaths occurred in the past three years.

The stuff about the Las Vegas killing is interesting because it shows how police literally cant SEE right-wing ideology because it is naturalized as normal politics, claimed The Nations National-Affairs Correspondent Jeet Heer on Saturday.

According to Neiwert and others, there is every indication that Paddock was an anti-government, gun-rights zealot. Paraphrasing numerous acquaintances of the killer into a composite explanation of his ideology, Neiwert writes that Paddock had a thing about guns and the Second Amendment and harbored a deep fear that the government would attempt to take them away.

One such acquaintance said that he defended the Second Amendment with an incredible degree of vigor.

Stephen Paddock [Image via the FBI]

But, because Paddock lacked any explicit right-wing organizational affiliations and because he did not leave behind a manifesto after he shot nearly 900 people, the government declined to assign him any ideological motivation.

The Paddock case is odd in that if there were the same number of links to ISIS or Al Qaeda ideologies, there would be no question that the government would highlight them and call him an Islamist terrorist, Brennan Center for Justice Liberty and National Security Fellow Michael German told Neiwert. But here, law enforcement tried to hide and downplay his many links to far right groups/ideology.

The aftermath of the Oct. 2017 mass shooting in Las Vegas, Nev. [Photo by Ethan Miller/Getty Images]

The database shows that during the first three years of the Trump administration, cases involving Islamist extremists were preempted 18 times, compared with seven completed attacks, or 72% a powerful indicator of the resources federal agencies poured into such probes. In contrast, a minority of right-wing extremist cases were preempted 18, compared with 30 realized attacks, or 37.5%.

[L]aw enforcement priorities remain skewed, Neiwert claims.

The top-line numbers are based on the total number of killings that were committed by far-right domestic terroristsunder an expansive definition of the termin the first three years of Trumps presidency compared to those committed by the same ideological cohort during the last three years of Barack Obamas time in the White House.

A less expansive definition of what constitutes right-wing domestic terrorismduring the same time frameshows that such killings have risen by nearly 200% since Trump became president.

[photo by Drew Angerer/Getty Images]

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Right-Wing Domestic Terrorism Has Increased By More Than 300% Since Trump Took Office: Report - Law & Crime

Tiny particles, big solutions – The Hindu

Over the past 15-plus weeks, how many times in a day have you furiously wiped down surfaces with disinfectants? The COVID-19 fear factor has turned scientists to research on products based around nano technology, the application of a group of few atoms. They are looking for a solution aimed at a surface coating that bonds to the material with long-term protection against germs (bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa).

What are these surface protectors?

They are substances that use metals such as silver and copper or biomolecules such as neem extract known for their microbial activity, or cationic (i.e positively charged) polymers in combination with chemical compounds (like ammonia plus nitrogen) that can be used as a long lasting protective coating. The compound can be sprayed on metal, glass, wood, stone, fabric, leather, and other materials and the effect can last from a week to 90 days depending on what type of surface it is used on.

Are they out in the market?

Until the pandemic, there were products for anti-bacterial application, but now the focus has shifted to viruses. For instance, Prof Ashwini Kumar Agrawal, the Head of Textile and Fibre Engineering Department at IIT Delhi, developed N9 blue nano silver in 2013, with a much higher potency than other metals and polymers to catch and kill bacteria. He has now evaluated the anti-viral properties and re-formulated the compound to work against COVID-19. He says different kinds of silver (yellow and brown) have been patented by countries including the US, China, Australia to establish the uniqueness of the metal for surface hygiene. "But the N9 blue silver can be 100 times more effective with the longest lasting protection."

Institutions (particularly the IITs) across the country are in different stages of developing these nanoparticles as surface coatings. All are awaiting validation against viruses, through field trials before they can legally mass manufacture.

The required certification needs to ideally go through government-approved labs (like ICMR, CSIR, NABL or NIV) that are currently all engaged only in research on medicinal drugs and vaccines.

Nano-products that are available

There are some products that have been tested by private labs either in India or abroad. For instance, Delhi-based start-up, Germcop has launched a disinfection service with a US manufactured and EPA-certified water-based anti-microbial product which, it is claimed, when sprayed over metallic, non-metallic, tiled and glass surfaces gives protection up to 120 days with a 99.9% killing rate in the first 10 days. Dr Pankaj Goyal, the founder, says the product is good for homes that have had a COVID positive patient home-quarantined. She is speaking to the Delhi Transport Corporation to disinfect 1,000 buses. However, the testing has been conducted in a private lab.

IIT Delhis samples were sent in April to the microbiological testing laboratory, MSL in UK. The reports are expected only by the end of the year. "The battery of lab tests will confirm the efficacy of the compound in dry state, how fast and for how long it can continue to kill the virus and if it is non-toxic and safe to use," says Prof Agrawal.

While Prof Agrawals N9 blue silver comes under the Government of Indias Nano Mission project funded by the Department of Science & Technology, another by IIT Madras, funded by the Defence Research Development Organisation, has developed a nano-coated filter for PPE kits, masks, and gloves that can be used by frontline healthcare workers. The coating filters sub-micron sized dust particles in the air. However, its practical application is also subject to field testing and is therefore, pending.

Why cant we just use regular disinfectants?

We can, but theyre not a healthy option for us or the environment, over a long term. Dr Rohini Sridhar, the COO of Apollo Hospitals in Madurai, says common disinfectants used so far in high density public places such as hospitals and clinics contain alcohol, phosphates or hypochlorite solutions, more commonly known as household bleach. "These solutions lose their function as they evaporate quickly, and break down when exposed to UV lights such as the sun, requiring the need for surfaces to be disinfected several times a day.

Are the long lasting surface protectors in use anywhere else in the world?

Following the findings from the Diamond Princess cruise ship that the coronavirus can last on surfaces up to 17 days, the development of a new disinfectant technology arose. While anti-viral coatings are undergoing clinical tests in several countries, three months ago scientists from Haifa's Institute of Technology, in Israel, claimed to have developed anti-viral polymers that could kill the coronavirus without getting diminished.

Researchers in Hong Kong University of Science & Technology also developed a new anti-microbial coating known as MAP-1 that can kill most bacteria and viruses -- including the coronavirus -- for up to 90 days.

Prof Agrawal says many countries are engaged in developing heat-sensitive polymers that respond to contamination from touch or droplets, from the time of previous epidemics of SARS. Many of those formulations have been modified during the current pandemic and sold under different brand names in Japan, Singapore, and the US. However, the surface protectors currently available in international markets are pocket-pinching.

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MRSEC wins major new grant from the National Science Foundation – Brandeis University

The cutting-edge research center received $18 million to develop the next generation of machines and materials.

MRSEC harnesses the power of organic matter to develop new materials and machines.

Brandeis' MRSEC program, which is developing revolutionary new types of nano-sized machines and materials, has received an $18 million, 6-year grant from the National Science Foundation (NSF).

It is the third time Brandeis has received the prestigious award. This year it was given to only 10 other universities besides Brandeis, including Columbia, Harvard and Princeton.

MRSEC, which stands for Materials Research Science and Engineering Center (MRSEC), is a long-term, nationwide effort to invent devices that are right out of a science fiction movie self-mending clothing, self-healing artificial organs, nanobots that travel through the bloodstream to wipe out cancer cells and cyborgs that move with the agility and grace of human beings.

Brandeis MRSEC researchers also recently began a long-term project to develop cures for viruses, including COVID-19.

It is extremely stimulating to be part of a sustained, well-supported team like the MRSEC that addresses grand challenges at the forefront of science, said Brandeis MRSEC director and professor of physics Seth Fraden. Brandeis is a fitting home for such a center because our small size and passionate community of researchers support a highly collaborative environment.

"The MRSEC program is a flagship program for the [NSF Division of Materials Research] and with these new awards will continue its long history of forging discoveries and fueling new technologies," the division's director, Linda Sapochak, said in a press release.

At Brandeis, Fraden and his colleagues focus on soft matter compounds like gels, liquid crystals, foams and polymers that exist somewhere between a liquid and a solid state.

They aim to endow these materials with features and abilities found in nature.

Fraden and his collaborators also work on "self-propelling" or "self-powered" liquids.

These are made from motor proteins taken from animal cells that consume chemical energy to keep on going. In the same way, these liquids move on their own without any kind of human intervention, and act like self-pumping fluids.

The MRSEC is an example of "horizontal connectivity" at Brandeis, where scientists transcend programmatic, departmental and school affiliations to work across disciplines. Some 17 Brandeis faculty, from 6 science departments, work alongside 30 graduate students, postdocs and MRSEC staff.

The MRSEC also offers a broad range of educational outreach programs for K-12 students and teachers, undergraduates, graduate students and postdocs.

As part of the NSF's Partnerships for Research and Education in Materials (PREM), MRSEC collaborates on research into cutting-edge materials with Hampton University, a historically black university in Virginia.

This 6-year, $3.6M PREM grant aims to boost diversity in the sciences by building Hampton's research capacity and increasing the recruitment, retention and graduation rates of individuals from underrepresented groups.

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MRSEC wins major new grant from the National Science Foundation - Brandeis University

Synthetic Biology Market (2019-2025) with COVID-19 After Effects Analysis by Emerging Trends, Industry Demand, Growth, Key Players – Jewish Life News

The synthetic biology market is segmented on the lines of its product, technology and application. The synthetic biology is segmented on the lines of its product are enabled products, core product and enabling products. The enabled product is further segmented into pharmaceuticals, chemicals, biofuels and agriculture. Under core product segmentation it covered synthetic DNA, synthetic genes, synthetic cells, XNA and chassis organisms. The enabling product is segmented into DNA synthesis and oligonucleotide synthesis. The synthetic biology is segmented on the lines of its technology like enabling technology and enabled technology. Under enabling technology it covers genome engineering, microfluidics technologies, DNA synthesis & sequencing technologies, bioinformatics technologies, biological components and integrated systems technologies. The enabled technology the market is segmented into pharmaceuticals, chemicals, biofuels and agriculture. Under application segmentation the market covered into research & development, chemicals, agriculture, pharmaceuticals & diagnostics, biofuels, environment, biotechnology and biomaterials. The synthetic biology market is geographic segmentation covers various regions such as North America, Europe, Asia Pacific, Latin America, Middle East and Africa. Each geography market is further segmented to provide market revenue for select countries such as the U.S., Canada, U.K. Germany, China, Japan, India, Brazil, and GCC countries.

FYI, You will get latest updated report as per the COVID-19 Impact on this industry. Our updated reports will now feature detailed analysis that will help you make critical decisions.

The global synthetic biology market is expected to exceed more than US$ 12.50 billion by 2024, at a CAGR of 20% in given forecast period.

You Can Browse Full Report @: https://www.marketresearchengine.com/reportdetails/synthetic-biology-market

The report covers detailed competitive outlook including the market share and company profiles of the key participants operating in the global market. Key players profiled in the report include BASF, GEN9 Inc. , Algenol Biofuels , Codexis Inc. , GenScript Corporation , DuPont , Butamax Advanced Biofuels , BioAmber , Biosearch Technologies, Inc. , OriGene Technologies, Inc. , Synthetic Genomics, Inc. , GeneArt (Life Technologies) , GENEWIZ, Inc. , Eurofins Scientific, Inc. , Integrated DNA Technologies, Inc. , DNA2.0, Inc. , Pareto Biotechnologies , Synthorx, Inc. , TeselaGen Biotechnology , Editas Medicine, Inc. , Twist Bioscience , GeneWorks Pty Ltd. , Proterro, Inc. and Blue heron (OriGene technologies Inc.) . Company profile includes assign such as company summary, financial summary, business strategy and planning, SWOT analysis and current developments.

Synthetic biology market also called as constructive biology or system biology in which creating and designing new biological device, part which is not exist in environment. It also reconstructs the existing system to perform better job. It is branch of biology as well as engineering. The main aim of synthetic biology is to develop biological system same like engineers produce mechanical and electronic system. System based on molecular are helpful in detection and changes in health of body. It also helpful in developing synthetic vaccines. Synthetic biology plays vital role in HIV and cancer treatment. Synthetic biology accepts different technology such as nano-technology, bio-technology and more.

The scope of the report includes a detailed study of global and regional markets for various types of synthetic biology market with the reasons given for variations in the growth of the industry in certain regions.

The Synthetic biology Market has been segmented as below:

The Global Synthetic biology Market is segmented on the basis of Product Analysis, Technology Analysis, Application Analysis and Regional Analysis .

By Product Analysis this market is segmented on the basis of Enabling Products, DNA Synthesis, Oligonucleotide Synthesis, Enabled Products, Pharmaceuticals, Chemicals, Biofuels, Agriculture, Core Products, Synthetic DNA, Synthetic Genes, Synthetic Cells, XNA and Chassis Organisms. By Technology Analysis this market is segmented on the basis of Enabling Technology, Genome Engineering, Microfluidics technologies, DNA synthesis & sequencing technologies, Bioinformatics technologies, Biological components and integrated systems technologies, Enabled Technology, Pathway engineering, Synthetic microbial consortia and Biofuels technologies. By Application Analysis this market is segmented on the basis of Research & Development, Chemicals, Agriculture, Pharmaceuticals & Diagnostics, Biofuels and Others (Environment, Biotechnology & Biomaterials, etc.). By Regional Analysis this market is segmented on the basis of North America, Europe, Asia-Pacific and Rest of the World.

This report provides:

1) An overview of the global market for synthetic biology and related technologies.

2) Analyses of global market trends, with data from 2015, estimates for 2016 and 2017, and projections of compound annual growth rates (CAGRs) through 2024.

3) Identifications of new market opportunities and targeted promotional plans for synthetic biology

4) Discussion of research and development, and the demand for new products and new applications.

5) Comprehensive company profiles of major players in the industry.

The major driving factors of synthetic biology market are as follows:

The restraints factors of synthetic biology market are as follows:

Request Sample Report: https://www.marketresearchengine.com/reportdetails/synthetic-biology-market

Table of Contents

1 INTRODUCTION

2 Research Methodology

3 Executive Summary

4 Premium Insights

5 Industry Speaks

6 Market Overview

6.1 Introduction6.2 Market Dynamics6.2.1 Drivers6.2.1.1 Rising R&D Expenditure of Pharmaceutical and Biotechnology Companies6.2.1.2 Increasing Demand for Synthetic Genes6.2.1.3 Rise in the Global Production of Genetically Modified Crops6.2.1.4 Increase in Funding6.2.2 Restraint6.2.2.1 Ethical and Societal Issues6.2.3 Challenge6.2.3.1 Standardization of Biological Parts6.2.4 Opportunities6.2.4.1 Rising Concerns on Fuel Consumption6.2.4.2 Increasing Demand for Protein therapeutics

7 Industry Insights

8 Synthetic Biology Market, By Tool

9 Market, By Technology

10 Market, By Application

11 Synthetic Biology Market, By Geography

12 Competitive Landscape

13 Company Profiles

13.1 Introduction

13.2 Amyris, Inc.

13.3 Dupont

13.4 Genscript USA, Inc.

13.5 Intrexon Corporation

13.6 Integrated Dna Technologies (IDT), Inc.

13.7 New England Biolabs, Inc.

13.8 Novozymes

13.9 Royal DSM N.V.

13.10 Synthetic Genomics, Inc.

13.11 Thermo Fisher Scientific, Inc.

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Synthetic Biology Market (2019-2025) with COVID-19 After Effects Analysis by Emerging Trends, Industry Demand, Growth, Key Players - Jewish Life News

The best and worst choices for a cloth face mask – Times Union

Any face mask is better than no face mask during the pandemic. But all masks are not created equal.

Anti-maskers argue that forcing someone to wear a face covering is an infringement on rights, such as the right to decide what represents an acceptable risk to oneself. Thats the same argument that bareheaded motorcycle riders made before helmet rules went into effect.

When it comes to masks, however, the infringement justification does not hold water. The primary duty of a face covering is not to protect the wearer like a helmet does, but to protect others. If you are COVID-19 asymptomatic and you refuse to wear a mask in public, your body effectively becomes a bioweapon.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says the general public should wear cloth face coverings, not medical-grade N95 masks and surgical masks. Those should be reserved for health-care workers and first responders.

So what are the best and worst cloth masks for everyday use?

Bandanas are the least-effective. In a Florida Atlantic University study, scientists found that droplets from a bandana-covered cough traveled 3 feet, 7 inches, compared to 8 to 12 feet with no mask at all. Holding a double-folded handkerchief over ones mouth was much more efficient it stopped droplets from going more than 1.25 feet.

Get one made of cotton. Tightly woven, 100-percent cotton works well. Christopher Zangmeister, a researcher at the National Institute of Standards and Technology and co-author of a new study published in ACS Nano, told NPR that microscopic cotton fibers have a more three-dimensional structure than synthetic materials, which makes them more efficient at snagging incoming particles.

The more layers, the better. Two layers of tight-weave cotton are good, three or more are better. The CDCrecommends at least three fabric layers, which can include a middle layer of filtering material.

Masks with a filter pocket between two layers provide more protection. A two-layer, tight-weave cotton mask alone can filter out about 35% of small particles, Stanford University Professor of Materials Science and Engineering Yi Cui told NPR. But if a filter made out of two layers of charged polypropylene is placed in the pocket, the masks filtration efficiency could double to up to 70%. Polypropylene, also known by the brand name Oly-fun (Walmart) and spunbond, holds an electrostatic charge that traps incoming and outgoing particles.

Fit matters. Its important that a cloth mask seals snuggly to your face. If gaps open up where the mask touches the skin, its effectiveness is compromised. Folded, pleated and duckbill masks allow more air flowing through the fabric and less leaking out the sides compared to a flat-front mask.

Neck gaiters, tubes or buffs, which cover the nose down to the neck, solve the air-leakage problem. Many people find them more comfortable than masks because they dont have ear loops or ties. However, they are generally made of polyester and/or spandex, which are less effective at filtering particles than cotton. Some come with filters. Sample complaints from product reviews include: too hot during the summer, easy to slip off nose, filter does not stay over the mouth.

Dont buy a mask with a vent or exhalation valve. While they make breathing easier, vents defeat the masks purpose because they release unfiltered air that can contain droplets. Industrial-grade N95 masks designed for smoky or smoggy environments often have these valves.

Reports of stores and other businesses barring entry to customers wearing vented masks are increasing. If you already own one, either put a second mask over top of it or completely cover the vent with tape or a sewn-on patch.

Make sure your mask is washable. Unlike medical masks, which are normally designed for single-use, cloth masks should be washed after every use and worn until the fabric or structure breaks down.

Mike Moffitt is an SFGATE Reporter. Email: moffitt@sfgate.com. Twitter: @Mike_at_SFGate

There are few studies on face mask fabrics, but the current consensus is that tight-weave cotton is the best material for a cloth mask.

This mask has two layers of cotton.

Pleated face masks allow more air circulation inside the mask, making it less likely air will escape through the sides.

A cone-shaped mask is more effective than a flat-front design in stopping incoming and outgoing droplets.

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The best and worst choices for a cloth face mask - Times Union

Research Assistant or Research Fellow in Electromagnetic Actuation job with CRANFIELD UNIVERSITY | 213886 – Times Higher Education (THE)

OrganisationCranfield UniversitySchool/DepartmentSchool of Water, Energy and EnvironmentBased atCranfield Campus, Cranfield, BedfordshireHours of work37 hours per week, normally worked Monday to Friday. Flexible working will be considered.Contract typeFixed term contractFixed Term Period21 monthsSalary30,600 per annum (Research Assistant) or 33,309 per annum (Research Fellow)Posted Date14/07/2020Apply by14/08/2020

Role Description

An exciting opportunity has arisen for an innovative individual, with expertise in electromagnetic modelling and electric circuit design, within the Centre for Thermal Energy and Materials (CTEM). The CTEM has a strong record in applied research in the academic and industrial sectors. Our research areas include renewable and low carbon energy systems, advanced power generation systems for efficiency benefits, heating and cooling and next generation technologies for reduction in energy demand.

As the UKs only exclusively postgraduate university, Cranfields world-class expertise, large-scale facilities and unrivalled industry partnerships is creating leaders in technology and management globally. Our distinctive expertise is in our deep understanding of technology and management and how these work together to benefit the world.

Our people are our most valuable resource and everyone has a role to play in shaping the future of our university, developing our learners, and transforming the businesses we work with. Learn more about Cranfield and our unique impacthere. Our shared, stated values help to define who we are and underpin everything we do: Ambition; Impact; Respect; and Community. Find out morehere.

This post resides within the CTEM and is related to many research activities across the University. The key mission is to extend our knowledge in micro-scale (possibly nano-scale) electromagnetic devices for a range of novel applications, including battery thermal management, aero-engine cooling and precision delivery of drug to human organs. The project will involve partners from City and Oxford Universities. It is expected significant new knowledge that runs across multiple disciplines will be created by exploiting the distinctive expertise residing in each partner. The key objectives for these projects are explained within the candidate brief.

You will have a PhD in Electrical / Electronic / Mechatronic Engineering / Industrial Engineering. You must have proven experience in electromagnetic modelling and electronic circuit design, and competence in advanced software design tools. You will have demonstrated skills in building and testing electric and electronic devices including those at micro-scale levels.

Whilst you will work within a multi-disciplinary research environment, you will also be self-resourceful and work independently with own initiatives. You will play an active role in fostering a vibrant research culture among your peers.

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Targeting brain metastases with ultrasmall theranostic nanoparticles, a first-in-human trial from an MRI perspective – Science Advances

Abstract

The use of radiosensitizing nanoparticles with both imaging and therapeutic properties on the same nano-object is regarded as a major and promising approach to improve the effectiveness of radiotherapy. Here, we report the MRI findings of a phase 1 clinical trial with a single intravenous administration of Gd-based AGuIX nanoparticles, conducted in 15 patients with four types of brain metastases (melanoma, lung, colon, and breast). The nanoparticles were found to accumulate and to increase image contrast in all types of brain metastases with MRI enhancements equivalent to that of a clinically used contrast agent. The presence of nanoparticles in metastases was monitored and quantified with MRI and was noticed up to 1 week after their administration. To take advantage of the radiosensitizing property of the nanoparticles, patients underwent radiotherapy sessions following their administration. This protocol has been extended to a multicentric phase 2 clinical trial including 100 patients.

Combined with surgery and/or chemotherapy, external radiotherapy (RT) is one of the most frequently used therapeutic solutions for patients with solid tumors. In Western countries, approximately 40% of cancer cures include the use of RT either as a single modality or combined with other treatments (1). However, despite its indisputable curative efficacy, RT is associated with deleterious side effects for the patient, the main undesirable one being the destruction of normal cells and healthy tissues in the vicinity of tumor areas or on the passage of high-dose radiation. Several strategies have been developed over the years to limit this issue of nonspecific dose deposition. In addition to major technological improvements such as intensity-modulated RT, image-guide RT, hypofractionated therapy, and ablative therapy, the use of radiosensitizers has been extensively studied, developed, and applied as an effective approach to limit undesirable side effects of RT (2). By definition, a radiosensitizer is an agent (molecule, drug, or nanoparticle) that sensitizes tumor cells preferentially to RT and, thus, increases the therapeutic window, in which the radiation dose allows the tumor to be eradicated while maintaining normal tissue tolerance. Standard chemotherapeutic agents, often combined with RT, are the most common agents used for increasing the efficacy of RT. Among the nanoscale-size particles recognized as nanoenhancers, those whose composition includes high-Z metals (gadolinium, hafnium, gold, silver, etc.) may interact with x-rays through various mechanisms of action, including the creation of photoelectric Compton and Auger electrons, themselves at the origin of secondary electrons. The high and local deposition of energy induced by these secondary electrons in the vicinity of the high-Z atoms results in synergistic effects that potentiate the deleterious effects of x-rays on the cells (36).

Considering the local radiosensitizing effect induced by these nanoenhancers, it seems all the more important to have access to their static and dynamic biodistribution and, possibly, to their in vivo concentration to make the most of the widening of the therapeutic window allowed by their presence. The use of theranostic nanoparticles, combining both diagnostic and radiosensitizing properties on the same nano-object, is an elegant solution to achieve this objective (7). This approach has recently been evaluated in a phase 2-3 clinical trial in patients with soft-tissue sarcoma using intratumoral administration of hafnium oxide nanoparticles visualized using computed tomography before preoperative external beam RT (8).

Similarly, the engineering of a new type of theranostic platform, consisting of a polysiloxane core matrix covalently bound to gadolinium chelates (Gd-DOTA), was first reported less than 10 years ago (9). Since then, the diagnostic and radiosensitizing properties of this Gd-based nanoparticle (AGuIX, NH TherAguix, Meylan, France) have been validated in numerous in vitro (1013) and in vivo studies (1420) using intravenous administration of nanoparticle suspension to tumor-bearing (glioma, pancreas, lung, brain metastases, etc.) animals followed by magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) sessions and RT treatment.

On the basis of the positive results obtained in these preclinical studies, a first-in-human phase 1 clinical trial with intravenous administration of AGuIX nanoparticles, filed in 2016 and inclusion completed in 2018, was conducted in 15 patients with multiple brain metastases from four types of primary tumors (melanoma, lung, colon, and breast). In this paper, we compile the main MRI findings obtained on the patients during this clinical trial. In particular, we report, through comparison with a commercial clinical MRI contrast agent, the diagnostic value of AGuIX nanoparticles for the detection and the characterization of brain metastases. Last but not least, we present quantitative measurements of theranostic nanoparticle concentration in all four types of brain metastases obtained 2 hours after administration to patientand incidentally 2 hours before the first session of whole-brain RTand up to 1 week after nanoparticle administration.

No acute grade 3 (severe) or grade 4 (life threatening) adverse effects attributed to the AGuIX nanoparticles were observed at each escalation step of administered dose (N = 3 patients for 15, 30, 50, 75, and 100 mg/kg body weight), with the highest dose corresponding to the dose retained for the multicentric phase 2 clinical trial.

The patient recruitment resulted into the inclusion of four types of brain metastases, namely, NSCLC (nonsmall cell lung carcinoma), N = 6; breast, N = 2; melanoma, N = 6; and colon cancer, N = 1.

Two hours after AGuIX injection, MRI signal enhancements (SEs) were observed for all measurable metastases (longest diameter greater than 1 cm), regardless of the type of brain metastases, the patient, and the dose administered. Tumor enhancements are exemplified in Fig. 1 for each type of brain metastasis. Within the region of interest drawn around each metastasis, MRI SEs were found to increase with the administered dose of AGuIX nanoparticles (Fig. 2A). SEs, averaged over all measurable metastases, were equal to 26.3 15.2%, 24.8 16.3%, 56.7 23.8%, 64.4 26.7%, and 120.5 68% for AGuIX doses of 15, 30, 50, 75, and 100 mg/kg body weight, respectively. The mean MRI SE was found to linearly correlate with the injected dose (slope 1.08, R2 = 0.90) as shown in Fig. 2A.

First and second row images are obtained pre/postadministration of Gd-based nanoparticles using three-dimensional (3D) T1-weighted imaging sequence. The green arrows are pointing highlighted metastases. Third row images are corresponding SE maps with conspicuous local increase of intensity (light blue to orange color) in all different types of brain metastases. The fourth row shows a 3D visualization of all metastases with SE.

(A) MRI SE as a function of the injected dose of AGuIX nanoparticle. Each point corresponds to an MRI SE value measured in a metastasis for all patients. Mean value and SD (error bar) are displayed. The solid line and the equation correspond to the linear regression on the mean values. BW, body weight. (B) MRI SE by primary tumor type. Each point corresponds to an SE value, normalized to the administered AGuIX dose, measured in a metastasis for all patients. Mean value and SD (error bar) are displayed. NSCLC, nonsmall-cell lung carcinoma. (C) MRI SE as a function of the longest diameter of metastases for each type of primary tumor. Each point corresponds to an SE value, normalized to the administered AGuIX dose, measured in a metastasis for all patients.

The dependence of the MRI SE on the primary tumor type is illustrated in Fig. 2B. To take into account the difference in SE due to the injected dose, the SE values were multiplied by a normalization coefficient corresponding to the ratio of the highest injected dose, 100 mg/kg, to the actual injected dose in mg/kg. The mean MRI SEs were equal to 115 81%, 107 62%, 124 52%, and 87 58% for melanoma, NSCLC, breast, and colon primary cancer, respectively. No statistical differences in SE values were observed between the different types of primary tumor.

Similarly, the dependence of SE as a function of the metastasis size for each primary tumor type is presented in Fig. 2C. The same corrective coefficient was applied to take into account the effect of the injected dose on the SE. No SE variation with size was found. For example, the mean SE values were 114 70% and 117 70% for metastases with the longest diameter between 10 and 20 mm and between 20 and 50 mm, respectively.

For each patient, the MRI SE was also measured at day 0, 15 min after injection of a clinically approved Gd-based contrast agent (Dotarem, Guerbet, Villepinte, France). Averaged over all measurable metastases with longest diameter larger than 1 cm, the MRI SE was equal to 182.9 116.2%.

The detection sensitivity of AGuIX nanoparticles, defined as their ability to enhance MRI signal in measurable brain metastases, was assessed for all administered doses and compared with the sensitivity of the clinically used contrast agent Dotarem. Expressed as a percentage of Dotarem sensitivity, the AGuIX nanoparticle sensitivity was equal to 12.1, 19.5, 34.2, 31.8, and 61.6% for injected doses of 15, 30, 50, 75, and 100 mg/kg body weight, respectively.

A tumor-by-tumor comparison of the MRI SE 15 min after Dotarem injection and 2 hours after nanoparticle injection is shown in Fig. 3A for patients treated at 100 mg/kg body weight. This largest injected dose of AGuIX nanoparticle represents the same quantity of injected Gd3+ ions as for the Dotarem administration, i.e., 100 mol/kg body weight of Gd3+. The MRI SEs were found to linearly correlate by primary tumor type (NSCLC, R2 = 0.96; breast cancer, R2 = 0.93).

(A) Each point corresponds to an MRI SE value measured in a metastasis for patients receiving 100 mg/kg body weight AGuIX dose. The solid lines and the equations correspond to the linear regressions for each primary tumor type (e.g., NSCLC and breast cancer). (B) Correlation between MRI SE and AGuIX concentration following AGuIX administration. Each point corresponds to an MRI SE and AGuIX concentration value measured in a metastasis of patients #13, #14, and #15 injected with a 100 mg/kg body weight AGuIX dose. The solid lines correspond to the linear regression applied to the series of points.

The multi-flip-angle three-dimensional (3D) FLASH acquisitions were successfully used to compute pixelwise maps of T1 values (fig. S1) and to enable quantification of the longitudinal relaxation time over regions of interest. The decrease in T1 relaxation times in brain metastases, induced by the uptake of AGuIX nanoparticles, is clearly shown in these T1 maps. As expected, the decreases in T1 values are colocalized with the contrast-enhanced brain metastases.

The concentrations of AGuIX nanoparticles in contrast-enhanced metastases were computed on the basis of the changes in T1 values following their administration. The measurements of AGuIX concentration were performed in metastases with longest diameter larger than 1 cm for the patients administered with a dose of 100 mg/kg body weight. The mean AGuIX concentration in the brain metastases was measured to be 57.5 14.3, 20.3 6.8, and 29.5 12.5 mg/liter in patient #13 (NSCLC metastases), #14 (NSCLC metastases), and #15 (breast cancer metastases), respectively.

The correlation between MRI SE and nanoparticle concentration was assessed for the three patients with the highest (100 mg/kg) administered dose. The relationship between the two MRI measurements is illustrated in Fig. 3B for the three patients. The slopes and R2 values of the linear regression were 3.31 (R2 = 0.80), 1.69 (R2 = 0.39), and 3.95 (R2 = 0.64) for patient #13, #14, and #15, respectively.

For each patient, the MRI SE and T1 values were assessed in brain regions of interest free of visible metastases (three representative regions of interest per patient, with a similar size for all patients). No substantial MRI SE and no T1 variations were observed in any of these healthy brain regions.

For patients administered with the largest dose (100 mg/kg body weight), persistence of MRI SE was noticed in measurable metastases (longest diameter greater than 1 cm) at day 8, 1 week after administration of AGuIX nanoparticles as shown in Fig. 4. The mean MRI SEs in metastases were measured equal to 32.4 10.8%, 14 5.8%, and 26.3 9.7% for patient #13, #14, and #15, respectively. As a point of comparison, the mean MRI SEs at day 1 were equal to 175.8 45.2%, 58.3 18.4%, and 154.1 61.9% for patients #13, #14, and #15, respectively. Because of small T1 variations, the concentration of AGuIX nanoparticles could not be computed. On the basis of the observed correlation between MRI SE and nanoparticle concentration, an upper limit of 10 M can be estimated for the AGuIX concentration at day 8 in brain metastases. No noticeable MRI SE was observed in any patient at day 28, 4 weeks after the administration of AGuIX nanoparticles.

3D visualization of patients brain superimposed with color-encoded SE in NSCLC metastases 2 hours p.i. (postinjection) on the left and 7 days p.i. on the right. The patient was administered with the largest dose of nanoparticles (100 mg/kg body weight).

The clinical evaluation of the diagnostic value of the AGuIX nanoparticles for brain metastases was one of the secondary objectives of the clinical trial NanoRad, and the first and main purpose of this paper is to present the MRI results obtained with these Gd-based, MRI-visible, ultrasmall nanoparticles. In this clinical trial, the MRI protocol included a large panel of MRI sequences giving access to many imaging readouts and biomarkers (relaxation time, diffusion, edema, hemorrhage, etc.). Despite its 40-min duration, the protocol was found to be compatible with the patients health status. However, if necessary, this protocol could easily be shortened in clinical routine and restricted to the sole MRI sequences needed to assess the volume and number of metastases and the concentration of nanoparticles.

The target dose for the theranostic application of the AGuIX nanoparticles in patients corresponds to the largest administered dose to the patients, and for this reason, the conclusions and perspectives of this study focus essentially on this dose. This largest dose (100 mg/kg body weight or 100 mol/kg body weight Gd3+) corresponds as well to the amount of chelated Gd3+ ions injected in one dose of clinically used MRI contrast agent such as Dotarem (100 mol/kg body weight Gd3+). It is therefore appropriate to compare the MRI SEs observed in metastases with the largest AGuIX dose to a dose of Gd-based contrast agent used in clinical routine.

A dose escalation was included in the design of this first-in-human clinical trial, and five increasing doses of AGuIX nanoparticles were investigated. From the linear correlation observed between the SE in metastases and the administered nanoparticle concentration, it can be concluded that the dose of nanoparticlesin the range of investigated dosesis not a limiting factor for the passive targeting of metastases. Despite the limited number of patients participating in this first clinical study, the initial results show that uptake of nanoparticles and SE is present at similar levels in the four types of investigated metastases (NSCLC, melanoma, breast, and colon) regardless of the injected dose of nanoparticles. In addition, the uptake of nanoparticles appears to be independent of the diameter of the metastases in the 1- to 5-cm range.

In this study, there was a 2-hour delay between the nanoparticle administration and the MRI acquisitions. As part of the safety protocol of this first-in-human trial, the patient was kept in bed under medical monitoring by a dedicated nurse for 1 hour after the start of the injection. An additional hour was necessary to transport and install the patient from the phase 1 unit, where the injection took place, in the MRI scanner. Note that this safety delay is not applicable for the phase 2 clinical trial and that the injection can be performed with the patient inside the MRI scanner.

With a mean nanoparticle plasma half-life of about 1 hour, this 2-hour delay results in an 86% decrease in the nanoparticle concentration in the plasma. In contrast, there was only a 15-min delay between the Dotarem injection (plasma half-life of about 1.5 hours) and the MRI acquisition. Despite this significant clearance of nanoparticles and the decrease in concentration in the patients bloodstream, the MRI SE at the highest nanoparticle dose is close to that observed with the clinical contrast agent. It is also of great interest to note that, from the tumor-by-tumor comparison of SE after AGuIX and after Dotarem administration, there is a notable correlation between the uptake of nanoparticle and the uptake of clinical contrast agent for two different types of primary tumors.

This remarkable diagnostic performance of AGuIX nanoparticles to enhance the MRI signal in brain metastases can be attributed to two independent factors. The first factor is related to the intrinsic magnetic properties of nanoparticles. Their larger diameter and molecular weight, as compared with clinical Gd-based contrast agent, result in a higher longitudinal relaxation coefficient r1, equal to 8.9 and 3.5 mM1 s1 per Gd3+ ion at a magnetic field of 3 T (21) for AGuIX nanoparticles and Dotarem, respectively. This higher relaxivity of nanoparticles results in a larger SE in tumors compared with that obtained with Dotarem, as observed in preclinical studies when identical delays between injection and MRI acquisitions are used for both Gd-based agents (15).

The second factor may be related to the ability of the ultrasmall AGuIX nanoparticles to passively accumulate in brain metastases. This passive targeting phenomenon takes advantage of the so-called enhanced permeability and retention effect, which postulates that the accumulation of nano-objects in tumors is due to both defective and leaky tumor vessels and to the absence of effective lymphatic drainage (22). The passive targeting of tumors by AGuIX nanoparticles has been consistently observed in previous investigations of animal models of cancer. In a mouse model of multiple brain melanoma metastases, internalization of AGuIX nanoparticles in tumor cells was reported and the presence of nanoparticles in brain metastases was still observed 24 hours after intravenous injection to the animals (18). At the highest 100 mg/kg dose, all metastases with a diameter larger than 1 cm were contrast enhanced up to 7 days after the nanoparticles were administered. The persistence of MRI SE in metastases 1 week after administration confirms this accumulation and delayed clearance of nanoparticles from the metastases. To the best of our knowledge, there is no report in the literature of such late SE in metastases after administration of clinically used Gd-based contrast agents.

Considering the radiosensitizing properties of AGuIX nanoparticles, it is key to evaluate and possibly quantify the local concentration of nanoparticles accumulated in metastases. To that end, the MRI protocol included a T1 mapping imaging sequence from which the nanoparticle concentration was derived. The concentration values obtained in this clinical study can be put in perspective with those obtained in preclinical studies in animal models of tumor. The computed concentration of AGuIX nanoparticles in the NSCLC and breast cancer metastases of the three patients injected with the highest dose varied between 8 and 63 mg/liter, corresponding to a concentration range of Gd3+ ions between 8 and 63 M in brain metastases. Although the experimental conditions differ in some respects (concentration, dose, and administration modalities of the nanoparticles), the concentration of nanoparticles obtained in animal models is very similar to the concentration values observed in patients. In a rat model of glioma, Verry et al. (19) reported a Gd3+ concentration in the order of 70 M, 4 hours after the nanoparticle administration to the animals. Similarly, in an experimental mouse model of lung cancer, Bianchi et al. (23) reported a Gd3+ concentration close to 40 M in tumor, 2 hours following the nanoparticle administration.

The percentage of injected dose per gram of tissue (% ID/g) in metastasis can be derived from the measured concentration of nanoparticle in the metastasis and from the total dose of nanoparticle injected to the patients. For instance, approximating the tissue density to 1 kg/liter, the percentage of injected dose is equal to 0.001% ID/g for a measured nanoparticle concentration of 60 mg/liter in a 60-kg patient administered with 100 mg/kg nanoparticles. As a point of comparison (and bearing in mind the differences in protocols, measurements, and administered nanoparticles), Harrington et al. (24) reported values ranging between 0.005 and 0.05% ID/g in passively targeted solid tumors of patients injected with radiolabeled pegylated liposomes. More recently, Phillips et al. (25) approximated the percentage of injected dose to 0.01% ID/g in melanoma metastasis of a patient injected with radiolabeled and pegylated nanoparticles engineered for cRGD (cyclic arginine-glycine-aspartate) targeting.

In this study, we evaluated as well the relationship between the nanoparticle concentration and the MRI SE obtained using a robust T1-weighted 3D MRI sequence. In the range of measurable nanoparticle concentration in metastases, a linear relationship between the MRI SE and the nanoparticle concentration is observed with the acquisition protocol used in this study. Hence, with the specific protocol used in this study, the SE can be used as a robust and simple index for assessing the concentration of AGuIX nanoparticles.

While metastasis targeting is beneficial for both diagnosis and radiosensitization purposes, it is desirable to maintain nanoparticles at low concentration in healthy surrounding tissues. In this respect, no SE could be observed in the metastasis-free brain tissues 2 hours after the highest dose of AGuIX nanoparticles was administered. This lack of enhancement is consistent with the rapid clearance of nanoparticles measured in patients plasma and is a positive indication of the innocuousness of the nanoparticles for the healthy brain.

The occurrence of brain metastases is a common event in the history of cancer and negatively affects the life expectancy of patients. For patients with multiple brain metastases, despite advances in stereotactic radiosurgery and new systemic treatments (immunotherapy and targeted therapy), the overall 2- and 5-year survival estimates across all primary tumor types are 8.1 and 2.4%, respectively (26). Consequently, new approaches need to be developed to improve the treatment efficacy for these patients. The use of radiosensitizing agents is thus of great interest. The in vivo theranostic properties (radiosensitization and diagnosis by multimodal imaging) of AGuIX nanoparticles were previously demonstrated in preclinical studies performed on eight tumor models in rodents (20), and particularly in brain tumors (14, 19).

The MRI results of this study show in humans, that the accumulation of Gd-based nanoparticles is also present in tumors (brain metastases) and can therefore potentially be used to increase the effectiveness of RT in patients.

Although Gd-based contrast agents used in clinical practice are also known to enhance brain metastases, it is important to note that radiosensitization requires the presence of nanoparticles and is not observed in the case of Gd-based molecular agents such as Dotarem (27). It is generally thought that it is the clustering of gadolinium atoms on the nanoparticle that leads to the formation of an Auger shower inducing a strong increase in the dose deposited in the vicinity of the nanoparticle (6).

Another key property of nanoparticles is their prolonged retention in metastases. As a result, the radiosensitizer can be used under optimal conditions with the elimination of nanoparticles in healthy tissues and remanence in tumors. In addition, prolonged persistence in metastases provides a wide therapeutic window that could benefit to fractionated RT.

The expected benefits of radiosensitizers are to increase the effectiveness of the radiation dose administered in metastases to improve the local response to RT and the overall survival of the patient, without increasing the dose in the surrounding healthy tissues. Alternatively, radiosensitizers can be used to obtain an equivalent local response with a reduced radiation dose. In the particular case of AGuIX theranostic nanoparticles, MRI visualization can be advantageously used to achieve personalized and adaptive RT based on the local uptake of the Gd-based radiosensitizers. In the future, the use of Gd-based radiosensitizers will be particularly relevant to the emerging MR-Linac technology combining an MRI scanner and a linear accelerator on the same instrument (28).

There are some limitations to this study. First, because of the dose escalation objective of this phase 1 clinical trial, the number of patients receiving the highest dose is relatively low and corresponds to only two types of brain metastases. This limitation will be addressed in a recently launched phase 2 clinical trial that includes 100 patients injected with an identical dose of 100 mg/kg body weight and that covers similar types of brain metastases. The second limitation concerns the quantification of T1 relaxation values and nanoparticle concentration. These quantifications require a sufficiently high signal-to-noise ratio and are therefore carried out on regions of interest corresponding to metastases greater than 1 cm in diameter. However, we have shown in this study that the acquisition protocol yields a quasi-linear correlation between the MRI SE and the nanoparticle concentration. Therefore, the more reliable and sensitive measurement of SE will probably be preferred in future clinical trials to more accurately assess the nanoparticle uptake in smaller metastases. Last, only metastases with a diameter greater than 1 cm were considered in this study, in accordance with the response evaluation criteria in solid tumors (RECIST) criteria. Although SEs do not show variation with tumor diameter between 1 and 5 cm, it remains important to evaluate nanoparticle uptake in smaller metastases. In the phase 2 clinical trial, metastases with diameter down to 5 mm will be included in the protocol. The analysis of these smaller metastases will be facilitated by the largest administered dose (100 mg/kg body weight) and by the shortened delay between nanoparticle injection and MRI acquisitions.

In summary, the preliminary results of the clinical trial reported in this paper demonstrate in patients that an intravenous injection of Gd-based nanoparticles is effective for enhancing different types of brain metastases in patients. These first clinical findingspharmacokinetic, passive targeting, and concentration in metastasesare in line with the observations obtained in previous preclinical studies in animal models of brain tumor and bode well for a successful translation of this theranostic agent from the preclinical to the clinical level. In addition to this, the preliminary results of the NanoRad phase 1 clinical trial indicate good tolerance of intravenous injection of AGuIX nanoparticle up to the 100 mg/kg dose selected for this study. All these results and observations make it possible to confidently start a phase 2 clinical trial on the same indication (NANORAD2, NCT03818386).

This study is part of a prospective dose escalation phase I-b clinical trial to evaluate the tolerance of the intravenous administration of radiosensitizing AGuIX nanoparticles in combination with whole-brain RT for the treatment of brain metastases. This investigator-driven trial was sponsored by the Department of Clinical Research and Innovation of Grenoble Alpes University Hospital and performed in the Department of Radiotherapy of Grenoble Alpes University Hospital. Its Data and Safety Monitoring Board is composed of physicians who specialized in RT, oncology, and pharmacology. Approval was obtained from the Agence nationale de scurit du mdicament et des produits de sant (ANSM) (French National Agency for the Safety of Medicines and Health Products; EudraCT number 2015-004259-30) in May 2016. The NanoRad trial (Radiosensitization of Multiple Brain Metastases Using AGuIX Gadolinium Based Nanoparticles) was registered as NCT02820454. The study began in June 2016 and was completed in February 2019. Here, we report the findings of the MRI protocol applied to the 15 recruited patients. The objectives assigned to this MRI ancillary study were (i) to assess the distribution of AGuIX nanoparticles in brain metastases and surrounding healthy tissues and (ii) to measure the T1-weighted contrast enhancement and nanoparticle concentration in brain metastases and surrounding healthy tissues after intravenous administration of AGuIX nanoparticles. Detailed information on the NanoRad trial is available in the paper from Verry et al. (29).

Patients with multiple brain metastases ineligible for local treatment by surgery or stereotactic radiation were recruited. Inclusion criteria included (i) minimum age of 18 years, (ii) secondary brain metastases from a histologically confirmed solid tumor, (iii) no prior brain irradiation, (iv) no renal insufficiency (glomerular filtration rate, >60 ml/min per 1.73 m2), and (v) normal liver function (bilirubin, <30 M; alkaline phosphatase, <400 UI/liter; aspartate aminotransferase, < 75 UI/liter; alanine aminotransferase, < 175 UI/liter). All patients provided written informed consent in accordance with institutional guidelines.

AGuIX product was provided by NH TherAguix. It is a sterile powder for solution containing gadolinium-chelated polysiloxane-based nanoparticles. AGuIX product was manufactured, controlled, and released according to Current Good Manufacturing Practice (cGMP) standards. This theranostic agent is composed of a polysiloxane network surrounded by gadolinium cyclic ligands, derivatives of DOTA (1,4,7,10-tetraazacyclododecane acid-1,4,7,10-tetraacetic acid), covalently grafted to the polysiloxane matrix (Fig. 5). Its hydrodynamic diameter is 4 2 nm, its mass is about 10 kDa, and it is described by the average chemical formula (GdSi47C2430N58O1525H4060, 5 to 10 H2O)x. On average, each nanoparticle presents on its surface 10 DOTA ligands that chelate core gadolinium ions. The longitudinal relaxivity r1 at 3 T is equal to 8.9 mM1 s1 per Gd3+ ion, resulting in a total r1 of 89 mM1 s1 per AGuIX nanoparticle.

(A) Schematic representation of AGuIX nanoparticles. DOTA(Gd) species are grafted to the polysiloxane core (Si, pearl gray; O, red; C, gray; N, blue; Gd, metallic blue; and H, white). (B) Main properties of AGuIX nanoparticle. (C) Hydrodynamic diameter distribution of AGuIX nanoparticles as obtained by dynamic light scattering. (D) Zeta potential of AGuIX nanoparticle as a function of the pH.

The timeline of the trial is summarized in Fig. 6. The main steps of the trial protocol were as follows. At day 0, patients underwent a first imaging session (see MRI protocol in next paragraph) 15 min after the intravenous bolus injection of Dotarem (gadoterate meglumine) at a dose of 0.2 ml/kg (0.1 mmol/kg) body weight. One to 21 days after the first imaging session (depending on patient availability and radiation therapy planning), the patients received a single intravenous administration of AGuIX nanoparticle suspension at doses of 15, 30, 50, 75, or 100 mg/kg body weight. The date of AGuIX nanoparticle administration is referred as day 1. The same MRI session, without injection of gadoterate meglumine, was performed 2 hours after administration of the nanoparticles. All the patients underwent a whole-brain radiation therapy (30 Gy delivered in 10 sessions of 3 Gy) starting 4 hours after administration of the nanoparticles. Seven days (day 8, no Dotarem injection), 4 weeks (day 28, Dotarem injection), and then every 3 months during 1 year after the AGuIX nanoparticles were administered, a similar MRI session was performed for each patient.

At day 0 (D0), the patients underwent an MRI session with injection of Dotarem. At D1, the patients received a single intravenous (IV) injection of AGuIX nanoparticles. Two hours later, the patients underwent an MRI session. After 2 more hours, the patients received their first session of whole-body radiation therapy (WBRT; 30 Gy split in 10 fractions). Further MRI sessions were performed at D8 (no Dotarem injection), D28 (Dotarem injection), month 3 (M3), and then every 3 months for 12 months (Dotarem injection).

The MRI acquisitions were performed on a 3 T Philips scanner. The 32-channel Philips head coil was used. Patients underwent identical imaging protocol including the following MRI sequences: (i) 3D T1-weighted gradient echo sequence, (ii) 3D FLASH sequence with multiple flip angles, (iii) susceptibility-weighted imaging (SWI) sequence, (iv) fluid attenuated inversion recovery (FLAIR) sequence, and (v) diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI) sequence. Some of these imaging sequences are recommended when following the RECIST and RANO (response assessment in neuro-oncology) criteria for assessing brain metastases response after RT (30, 31). The 3D T1-weighted imaging sequence provides high-resolution contrast-enhanced images of healthy tissue and brain metastases following MRI contrast agent administration. The 3D FLASH sequence is repeated several times with a different flip angle for computing T1 relaxation times and contrast agent concentration. The SWI sequence is used for detecting the presence of hemorrhages. The FLAIR sequence is applied for monitoring the presence of inflammation or edema. Last, the DWI sequence can be applied for detecting abnormal water diffusion in tissue or brain metastases. The total acquisition time ranged between 30 and 40 min depending on patient-adjusted imaging parameters. The key features and the main acquisition parameters of these imaging sequences are detailed in the Supplementary Materials.

MRI analyses were performed using an in-house computer program called MP3 (https://github.com/nifm-gin/MP3) developed by the GIN Laboratory (Grenoble, France) and running under MATLAB software. Image analyses include counting and measurements of metastases, quantification of contrast enhancement, relaxation times, and concentration of nanoparticles. Following RECIST and RANO criteria, solely metastases with longest diameter above 1 cm were considered as measureable and were retained in subsequent analyses. The MRI SE, expressed in percentage, was defined as the ratio of the difference between the amplitude of the MRI signal after the administration of the contrast agent and before the administration of the contrast agent over the amplitude of the MRI signal before the administration of the contrast agent, the MRI signal amplitude being measured in the 3D T1-weighted image dataset. The T1 relaxation times were derived from the 3D FLASH images obtained at four different flip angles. The concentration of nanoparticles in brain metastases was derived from the variations of T1 relaxation times before and after contrast agent administration and from the known relaxivity of the nanoparticles. The details about the acquisition and the procedure for computing the T1 values and the concentration are given in the Supplementary Materials.

A 3D image rendering was performed using the BrainVISA/Anatomist software (http://brainvisa.info) developed at NeuroSpin (CEA, Saclay, France). To better visualize the location of the different metastases, the Morphologist pipeline of BrainVISA was used to generate the meshes of both the brain and the head of each patient.

All analyses were performed using GraphPad Prism (GraphPad Software Inc.). Significance was fixed at a 5% probability level. All of the data are presented as means SD.

Acknowledgments: This work was performed on the IRMaGe platform member of France Life Imaging network (grant ANR-11-INBS-0006). Funding: The clinical trial was funded by the Centre Hospitalier Universitaire (CHU) of Grenoble and the company NH TherAguix (Meylan, France). Author contributions: C.V. is the trial coordinator and the main investigator of the clinical trial. C.V., J.B., S.D., G.L.D., and O.T. defined the study design. C.V., S.G., S.D., G.L.D., and O.T. designed the MRI protocol. J.P. and I.T. performed the MRI acquisitions. S.D., B.L., S.G., Y.C., S.M., B.L., E.L.B., and O.T. contributed to data quantification and MRI analysis. S.D. and Y.C. performed statistical analysis. Y.C. wrote the paper, and all authors revised it critically, contributed to it, and approved the final version of the manuscript. Competing interests: F.L. and O.T. are authors on a patent filed by NANOH, Universit Lyon 1, Institut National des Sciences Appliques de Lyon (no. WO2011135101 A3, published 31 May, 2012). G.L.D. and O.T. are authors on a patent filed by Universit Claude Bernard Lyon 1, Hospices Civils de Lyon, Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, NANOH, European Synchrotron Radiation Facility (no. WO2009053644 A8, published 17 December 2012). These patents protect the AGuIX nanoparticles described in this publication. S.D., Y.C., O.T., F.L., and G.L.D. are employees from NH TherAguix that is developing the AGuIX nanoparticles. The authors declare that they have no other competing interests. Data and materials availability: All data needed to evaluate the conclusions in the paper are present in the paper and/or the Supplementary Materials. Additional data related to this paper may be requested from the authors.

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Targeting brain metastases with ultrasmall theranostic nanoparticles, a first-in-human trial from an MRI perspective - Science Advances

Healthy Living: What you need to know about the Menopause – Leinster Express

The perimenopause can be one of the trickiest times for women to get their head around. One minute youre busy having a family and all that goes with it and all of a sudden, the years sneak up on you and you dont quiet feel like the woman you once were!

You may notice your energy levels have dropped and some days youre literally dragging yourself through the day, youve lost your get up and go for no reason, you cant seem to shift that foggy feeling in your brain and the scales is moving in the wrong direction even though your diet hasnt changed!

Welcome to the menopause, well technically the term menopause is inaccurate because it represents the end of symptoms, whereas the stage that most women struggle through is called peri-menopause, which can last anything from two to ten years until the last period.

The average age of menopause is 51. You officially reach menopause when you have had no periods for 12 consecutive months.

Women typically start to experience perimenopause in their 40s and for some the only sign is that your periods start to become more irregular, this is due to the fact that in the perimenopause, Progesterone levels fall rapidly as you stop ovulating as regularly. the levels of one of the main female sex hormones, oestrogen, rises and falls unevenly and its falling at a slower rate than progesterone, meaning you can end up being oestrogen dominant, thats a ratio of too much oestrogen to progesterone. This is usually whats behind many of the typical symptoms experienced during the transition to menopause. The stress hormone cortisol can also increase making sleep more difficult and leading to weight gain.

The thyroid comes under increased pressure, and low levels of thyroid hormones can bring mood changes, weight increases, constipation and a sluggish feeling.

Your hormones work together synergistically. When one or more is out of kilter, there can be an effect on the others, too.

The length of time between periods may be longer or shorter, your flow may be light to really heavy and with worse PMS than ever before, and you may even skip some periods only for them to return out of the blue with a vengeance.

You might also experience some of the symptoms traditionally associated with the menopause, like night sweats, hot flushes, sleep problems, mood swings, more UTIs like cystitis and vaginal dryness, poor memory, brain fog, cravings, bloating, loss of sex drive and irritability. Around this time, you might begin to notice your waistline is expanding and you just cant seem to shift that fat around the middle. Once women hit their 40s, they typically gain an average of 1lb a year so you could easily be a stone heavier by the time you reach 54.

Remember going through the peri-menopause is not an illness, it is the most natural thing in the world, although if your experiencing it right now you might be thinking this is anything but natural!! but you do have some control over managing symptoms. Its all about making some changes to your diet, stepping up your self care and taking action to reduce stress, and moving gently.

Diet

It really is important to start taking a closer look at your diet as Unfortunately when we reach this part of our life we just cant get away with eating the way we did when we were younger, as The drop in oestrogen levels that occurs during menopause has a side effect of redistributing body fat and excess pounds start to settle around the waist. On top of that, the change that happens in relation to oestrogen and progesterone at this stage of life is also likely to make your body less sensitive to insulin, the fat storage hormone. This is produced in response to you eating carbohydrates. When the bodys cells are less sensitive to insulin, more insulin is needed to do the same job, and more insulin produced means more fat stored.

This is where a low carbohydrate is very beneficial, focusing on low GL carbohydrates, fruit, vegetables, moderate protein and healthy fats coming from oily fish, nuts, seeds and avocados.

You may benefit from adding phytoestrogens to your diet. Phytoestrogens are plant-based chemicals (the good kind), which are structurally similar to oestrogen and exert a weak oestrogenic effect. They include soy beans, lentils, beans, chickpeas, tofu, barley, rye, oats, alfalfa, apples, pears, carrots, fennel, onion, garlic, sunflower seeds, flaxseeds, liquorice root.

Managing stress

Cortisol is one of the main stress hormones and it can lead to weight gain and leave you feeling fatigued. Even though it is the imbalance of hormones that are behind most of your symptoms, the effects of stress can be just as debilitating.

Most hormones are made from the same basic ingredients. When its under stress, the body prioritises those jobs that are useful for sustaining life, which means that when you are stressed, your body will make stress hormones ahead of anything else. So all those raw materials that might have gone to make oestrogen now wont. therefore managing your stress is essential to managing your peri-menopausal symptoms!

Exercise

As the weight creeps on, its very common for women to start getting into the types of exercise that are very punishing on the body, like running and high intensity interval training.

What do I mean by punishing?

These very intense forms of exercise stress the body and, if your body is already stressed, its just too much. Yoga, Pilates, Zumba and other dance-based classes are a good alternative as is a good power walk.

Resistance training (weights) is also good to help with the loss of muscle. Strength training also helps maintain balance, and avoid injuryimportant for protecting your skeleton both now and when youre older.

Always consult your doctor before starting a new exercise, especially if you have any underlying health conditions, you consider yourself to be unfit or very overweight.

Supplements

Menopause supplements can provide natural support for those who may be experiencing some of the symptoms related to the menopause. Its important to note that not all supplements will suit everyone and may not be safe for someone with an underlying health condition or those taking medication, therefore it is advisable to only take a supplement protocol recommended to you by a professional.

If you are struggling with managing your symptoms of menopause or maybe you would like to get your diet right before to hit that time of your life, why not schedule in an appointment with The Nutri Coach! There is no time like the present My clinic is back open and I am taking bookings for new and existing clients, so just pop me a message if you would like to schedule an appointment. contact details below.

Debbie Devane from The Nutri Coach is a qualified Nutritional Therapist and health & lifestyle coach, Debbie runs her clinic from the Glenard Clinic in Mountmellick and also offers one to one and group online consultations. Debbie is also Nutritionist to the Offaly GAA senior footballers. For more information or to make an appointment email Debbie at

info@thenutricoach.ie

Ph: 086-1720055

Facebook: The Nutri Coach @debbiedevanethenutricoach

Instagram: the_nutricoach

For more information go to http://www.thenutricoach.ie

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Healthy Living: What you need to know about the Menopause - Leinster Express

You can see Comet NEOWISE this month. Here’s what we know about it – CNN

Once it disappears from view, the comet will not be visible in Earth's skies for another 6,800 years, according to NASA.

While July began with the comet visible low on the horizon in the early morning sky, NEOWISE has now transitioned to become an evening comet, perfectly visible as the skies darken.

It's named after NASA's Near-Earth Object Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer, otherwise known as the NEOWISE mission, which discovered it in late March.

You may be able to see it with the naked eye, but grab a pair of binoculars or peer through a small telescope, if you have either, for a better view.

If you live in an urban area with a lot of light pollution, you may want to find a spot to watch the sky that has less light and obstructions, like tall buildings.

After the sun sets, look for the Big Dipper constellation in the northwestern sky, according to NASA. Just below it, you'll see the comet. It looks a bit like a fuzzy star with a tail.

The comet will continue to rise higher above the northwestern horizon for the rest of this month. It will come closest to Earth on July 22 -- just 64 million miles away.

While comets are unpredictable and can disappear from view at any time, astronomers predict that we should be able to see it for the rest of the month.

Comets are really just made up of ice and dust, with some organic material. Many of the comets with long orbits, like NEOWISE, only venture through the inner solar system and close to the sun for a short time.

Scientists compare it to coming out of "cold storage" for the comet because the outer solar system where they originate is so much colder. The warmth of the sun and the inner solar system causes the ice to melt, although astronomers aren't sure why ATLAS broke apart.

After its closest approach to Earth, Comet NEOWISE will continue on its very long orbit to the edge of the solar system, stretching out 715 astronomical units from our sun. (As a comparison, Earth is one astronomical unit from the sun.)

This is why we won't see the comet again in our lifetimes -- it takes thousands of years to travel the outer solar system before returning to the inner solar system.

But, scientists point out, this means the comet isn't exactly new, only new to us, because it previously passed through Earth's skies when humans were present about 6,800 years ago.

Discovering Comet NEOWISE

While Comet NEOWISE was spotted on March 27 by NASA's Near-Earth Object Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer, the mission didn't start out to find comets.

Ten years ago, the mission was launched as WISE and it was designed to do an all-sky map in infrared light.

But the team realized that it was also pretty useful for observing asteroids and comets and measuring their sizes and how reflective they were, said Amy Mainzer, the NEOWISE principal investigator at the University of Arizona, in a NASA press conference this week. The NEOWISE mission has found a couple dozen comets so far.

The WISE mission was only designed to last for about seven months, but NASA asked the team to reactivate it after its prime mission concluded in 2013, and they've been using NEOWISE to watch the skies ever since, Mainzer said. The team estimated that the NEOWISE mission only has about one year left.

"We're excited it's still able to find spectacular things like this comet," Mainzer said.

The team spotted Comet NEOWISE by its infrared emissions, meaning they could pick out its heat signature. In late March, the scientists determined it was a comet and when it would pass close to the sun -- and they've been tracking it ever since.

By observing the comet, the researchers have learned that it's about three miles in diameter, the average size for a comet with a long orbit. And it's incredibly bright, even if it's not as spectacular as Comet Hale-Bopp as witnessed in 1997.

Sometimes when comets that have a lot of mass, like NEOWISE, they can blow apart when they come close to the sun. Their ice becomes heated so quickly that it shreds and destroys the comet, Mainzer said. Because this comet survived, it tells astronomers there is something unique about its structural strength.

The comets in our solar system formed at its very beginning. Gas and dust formed in clumps orbiting in a disk around our young sun, and those clumps became planets, asteroids and comets. The comets were kicked out to the edge of the solar system, so their ice remains pristine.

NASA scientists and the NEOWISE team will continue observing the comet with various instruments and cameras to see how it progresses, said Emily Kramer, co-investigator on the NEOWISE science team at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California.

Because the comet is so bright, the scientists expect to get better data, and much more of it, than they typically do for most comets, Kramer said.

Most comets are so faint that they can only be seen using the most powerful telescopes. Scientists are looking forward to learning the composition of this comet based on the data they gather. That composition could reveal more information about the "ingredients" used to make our solar system.

Although this comet takes a long time to complete one orbit around the sun, some that originate further out in the solar system can take hundreds of millions of years to orbit the sun or even longer, Mainzer said. Meanwhile, some of the closer comets only take about five or six years to complete an orbit. Comet NEOWISE is in the middle, taking about 7,000 years.

"This is coming in from a medium-long distance," Mainzer said. "How it got there is a bit of a mystery. It may have had a more distant orbit that was perturbed to create this current orbit."

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You can see Comet NEOWISE this month. Here's what we know about it - CNN

Snap a pic of this spectacular comet now — it won’t be back for 6,800 years – Bangor Daily News

PORTLAND, Maine The newly discovered comet NEOWISE is putting on a show in the early evening skies over Maine right now. Its one of the rare comets to reveal its tail to anyone with a modest set of binoculars and NEOWISE gets even more impressive when you take its picture.

In my life, Ive seen 30 or 40 comets. This is only the fourth one Ive seen that has a tail you can obviously see, said astronomy educator and photographer John Meader of Fairfield.

Meader knows what hes talking about.

Since 1987, hes operated the Northern Stars Planetarium. Its an inflatable star dome that travels to about 100 elementary and middle schools in Maine every year, reaching upwards of 18,000 students. Before that, Meader worked in planetariums at the Francis Malcolm Science Center in Easton and the University of Maine in Orono.

You cant see most comets without a telescope and, most of the time, they look like a star someone tried to erase with an eraser and theres no discernable tail, he said. With this one, you look through binoculars and youll see that tail. Its really clear.

NEOWISE has been visible in Maine for at least a couple weeks but until a few days ago, you had to be up before dawn to see it. Now, its viewable in the evening just after sunset. NEOWISE is expected to be 10 percent brighter by this weekend and it will hang around in the sky until mid-August.

The comets propper name is C/2020 F3 NEOWISE. Its named for NASAs Near Earth Object Wide Field Infrared Survey Explorer orbiting telescope, which first spotted it on March 27. Like all comets, its basically a giant, space-traveling dirty snowball of ice and organic materials leftover after the formation of our solar system 4.6 billion years ago. NEOWISEs tail is made of dust and vaporizing gases given off as it travels close to the sun.

Its worth noting that, as the comet comes close to Earth on its giant orbit around the solar system, this is our only chance to get a good look at it and its conspicuous tail. NEOWISE wont be back this way in any of our lifetimes.

To find the comet yourself, Meader said, just grab some binoculars. Any pair will do. They dont have to be expensive. Their power lies not in making NEOWISE look bigger but by gathering more light than your eyes can on their own.

Scan just above the horizon in the northwest just after sunset and it will pop right into view, Meader said. Youll see it with a nice little tail. Its very sweet.

Its possible, with a very dark sky, to see the comet without binoculars, Meader said, but it will be difficult. Also, he warns that through binoculars, it wont look exactly like the impressive photographs hes taken. Just as the binoculars collect more light with their lenses, a camera takes in even more with long exposures.

You have to remember that when you do photography, youre gathering photons over time, which brightens everything up, Meader said. Your eyes cant do that.

Its the same reason glossy space pictures of the sky always show more stars and a clearer Milky Way than the human eye can detect. Meaders recent photo of NEOWISE in Skowhegan was a 5-second exposure.

To make a photograph of the comet, Meader said photographers will need a camera with manual controls, a tripod and some kind of remote shutter control or timer.

First, find the comet with binoculars and then point your tripod-mounted camera in the same direction, manually focusing it to infinity. Then, crank the ISO up high thats the cameras light sensitivity and open the aperture up all the way. The aperture is the hole inside the lens, controlling how much light gets through.

To make the exposure, set the shutter to something like 5 seconds and fire away. Use a remote control or the timer function which will ensure you dont shake the camera by pressing the shutter button with your finger.

If the picture comes out too light, make the shutter speed a tad faster. If its too dark, make it longer.

But you cant take a very long exposure because the stars will start to trail, Meader said.

Thats because, even though we cant perceive it, the Earth is rotating on its axis, making the stars appear to revolve around the North Star every night.

Meader said its all about experimenting with your cameras settings and admits, theres some nights when his pictures dont come out, either. The important part is to have fun outside, under the heavens, he adds.

It gets you out to someplace interesting, he said. Its getting yourself in front of something of beauty. I like that.

John Meader is hosting a socially-distanced public star party at the Quarry Road Trails in Waterville from 11 to 11:45 p.m. Wednesday.

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Snap a pic of this spectacular comet now -- it won't be back for 6,800 years - Bangor Daily News

Don’t Miss the Comet! – SETI Institute

Have you ever seen a comet in the flesh? If you live in the northern hemisphere, you can cross that experience off your bucket list before bedtime tonight.

The NEOWISE comet takes its name from the instrument that found it, the repurposed Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer (WISE) telescope. Launched in 2009, WISEs mission was to map the sky in infrared wavelengths. But after its coolant dissipated, the telescope gaze was turned on a different sort of prey: small objects in our solar system. So far, this orbiting instrument has bagged nearly three hundred nearby asteroids and 28 comets. One of the latter, NEOWISE, has been adorning the pre-dawn sky for weeks. But as of today its emerging in the early evening. It awaits your inspection.

Heres what you have to do: Grab a pair of binoculars and go out into the evening twilight, about an hour after sunset. While the sky becomes darker, look towards the north-northwest and scan just above the horizon. In the coming days, the comet will gradually climb higher, but also become fainter as it pulls away from the Sun.

Once youve spotted NEOWISE, youll be able to pick it out with the naked eye. Obviously, a dark sky is a plus, particularly if you want to see the tail. You might wish to consider a quick road trip to a rural area if you live in an urban or suburban conurbation.

The comet will get no closer than 64 million miles to Earth (on July 22), so no need to dig a bomb shelter. SETI Institute astronomer Peter Jenniskens also advises that there will be no meteor shower associated with this object.

Seeing a comet in the sky used to be taken as an omen (see: King Harold and the Battle of Hastings.) NEOWISE may not be an omen, but is an opportunity. Sure, you could bide your time until Halleys comet returns, but that will be in 2061. Waiting will be a drag.

More observing details published bySky & Telescopecan be found athttps://skyandtelescope.org/press-releases/new-bright-visitor-comet-neowise/

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Don't Miss the Comet! - SETI Institute

Dennis Mammana: The Iceball Cometh This Week with Comet NEOWISE – Noozhawk

Its been quite a while since weve seen a bright comet in our skies. Many stargazers remember the show put on by Comet Hale-Bopp 23 years ago, but most folks cant recall seeing another one since.

One is now swinging past the Earth and, while it wont compare to Hale-Bopp, it has become barely visible to the unaided eye.

Im referring to a visitor from space called C/2020 F3, aka Comet NEOWISE, named for the NASA space telescope that discovered it: Near-Earth Object Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer.

Comet NEOWISE, like all others, is one of billions of small icy remnants of the primordial solar system that tumble silently through space. Occasionally, one of these cosmic nomads drifts inward toward the suns heat, and its ices disintegrate into a cloud of gas and dust around its nucleus (the coma). Sunlight and the solar wind act as a fan and blow this material outward to create one or two tails that always point away from our star.

With a diameter of about 3 miles, the icy nucleus of NEOWISE is fairly large but much too small to be seen with the eye or even a powerful telescope. Its long tail, however, can be seen as it stretches away from the direction of the sun (below the horizon after dark, of course).

As compact as a comets tail may appear to us from Earth, its material is actually distributed over tens of millions of miles; in fact, to achieve the density of the air we breathe, a comets entire tail would need to be compressed to fit into the size of an average suitcase. In other words, a comets tail is the closest thing to nothing thats still something!

Comet NEOWISE is a type of comet known as a periodic comet; it passes through our cosmic neighborhood about every 6,800 years. During this visit, it swung close to the sun in early July and brightened enough to become barely visible to the unaided eye during predawn hours.

Now its crossing over into the evening sky, and on July 22, it will reach its nearest approach to the Earth of 64.3 million miles.

Just how bright NEOWISE will appear as it passes us this week is anyones guess. Will it be bright enough to see with the unaided eye, or will it fade as it recedes once again into the depths of space? No one can say for sure.

Comets are notoriously fickle. As noted comet-hunter David Levy likes to say: Comets are like cats. They both have tails and they both do what they want.

Their unpredictable and ghostly nature has led people over the ages even some today to interpret them as cosmic harbingers of doom.

Nevertheless, it may be possible to spot this interplanetary nomad in the evening sky this week if youve got very dark skies far from the lights of large cities. Over the next week, NEOWISE will appear in the northwestern sky shortly after dark, just below the Big Dipper.

Be sure to check out the accompanying illustration and grab binoculars to locate and enjoy the amazing interplanetary iceball this week after dusk!

Dennis Mammana is an astronomy writer, author, lecturer and photographer working from under the clear dark skies of the Anza-Borrego Desert in the San Diego County backcountry. Contact him at [emailprotected] and follow him on Twitter: @dennismammana. The opinions expressed are his own.

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Dennis Mammana: The Iceball Cometh This Week with Comet NEOWISE - Noozhawk

Applying to residency is tough even in normal times. The pandemic isn’t helping. – AAMC

Last year, Samuel Bunting, a student at the Chicago Medical School at Rosalind Franklin University of Medicine and Science, spent his psychiatry clerkship helping LGBTQ+ patients handle such painful issues as family rejection, social stigma, and substance use. He quickly saw that working with this population was his calling. I knew that if I had been a little less fortunate in how I grew up, that very easily could have been me, says the fourth-year student. "It was one of the most meaningful experiences Ive ever had.

Now, though, Bunting worries about landing a spot in a residency program that shares his values and supports his goals. Like tens of thousands of other residency applicants, Bunting fears the numerous ways that COVID-19 is hobbling this years application process.

Honestly, Im not a good standardized test-taker, but I am an outstanding student by other measures like leadership, says Bunting. I worry that those wont matter as much given the lack of in-person interviews and the many other changes in the application process that were seeing.

The transition to residency is tough even in normal times. It typically starts during the third year of medical school, when students gather key components letters of recommendation, a personal statement, and more that they can then load into the Electronic Residency Application Service (ERAS) starting in June. The goal is to land coveted interview invitations, which usually get taken almost as soon as theyre offered. Interviews begin in the fall, span months, and culminate, applicants hope, with offers from their top picks in the National Resident Matching Program in March.

But this years application cycle will be far from typical.

Program directors are stressed out about how were going to recruit and pick the right students for our programs and the medical students are a thousand times more stressed than we are.

Melvyn Harrington, MDProgram director for orthopedic surgery, Baylor College of Medicine

Clinical clerkships were disrupted, so applicants will have difficulty getting desired letters of recommendation, and many students had their board exams postponed, some more than once, says Jessica Kovach, MD, director of the psychiatry residency program at Lewis Katz School of Medicine at Temple University. On top of that, the Coalition for PhysicianAccountability a group of medical education organizations that includes the AAMC recommended ending all in-person interviews and strictly limiting audition rotations at residency programs because of the pandemic.

This is a seismic shift, says Melvyn Harrington, MD, program director for orthopedic surgery at Baylor College of Medicine. Program directors are stressed out about how were going to recruit and pick the right students for our programs and the medical students are a thousand times more stressed than we are.

Harrington and others worry that student stress may send application numbers skyrocketing. In fact, candidates were already submitting increasing numbers of applications even before COVID-19. Thats because the number of U.S. medical school students has grown 31% since 2002 but residency slots have not kept pace, largely due to insufficient federal funding.

Perhaps even more worrisome, experts say, is the potentially unequal impact of changes on certain students, including those from groups that are underrepresented in medicine, many of whom have been hit hard by COVID-19, racial injustice, and current social, political, and racial unrest.

All this has sent leaders in academic medicine searching for effective solutions. ERAS extended its deadline from Sept. 15 to Oct. 21 to give applicants extra time to build their application portfolios. In addition, medical schools, program directors, and national organizations have been pumping out resources and recommendations to guide all involved through this unprecedented application cycle.

This year, there has to be robust engagement between schools, residency programs, and learners, and Ive certainly been seeing this, says Jennifer LaFemina, MD, general surgery program director at the University of Massachusetts Memorial Medical Center. Sometimes, as we educators work to support our learners at different phases, we dont always work in tandem, but now we must be collaborative every step of the way. If we dont, we could lose sight of what this comes down to: safety and equity for all our learners.

For residency applicants, there are two basic stages in the quest for a slot: the steps leading up to landing an interview and then, hopefully, acing the interview.

Several factors go into a program's decision to offer an interview, and many of those have been upended by the need to protect students and the public during the pandemic.

Among the most influential metrics are scores on the United States Medical Licensing Examination (USMLE), which assesses such crucial areas as clinical knowledge. This year, the test-taking process has been unusually unnerving.

In March, as the pandemic spread, the company that runs USMLE test sites temporarily ended all exams in the United States and Canada. Sites began reopening in May, but many students have been affected by last-minute cancellations as the company has limited the number of test-takers to enable social distancing.

I was ready, but I didnt know when I could take the test, says Adiba Matin, a fourth-year student at the University of Missouri - Kansas City School of Medicine. It was very stressful trying to keep all the information fresh in my mind, she adds. Ultimately, my test was postponed four times.

Also topping applicants worries are landing valuable letters of recommendation.

Students have a lot of anxiety about getting letters that reflect their true abilities, says Angela Jackson, MD, associate dean of student affairs at Boston University School of Medicine. Much of the concern lies in lost opportunities to impress faculty as the pandemic shuttered clerkships for months this spring. Even now that students are back, sometimes the volume of patients is down, so they have fewer chances to show their skills, she notes.

It was very stressful trying to keep all the information fresh in my mind. Ultimately, my test was postponed four times.

Adiba MatinUniversity of Missouri - Kansas City School of Medicine

Students are also concerned about the canceling of away rotations often called audition rotations that work like weekslong trial runs at outside institutions. In 2019, 56% of medical students completed these rotations, and some did several.

Now, 98% of responding schools have decided to curtail away rotations, according to an AAMC survey, with a number allowing exceptions for medical specialties that are unavailable at their own schools.

Meanwhile, some students say they will take advantage of a new option: virtual away rotations. In fact, nearly 70 of these remote options have sprung up in more than a dozen specialties. How will they work? A program might send students information about patients and then ask them to present their treatment recommendations via Zoom, for example. Its not the same as in-person interactions, students say, but theyre glad to have some creative alternatives.

Even though the experience will be remote, I believe it still can deepen my knowledge in my future specialty, says Ushasi Naha, a fourth-year student at the University of Illinois College of Medicine. I also like that virtual aways can provide me the opportunity to show interest in some of my top residency programs.

Before COVID-19, applicants attended 13 interviews on average and often spent thousands of dollars traveling to them. This year, as the pandemic has forced interviews online, students are thrilled with the cost-savings. But many also fear the downsides of going virtual.

People are concerned about conveying personality in a virtual interview, Naha says. Then there are worries about good lighting, good internet, and a quiet place to take an interview that could last all day.

Virtual interviews also mean applicants will lose traditional opportunities to size up programs, especially such intangibles as interpersonal dynamics that they might assess at pre-interview dinners and other informal events.

Now, applicants are hoping for other ways to gain such glimpses. For example, students want private chats with existing residents where they can ask some tougher questions, says Robbie Daulton, a fourth-year University of Cincinnati (UC) College of Medicine student who surveyed fellow students for a paper on this years process.

People are concerned about conveying personality in a virtual interview. Then there are worries about good lighting, good internet, and a quiet place to take an interview that could last all day.

Ushasi NahaUniversity of Illinois College of Medicine

Meanwhile, as programs and applicants all gear up for interviews, they share one key concern: Will candidates accept many more interviews than before since they wont have to travel?

Now it could be a lot easier for students to hold on to more invitations than they truly need, says Aurora Bennett, MD, associate dean for student affairs at the UC College of Medicine. Advisors will have to help more competitive students let go of some interviews, she adds. They need to identify a reasonable number to have a successful match and release others so their peers who need them can have them.

Faced with unprecedented challenges, leaders in academic medicine say theyre working hard to determine how to ease application obstacles and assess students fairly.

Each program will determine how it can best address any current limitations in the process, notes Alison Whelan, MD, AAMC chief medical education officer. I continue to be impressed with the creativity, energy, and commitment that both schools and programs are using to overcome barriers and create a successful process. Some programs are considering such new approaches as requesting secondary essays about why an applicant is drawn to that institution.

Certainly, we hope programs will use holistic review, looking at a candidates full range of experiences and attributes and we have heard of a variety of ways programs are tackling this, given their time limitations and stresses related to their current residents and the ongoing pandemic, Whelan adds.

Richard Church, MD, emergency medicine residency director at the University of Massachusetts Medical School, is determined to give every application its due. This year, I have to be even more diligent, examining every single part of applications, he says. The increased load may require him to enlist additional application readers an option that may not be feasible for all programs, he notes.

Church advises this years residency hopefuls to think carefully about how to highlight key achievements in their ERAS applications.

A lot of applicants went to great lengths to do something productive with themselves [when clerkships closed], so even if its not the usual type of experience, they should present that. And if they didnt do much, they should explain why.

He also notes that letters will be particularly important to him this year in the absence of some other metrics. Id tell applicants to put serious thought into who you want to write your letters. Look for people who can speak to you as a student as well as to you as an individual.

On his end, Harrington predicts research output will play a larger role since students could perform duties like literature reviews online during the pandemic. We will, of course, continue to look at grades and traits like leadership, he adds. Also, I think applicants will need to be creative with their personal statements to really tell their individual stories and help them stand out.

As programs and applicants feel their way forward, national organizations are providing guidance and support. For one, USMLE leaders say they are committed to testing applicants in time for scores to reach programs in October.

Meanwhile, the AAMC and other groups are working to create resources to support students and programs in navigating the many changes. For one, the AAMC and several other organizations recently began providing a tool called Residency Explorer to help candidates apply more effectively. The AAMC also released resources on virtual interviews and issued guidance for explaining students pandemic-related limitations on the Medical Student Performance Evaluation, a structured assessment provided by an applicants medical school.

Theyre not going to believe me until its over, but its going to be okay. I tell them its our job to help make sure its okay.

Angela Jackson, MDAssociate dean of student affairs, Boston University School of Medicine

In addition, many medical specialty organizations have issued COVID-19-related suggestions, such as that programsloosenrules around numbers and types of recommendation letters.

Medical schools are stepping up to help as well. For example, Boston Universitys Jackson is offering various application-related events, including a virtual-interview workshop featuring tips from broadcast journalists. The office also is increasing the number of scheduled guidance sessions and connecting students with recent alumni who can provide insights as applicants assess whether a program might make a good fit.

Jackson says shes determined to help students succeed despite any obstacles. Theyre not going to believe me until its over, but its going to be okay, she notes. I tell them its our job to help make sure its okay.

As leaders strive to help all applicants, they worry in particular about those who may be most affected by the pandemic, including students of color.

Theres an ongoing sense of exhaustion from having to deal with racism in this society, says Alex Lindqwister,national chair of the AAMCs Organization of Student Representatives. On top of that, theres COVID-19, which disproportionately affected African American students, many of whom also live in cities that have been affected by police brutality and recent protests, he adds. I hope holistic review will help, that programs will look at the context in which applicants managed to make their achievements.

Harrington worries that some students who lack connections will be at a disadvantage. With so many changes, Im concerned that things are going to fall back a bit to the old boys club of who's making phone calls or sending emails for you. In his field of orthopedic surgery, national organizations dedicated to diversity are trying to mentor students and reach out to programs on their behalf, he notes.

Economic disparities play a role as well, say observers. For example, some students may have weak Wi-Fi or other less-than-ideal at-home interviewing conditions. Maybe someone is in their small childhood bedroom for their virtual interview, but someone else is at their parents lake house, so thats their beautiful backdrop, says Daulton.

In response, schools are working to offer students campus spaces for their interviews. Daulton makes another suggestion: Schools or programs should provide a standardized interview backdrop to level the playing field. "Were also recommending anti-racism and implicit bias training for people involved with application evaluation.

Individuals from lower-income backgrounds also sometimes attend lesser-known medical schools, which could hurt their chances, says Lindqwister. A lot of these issues all tie in together as certain students face multiple inequities.

Matin says she attends a lesser-known school, and she worries that given all the COVID-19-related changes, programs are going to look at names and numbers a little bit more intensely this cycle.

Still, Matin remains optimistic. At the end of the day, Im confident Ill match somewhere, she says. I know Ill be able to help patients, which is really all I want to do.

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Applying to residency is tough even in normal times. The pandemic isn't helping. - AAMC