‘Best ecosystem possible’ – Gazette

Since their introduction to Newfoundland in the early 1900s, moose have had a tremendous impact on the islands forests.

Moose no longer have natural predators, such as wolves, to keep their population in check.

Photo: Benjamin Ojolek

In coastal areas, in particular, intensive browsing (or feeding) on balsam fir one of the foundation species of Terra Nova National Parks boreal forest has created spruce-moose meadows.

These are large areas of the park where black spruce trees have taken over with grass under the trees rather than the usual mossy ground, making it difficult for the fir trees to regenerate.

Over the past few years, experimental restoration to support Parks Canada Ecological Integrity targets in Terra Nova National Park was implemented by Dr. Luise Hermanutz,Department of Biology, and her graduate student, Louis Charron, with the support of park staff.

Their work is key in determining which park management actions are likely to be effective.

Due to shading, the canopy trees, made up of predominately balsam fir, usually prevent native grass from getting enough light to grow.

But, with most of the balsam fir becoming lunch for hungry moose in the park, the grass acts as an invasive species growing fast and irreversibly changing the ground vegetation.

The problem? The fir trees cant penetrate the thick root mat and regrow; hence the need for restoration.

Working with Janet Feltham and Kirby Tulk, Terra Nova National Park staff members, the researchers carried out experiments to determine if balsam fir would regenerate in the park without assistance or if it was necessary to replant them in the black spruce savannahs.

And, if seedlings were planted, did they require specialized treatments to give them a better survival rate?

Photo: Benjamin Ojolek

Seedlings were used for the restoration project instead of seeds because, based on previous Memorial University student research, it was discovered that various seed predators small mammals like the introduced red-backed vole, birds and slugs would eat the seeds before they germinated.

We started looking at where in the park we should focus and what experimental planting treatment we should implement, knowing that financial and staff resources were limited, said Mr. Charron.

We also looked at different treatments to see if experimental removal of surrounding plants was needed to lower the competition and provide more light or if decompressing the soil would allow the fir seedlings to better survive and grow.

Seedling plantings were carried out across a number of sites within the park using various ground preparation treatments. Seedling performance indicators, such as survival, growth and browsing occurrence, was monitored over a two-year period.

The seedlings were provided by the teams forestry partners at the Wooddale Provincial Tree Nursery.

We would certainly need to look at the results in 10-20 years to see if, in the long-term, our results are consistent. Louis Charron

What we saw during the first two years is the planted balsam fir seedlings had a pretty high survival rate, over 90 per cent in all treatments, said Mr. Charron.

We only looked at the first two growing seasons to see if the plants could establish themselves, and we would certainly need to look at the results in 10-20 years to see if, in the long-term, our results are consistent. But the first two years have been successful, so thats a good start.

They found that cutting surrounding vegetation and plowing the ground was a lot of work and didnt do much to help the seedlings. In fact, in areas larger than five hectares, the ground was so open that the drying of the soil caused seedlings to die, regardless of the ground treatment.

Photo: Benjamin Ojolek

Considering that no substantial biological benefits were detected following ground treatments, which were costly and time-consuming to implement, the team determined that active restoration in boreal forests can be implemented using standard forestry planting protocols, without ground preparation.

You dont need to rely on black spruce, and other species that have been used in past restorations. Louis Charron

Planting seedlings directly into the vegetation without any preparation actually saw better survival rates with lower browsing intensity from moose, and was much less expensive to implement a win-win situation.

More work isnt always the best solution, said Mr. Charron.

Now we know that you can plant balsam fir and it will survive and grow. You dont need to rely on black spruce, and other species that have been used in past restorations. We know that balsam fir can be a good option for forest restoration too.

The researchers feel that, despite little research previously being done on balsam fir, it is a key species.

It acts as an architect, helping to acidify the soil, provide necessary shade and provide food and shelter for the many species of plants and animals that use the balsam fir forest, such as rare lichens and cross-bill birds.

For a park in a natural area, its not just about having the structure of a forest back, said Mr. Charron.

Its also about having the right elements. Diversity at the end of the day is also important. In a national park you arent looking into the fastest growing trees for financial benefit, you just want to have the best ecosystem possible.

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'Best ecosystem possible' - Gazette

Cat Zingano Open To Holly Holm, Says ‘Cyborg Is The Ultimate Goal … – FloCombat

Photo: Joshua Dahl-USA TODAY Sports

Cat Zingano Open To Holly Holm, Says 'Cyborg Is The Ultimate Goal'

Recently, it was announced that now-former women's featherweight champ Germaine de Randamie would be stripped of her title due to refusal to fight. Cris 'Cyborg' Justino will now face Megan Anderson at UFC 214 for the vacant strap.

Following that news, Cyborg told MMAuno.comshe would like the UFC to book Zingano vs. former UFC bantamweight champ Holly Holm to determine the next contender at 145.

Zingano, for her part, is down.

"I'm seeing awesome progress on the health issues that I've been working on, with the support of the UFC," Zingano told FloCombat. "Holm is a good fight for me, my coaches are excited to hear of that possibility.

"I'm interested, and when the time is right I'd be happy to go toe to toe with her. We need to build up this 145 [pound]division, I think there's all the talent in the world available, we just need to get organized and put on some good fights."

Zingano previously excelled at 135 inside the UFC Octagon, working her way to a title shot against then-champion Ronda Rousey at UFC 184. While she would drop that contest via submission--and her next to Julianna Pena at UFC 200 via decision--she's not ruling out the possibility of bouncing between bantamand featherweight.

Plus, there's a certain someonelingering at 145 that she can't wait to tackle head on.

"I hope to be able to bounce back and fourth between feather and bantam until more has been established," Zingano said. "Cyborg is the ultimate goal at this point, should she win the belt. Until then I'm just working hard (and smart) and waiting for my body to tell me it's time to go to war."

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Cat Zingano Open To Holly Holm, Says 'Cyborg Is The Ultimate Goal ... - FloCombat

Mattel Unveils SDCC Exclusive Cyborg ‘Justice League’ Motherbox Toy – Heroic Hollywood (blog)

Mattel has unveiled a premium Cyborg Justice League action figure that will be exclusively available at San Diego Comic Con 2017.

The figure itself comes encased within a Motherbox which activates lights and the sound of the Motherbox heard when the sentient supercomputer granted the half man, half machine his abilities in Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice. You can also press the activation button to light up Cyborg and for sound as well.

You can check out the video of the SDCC exclusive Justice League Cyborg Origin figure below.

Directed by Zack Snyder,Justice Leaguestars Ben Affleck as Batman, Gal Gadot as Wonder Woman, Henry Cavill as Superman, Jason Momoa as Aquaman, Ezra Miller as The Flash, Ray Fisher as Cyborg, Jesse Eisenberg as Lex Luthor, Jeremy Irons as Alfred, Amy Adams as Lois Lane, Amber Heard as Mera, J.K. Simmons as Jim Gordon, Kiersey Clemons as Iris West, Julian Lewis Jones, and Willem Dafoe are also set to appear. Heres the official synopsis:

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

Justice League hitstheaters November 17, 2017.

Source: Mattel

The DCEU has found its own definitive version of Superman. Henry Cavill has been given the opportunity to play the iconic superhero in this monster of a DC franchise and so far hes done a great job with the role and brining Superman into the new century in a new way. With Justice League set to hit theaters later this year its safe to say that we will be seeing a lot from him over the next several years. So far there have only been two movies featuring him but these two movies have already given us some memorable moments with the character. These moments in particular stand out and give a weight to the character that is crucial to this series continued success. While it still may be early its a good time to look back at said great moments.

Here are 5 of the Best DCEU Superman Moments So Far. Click Next to continue

Michael Mistroff

Michael Mistroff is a Film/TV fan with a passion for Star Wars, Marvel, DC, and Stranger Things.

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Mattel Unveils SDCC Exclusive Cyborg 'Justice League' Motherbox Toy - Heroic Hollywood (blog)

Beaches – Savannah, GA | Savannah.com

Parking on Tybee Island

Tybee Island is filled with metered parking all along Butler Avenue with easy access to the beaches, shops and restaurants, with parking lots at North Beach and South Beach, which have hourly rates. see all

With humidity averaging in the 60s during the winter and spring and 70s in summer and fall, Savannah has a humid subtropical climate. Long summers and short winters make Savannah a beautiful place to explore year round, reaching highs in the 90s in the summer with highs in the 50s during the winter. see all

Tides in Savannah and Tybee Island can be as high as 6 feet. Savannah and Tybee Island, Georgia Area Tide Chart Information provides users with immediate information regarding Low and High Tide water levels based on the Savannah River entrance. see all

The Beach on Tybee Island is only a 20 minute drive east of Savannah. Tybee Island offers miles of beautiful beach, forts, museums and a beautiful old lighthouse. Rent kayaks, bikes along with hotels, motels, cottage and condo rentals. Come and enjoy the beaches on Tybee Island. see all

Find out what is allowed and whats prohibited on Tybee Island so everyone can have a safe, fun trip to Savannahs Beach! see all

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Beaches - Savannah, GA | Savannah.com

Sandcastles can make you sick; beware playing on beaches filled … – ABC Action News

CLEARWATER BEACH, Fla. - Brittany Schiro knows about dirty beaches.

We have a lot of problems in the water, bacterial stuff going on there," says Schiro, who lives close to Galveston, Texas.

She is much more comfortable bringing her two daughters to Clearwater Beach, where theyre vacationing.

You gotta let them be children, right?" she said.

Schiro and her husband Eric are aware of new warnings from the Environmental Protection Agency and pediatricians. Beach sand can contain pollutants and bacteria that is especially harmful to children.

Symptoms can range from gastrointestinal illness to severe rashes.

So far, scientists have not flagged Clearwater Beach for pollution, but other Tampa Bay beaches are being watched.

The new sand warnings come with rules. Schiro follows most of them.

Well, obviously I dont let my kids shovel handfuls of sand in their mouths," says Schiro. "And we wash them off [after they play in the sand]. If they did have a reaction, wed pay attention to that. But theyve been fine here so far.

Even eating food that falls in the sand is a no-no. Not only would your food tastes gritty and gross, it could become contaminated.

Sand pollution is highest after heavy rains. Doctors urge parents to use sanitizer on tiny hands.

But Schiro draws the line at some of the other rules: making kids wear beach shoes all the times or brushing sand from under their fingernails.

Theres too much to worry about, says Schiro. We want them to experience the world. We dont want them to be afraid of everything.

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Sandcastles can make you sick; beware playing on beaches filled ... - ABC Action News

Five South Shore beaches closed by contamination – The Patriot Ledger

Beaches in Quincy, Braintree, Hull and Marshfield have been closed to swimming after testing showed elevated bacteria levels.

The Milton Street section of Wollaston Beach, Darcys and Newport beaches in Hull, Smiths Beach in Braintree and Green Harbor Beach in Marshfield are all over the limit recommended for swimming.

Milton Street was posted Wednesday and the others on Thursday.

Newport Avenue in Hull is four times over the limit and Smiths Beach is double. The other three are under twice the recommended maximum.

In most cases the culprit is rain that washed contamination into the water. The beaches are being retested and results are expected on Friday.

The other 60 salt-water beaches on the South Shore passed bacteria tests this week and are open for swimming.

See water quality test results for each community and for Cape Cod, the South Coast and North Shore.

For more on Quincy beaches, call 617-376-1288, or visit tpl-beaches. For more on Wollaston Beach, call 617-626-4972.

HOW BEACHES ARE TESTED

Sixy-five beaches on the South Shore are tested for intestinal bacteria found in humans and animals.

High levels indicate the possible presence of disease-causing microbes that are present in sewage but are more difficult to detect. Bacterial colonies are filtered from three ounces of water and placed on a gel infused with nutrients and chemicals designed to promote growth.

Left in an incubator, the single cells isolated on the filter grow explosively, forming colonies visible to the naked eye. After one day, the colonies are counted and if they exceed 104 colonies, the beach is closed to swimming.

If the past five samples have a mean exceeding 35 colonies, the beach must also be closed to swimming.

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Five South Shore beaches closed by contamination - The Patriot Ledger

Dane County commits to keeping beaches clean – hngnews.com

As summer temps rise, Dane County is using new technology to keep beaches free from algae and harmful bacteria.

Goodland County Park is the second in the county to get the Clean Beach Corridor with a five-sided barrier swimming area where filters clean the water and pump it back in, removing algae-causing plants and E. coli.

There has been no beach closing where the $80,000 system has been used, county officials say. Lake Mendota County Park in Middleton was the first beach to get the system.

Goodland County Park beach was closed 18 times last year for problem-causing algae and bacteria.

Dane County Executive Joe Parisi including money for the Goodland County Park beach project in his 2017 budget, eager to give residents and visitors a place to go when Wisconsin summers get hot and humid.

This new Clean Beach Corridor means when a family packs up to head out to the beach, they know when they get here theyll be able to swim and have fun, Parisi said.

At beaches without filtering systems, public health officials suggest tips to swim safely. Public Health Madison & Dane County (PHMDC) monitors public beaches, pools and splash pad between Memorial Day and Labor Day for bacteria and toxic blue-green algae.

People and dogs should avoid water where algal blooms are present and can cause stomach upset, rashes and respiratory problems.

Theres also a problem with animal and human waste getting into the waterways.

Once they arrive at a beach, we advise the public to always take a look at water conditions before getting into the water, especially after a heavy waterfall. Thats when stormwater runoff containing things like goose and pet waste can cause E. coli bacteria levels to be higher, says PHMDC microbiologist Jennifer Lavender-Braun.

Problems can also pop up at public pools where Lavender-Braun says it only takes one person with diarrheal illness to contaminate a whole pool, no matter how well maintained the pool is.

Residents can stay informed about beach and lake conditions in Monona, Madison, Middleton and McFarland area by signing up for Lake-O-Grams or visiting http://www.lakeforecast.org.

The Public Health Madison and Dane County website, http://www.publichealthmdc.com also has beach closures/conditions.

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Dane County commits to keeping beaches clean - hngnews.com

Double flags at beaches aren’t stopping vacationers from having fun … – WPMI Local 15 News

GULF SHORES, Ala. (WPMI)

When these vacationers planned trips to Gulf Shores, they didn't plan on an unwanted visitor named Cindy passing through. Double red flags are posted along the beach, meaning it is illegal to enter the water.

Heather Gilmore and her family came all the way from Arkansas.

"It's been an experience because we have 9 kids in one condo," said Gilmore.

She and others say they're making the best out of a soggy situation by spending time checking out local restaurants, shops and mother nature's strength. Tropical Storm Cindy was flexing her muscles Wednesday through powerful waves and wind gusts up to 40 mph.

"I've never seen anything like this. This looks so amazing," said one beach-goer.

Local 15 also ran into three sisters from Kentucky who came for relaxation and tan lines.

"It's going to be a sand blast line instead," said one of the women.

But nothing is putting a damper on their vacation. They say as long as they have each other, that's all that matters.

"We do this trip in honor of our mother and father and so our first gathering was to spread their ashes and we gather every year thereafter so we have five days off and Cindy is going to be visiting us in Gulf Shores," said one of the sisters, Nancy Kohsin-Kintigh.

Officials say they're keeping a close eye on the beaches to make sure no one gets in the water.

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Double flags at beaches aren't stopping vacationers from having fun ... - WPMI Local 15 News

Summer lifeguard patrols on 11 Northern Ireland beaches – BBC News


BBC News
Summer lifeguard patrols on 11 Northern Ireland beaches
BBC News
RNLI lifeguards will begin full-time summer patrolling on 11 beaches in Northern Ireland this weekend. They will be on eight beaches daily along the Causeway Coast and three in County Down. Last year, lifeguards in Northern Ireland responded to 235 ...

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Summer lifeguard patrols on 11 Northern Ireland beaches - BBC News

Yellow flags now flying along Emerald Isle beaches – WNCT.com – WNCT

WNCT Staff Published: June 22, 2017, 9:02 am Updated: June 22, 2017, 9:07 am

EMERALD ISLE, N.C. (WNCT) Officials have removed the red flags in place along Emerald Isle beach since Sunday.

The town said Thursday morning that beach conditions have improved and the ocean is now open for public use.

Yellow flags are now flying, which is the towns normal beach status. Yellow flags are indicative of moderate hazards and the public should continue to use caution when entering the ocean.

Lifeguards are stationed at the Eastern Ocean Regional Access, the Western Ocean Regional Access, and on 4 all-terrain vehicles patrolling the Towns 12 miles of ocean beach. Theyre on duty from 10 a.m. 5 p.m. daily and may be on duty earlier or later in the day as conditions warrant.

Due to recent and current threats, Emerald Isle has added an additional roving lifeguard to improve patrol coverage and response time.

WNCT-TV 9 On Your Side provides commenting to allow for constructive discussion on the stories we cover. In order to comment here, you acknowledge you have read and agreed to our Terms of Service. Commenters who violate these terms, including use of vulgar language or racial slurs, will be banned. Please be respectful of the opinions of others. If you see an inappropriate comment, please flag it for our moderators to review.

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Yellow flags now flying along Emerald Isle beaches - WNCT.com - WNCT

Baby brown pelican chicks washing up on Pass Christian, Waveland beaches – The Sun Herald


The Sun Herald
Baby brown pelican chicks washing up on Pass Christian, Waveland beaches
The Sun Herald
Tropical Storm Cindy has washed baby brown pelicans off their nests on the barrier islands and ashore in Pass Christian and Waveland. Alert people noticed the little guys on the beach and were holding them while wildlife rescue arrived on Thursday.

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Baby brown pelican chicks washing up on Pass Christian, Waveland beaches - The Sun Herald

Is there another Planet Nine altogether? – Astronomy Magazine

Planet Nine, meet also Planet Nine. Maybe.

An Earth or Mars-sized world or even two may exist on the outskirts of the Kuiper Belt at an eight degree inclined orbit, shifting a number of Kuiper Belt orbits up to a similar inclination.

The planet-mass object would be about 60 AU from the Sun. One AU is the distance between the Sun and Earth, with Pluto at about 30 AU at closest approach.

The proposed planet, hypothesized by Kat Volk and Renu Malhotra of the University of Arizona, is different than the one proposed by Caltechs Mike Brown and Konstantin Batygin. Brown and Batygin propose a much more distant ice giant a bit smaller than Neptune, whereas Volk and Malhortas planet is smaller and much closer in.

In fact, one does not preclude the existence of the other as the dwarf planets affected by Planet Nines orbit far, far away.

If it clears its orbit to meet the definition of a planet (and actually exists) we could probably consider it Planet Nine and rename Planet Nine to Planet Ten. Or if youre a Pluto Truther, consider it Planet Ten, Eris as Planet Eleven (same size as Pluto so you have to count it), and Planet Nine as Planet Twelve.

Regardless, we could have a long lost sister to Earth and Mars lurking surprisingly close, in overall solar system terms.

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Is there another Planet Nine altogether? - Astronomy Magazine

Updated Kepler catalog contains 219 new exoplanet candidates – Astronomy Now Online

NASAs Kepler space telescope team has identified 219 new planet candidates, 10 of which are near-Earth size and in the habitable zone of their star. Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech

Scientists have published a catalog of exoplanet discoveries made by NASAs Kepler space telescope, identifying 219 previously-unknown planet candidates circling stars elsewhere in the galaxy, including 10 would-be worlds that appear to be about the same size of Earth with temperatures potentially hospitable for life.

Culling data collected during the first four years of Keplers mission, researchers used computers to pick out and analyse signals from stars that could be have caused by nearby planets. Automated software identified the detections most likely to be real worlds, according to Susan Thompson, a Kepler research scientist at the SETI Institute and NASAs Ames Research Center who led the cataloging effort.

This is the last search that we performed, and we used our most improved techniques, and with that we found 4,034 candidates, which include 10 new terrestrial-sized candidates in the habitable zone of their star, Thompson said.

Follow-up observations have, so far, confirmed 2,335 of the more than 4,000 candidate worlds discovered by Kepler are real. The 10 new Earth-sized exoplanet candidates identified by Kepler scientists bring the missions total haul to 49 likely worlds about the same size as our home planet that could have the right temperature to harbour liquid water, Thompson said.

Thirty of the 49 Earth-sized planets have been verified.

This new result presented today has implications for understanding the frequency of different types of planets in our galaxy, and helps us to advance our knowledge of of how planets are formed, said Mario Perez, Kepler program scientist at NASA Headquarters.

The four years of data covered in the exoplanet catalog come from Keplers observations of around 200,000 stars in the constellation Cygnus. Using a 37-inch (95-centimetre) telescope and a unique wide-angle 95-megapixel camera, Kepler looked for subtle dips in the brightness of stars in a predetermined patch of sky beginning soon after its 2009 launch on a Delta 2 rocket.

The brightness fluctuations if they occur in regular patterns could be caused by a planet transiting in front of the star, blotting out a tiny fraction of its light. Sophisticated software written specifically for the Kepler mission was tasked with rooting out false positives that could be caused by starquakes or other natural phenomena.

Thompson said scientists injected simulated transits and measured how often Kepler and its data-crunching computers missed a planet. The catalog also accounted for noise in Keplers data archive that software could have mistaken for a planet.

That is how scientists arrived at the 4,034 planet candidates from Keplers four-year observing campaign in the constellation Cygnus. Subsequent detections from other telescopes, in space or on the ground, have verified 2,335 of them to date.

These are planets where there is no question at all that that signal is coming from an exoplanet, Thompson said.

In the case of the exoplanet candidates, there is still some room for doubt whether that signal is coming from a planet, she said. It still could be coming from other astrophysical signals.

Several of the newly-discovered planet candidates orbit G dwarf stars like our sun.Thompson singled out one exoplanet candidate named KOI-7711, which is about 1.3 times the size of Earth and orbits its star every 302 days.

She said KOI-7711 gets approximately the same amount of heat that we get from our own star.

However, theres a lot we dont know about this planet, and as a result, its hard to say whether its really an Earth twin, Thompson said Monday. We need to know more about its atmosphere, whether theres water on the planet.

Alien astronomers looking into our solar system through a distant telescope could be tricked into assuming more than one planet was hospitable to life.

I always like to remind people that it looks like there are three planets in our habitable zone Venus, Earth and Mars and Id only really want to live on one of them, Thompson said.

Keplers updated exoplanet listing will help astronomers estimate how common rocky, potentially habitable planets are in our galaxy.

For M dwarfs, which are small stars that make up 75 percent of the stars, in the galaxy, we know that one out of every four of them has a planet that is small and is in the habitable zone, said Courtney Dressing, a NASA Sagan Fellow at the California Institute of Technology.

Dressing said scientists still trying to determine the ubiquity of Earth-sized planets around sun-like stars, one of the chief goals of the Kepler mission. But the catalog released this week will arm scientists with better data to answer that question.

One thing thats important for us is are we alone? Perez said Monday. And maybe Kepler today has told us indirectly although we dont have confirmation that we are probably not alone.

Statistics from the Kepler planet catalog also suggest small planets fall into two families, said Benjamin Fulton, a doctoral candidate at the University of Hawaii in Manoa.

One grouping of planets ranges from smaller than Earth to less than twice the size of Earth, and another set of planets found by Kepler measure up to four times Earths diameter. There are relatively few worlds in between, Fulton said.

Most of the planets in the first group may be akin to the Earth with rocky surfaces and little to no atmospheres, Fulton said. Planets in the second group are probably more like cousins of Neptunes with thick atmospheres and no surface to speak of.

Astronomers turned to the W. M. Keck Observatory in Hawaii to measure the sizes of approximately 1,300 stars known to have planets. The data yielded better estimates of the planets dimensions.

Scientists believe the delineation between super-Earths and mini-Neptunes stems from the way the planets form. Some worlds suck in more hydrogen and helium, growing thick, deep atmospheres, while others develop comparatively thin atmospheres that can be blown away by stellar winds and heat.

This result has significant implications for the search for life, Fulton said. Approximately half of the planets that we know are so common have no solid surface, or a surface deep beneath the crushing weight of a thick atmosphere, and these would not be nice places to live.

Our result sharpens up the dividing line between potentially habitable planets, and those that are inhospitable to life as we know it, he said.

Keplers mission has been plagued by the failure of two of the observatorys four reaction wheels, spinning gyro-like mechanisms that kept the telescope steadily pointed at the missions star field in the constellation Cygnus.

With the loss of Keplers second reaction wheel in 2013, the telescope could no longer meet the missions original pointing requirements.

Engineers found a way to harness the pressure of photons of sunlight by positioning the spacecraft to prevent solar radiation from slowly pointing the telescope away from its astronomical targets. Although solar pressure exerts very low forces on spacecraft, the constant bombardment of solar photons can alter the orientation of satellites.

Controllers can eliminate the effects of solar pressure by balancing Kepler against the stream of sunlight, similar to balancing a pencil on a finger. The telescope cannot detect the faint signatures of planets without stable pointing.

Kepler orbits the sun at roughly the same distance as Earth. NASA calls telescopes current observing program the K2 mission.

Keeping Kepler balanced means it must be pointed in the ecliptic plane, or the plane where all the solar systems planets orbit the sun. The mitigation against solar pressure means Kepler can only look at a narrow band of stars, shifting its 100-square-degree field-of-view every two or three months to avoid pointing its sensitive camera at bright sunlight.

The new observing method means Kepler is now best-suited to finding exoplanets located very close to their host stars.

Kepler continues searching for planets, but officials expect it to run out of fuel some time next year.

The spacecraft has about 10 percent of its hydrazine fuel supply remaining, according to Jessie Dotson, the K2 missions project scientist at Ames.

We think the limiting factor is probably going to be the fuel, Dotson said.

NASAs next planet-hunting mission, the Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite, is scheduled to launch from Cape Canaveral in March 2018 on a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket. TESS will survey the entire sky to look for exoplanet signatures around nearby, bright stars.

Email the author.

Follow Stephen Clark on Twitter: @StephenClark1.

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Updated Kepler catalog contains 219 new exoplanet candidates - Astronomy Now Online

WD 1202 is a weird binary: One of the stars used to be inside the other one! – SYFY WIRE (blog)

Astronomers have just announced the discovery of a pretty unusual binary system: A white dwarf and a brown dwarf orbiting each other. That's pretty rare, so as cool as that is and I'll explain why in a sec even better is how ridiculously close together they orbit: They're separated by a mere 310,000 kilometers, closer than the Moon is to the Earth! And that means they move around each other fast: The intense gravity of the white dwarf tosses the brown dwarf around it at a speed in excess of 100 kilometers per second. That's rapid enough that they make a complete pass around each other every 71 minutes! Yes, minutes.

Yegads.

There are a few really nifty things about this system, so let's take a closer look. But not too close, because you'll get fried. Let me explain.

First, the white dwarf: It's called WD 1202-024, and it was first discovered in a survey of the sky in 2006. At 2700 light-years from Earth, it's pretty faint; the faintest star you can see with your naked eye is 150,000 times brighter!

Like all white dwarfs, it's the remains of a star that was once much like the Sunbut ran out of usable hydrogen fuel in its core. It takes billions of years for a star to get to that point, but in this case WD 1202 reached this stage not too long ago, just 50 million years or so in the past. Normally, when a star like that is all by its lonesome, it responds to losing its fuel by expanding its outer layers, swelling to enormous size and cooling down. We call that a red giant. Over time, the outer layers of the star get blown away, exposing the hot core to space. This core is small (around the size of the Earth) and terribly hot, shining a painful white. That's a white dwarf (and you can find out lots more about them in my episode of Crash Course Astronomy about them).

[WD1202-024 just looks like a white dwarf sitting out there in space, alone and dim. But it harbors a surprising secret. Credit: Rappaport et al., SDSS]

But WD 1202 is different. In this new study, the astronomers discovered it's a variable star, changing its brightness in regular, predictable cycles that take a little over an hour. It slowly and subtly brightens and dims, then, for a few minutes each cycle, the light from the star drops precipitously. That's pretty unusual behavior for a white dwarf, and the astronomers quickly figured out what's going: WD 1202 isn't all by its lonesome. It has a companion: a brown dwarf.

Although the names are similar, they couldn't be more different. Brown dwarfs are objects that are too massive to be planets, but not massive enough to ignite fusion in their cores and become proper stars*. In this case, WD 1202's brown dwarf companion has a mass of about 6.6% of the Sun, which is definitely too low for fusion. It's about 67 times Jupiter's mass, so it's way beefier than a planet, too.

Even though it's far more massive than Jupiter, it's not much bigger (brown dwarfs are weird that way; their cores are very dense and take on odd properties, such that as you add mass to them they actually shrink). But it's still much larger then WD 1202, probably 4 or 5 times wider.

And that's why the brightness of the system changes. Get this: The subtle variations are caused by the brown dwarf itself as it goes around the smaller dwarf. We're seeing its phases!

[The WD 1202-024 light curve is caused by the phases we see of the brown dwarf orbiting the white dwarf, plus a bonus eclipse. Credit: Rappaport, et al. / Bishop's University]

This is just like the Moon, where we see it go through its phase of new (when we only see the dark half), first quarter, full (when we see it fully lit by the Sun), then last quarter, then new again.

But in the case of the brown dwarf we're seeing phases, not because it's reflecting light from WD 1202, but because it's heated to incandescence by it!

The white dwarf is small, but it's furiously hot, about 22,400 C. The side of the brown dwarf facing the white dwarf is heated to glowing. When it's on the other side of the WD 1202 from us we see it full. A quarter of an orbit (about 69 minutes) later it's half full, then another quarter of an orbit after that the unlit side is facing us, so the system is dimmer. After that we start to see the lit side again until it's full, and the cycle repeats.

But there's more. Because the brown dwarf is so much bigger, when it's "new" it actually gets in the way of the white dwarf and blocks its light from us. That's why the brightness drops so much every 71 minutes!

[The light curve of the binary (the change in brightness over time). The red line is a model that includes the phases of the brown dwarf and the eclipse; the black line is the observations (exposure times are about 30 minutes, so the eclipse isn't seen), and the blue line is the model mathematically fit to the observations (including the exposure time fuzzing out the eclipse). Credit: Rappaport et al. / Bishop's University]

I love just this part of the story. That brown dwarf is far too faint and close to WD 1202 to see it separately, but we can infer its existence because of its phases even though it's 27 quadrillion kilometers away. How about that?

But there's more, and it's also wondrous. Get this: The brown dwarf was, for quite some time, literally inside WD 1202!

Let's rewind the clock back to when WD 1202 was a regular star, about to run out of hydrogen fuel in its core. Back then, the brown dwarf was farther out, probably something like 50 million kilometers out (or half the distance from the Earth to the Sun), well separated.

But then WD 1202 expanded into a red giant. These kinds of stars get really big, easily spanning a hundred million kilometers across, sometimes more than twice that. That's bigger than the orbital distance of the brown dwarf, so when the primary expanded, it engulfed the brown dwarf.

Yet it persisted. That's because when it expands, the density of the gas in the red giant's outer layers dropped hugely. The lower density is what saved the brown dwarf from destruction. It would've been heated a lot by the star around it, and the drag from plowing through the material would have shrunk its orbit. As it got closer it would have orbited faster than the red giant rotated, too, so the companion acted like an egg beater, stirring up the primaries outer layers.

That can give the gas so much energy that they are expelled even more rapidly. When this violent period in the binary's life was over, what was left was the white dwarf with the companion brown dwarf in its tight orbit. Judging from what we know about the physics of such events, and the temperature of the white dwarf (they cool over time, giving us a measure of their age) this happened about 50 million years ago.

That's seriously cool. And yet there's one more thing.

[Artist's drawing of the RS Ophiuchi system, a similar one to what WD 1202 will be like in a couple of hundred million years. Credit: David Hardy & PPARC]

The gravity of the white dwarf is impressive. When you squeeze half the mass of the Sun into a ball about twice the size of the Earth, it's phenomenally dense. The surface gravity is tens of thousands times stronger than Earth's. If you stood on its surface, you'd weigh thousands of tons. Oof.

As it happens, the brown dwarf is orbiting so close to WD 1202 that its gravity is felt very strongly indeed. Over time, even now, the brown dwarf is slowly spiraling in, getting closer to the white dwarf as they emit gravitational radiation (for more about that, read this article about gravitational waves). The astronomers who observed the system calculate that in about 250 million years, the brown dwarf will get so close to the primary that the white dwarf's gravity will start to draw material off the companion!

This material will pile up on the white dwarf and get squeezed excruciatingly hard by the intense gravity. When there's enough, it will undergo sudden and catastrophic hydrogen fusion, exploding literally like a thermonuclear bomb. This explosion is very energetic, and the system will dramatically flare in brightness. Then it will fade as the material blown off cools and blows away and then the cycle will star again.

This kind of object is called a cataclysmic variable, or CV, and we know of quite a few. We also know of a few pre-CV systems, but this one has the shortest period of any known, which means it's the closest we know of that will become a proper CV in the future.

So, as amazing as this system's history is, and is now, its future will still hold plenty of wonder. As long as you stand a bit back from it. Cataclysmic variable are given that name for a very good reason.

This is one of those science stories where I dig every piece of it. It's got quite a bit of the stuff I love: stellar evolution, weird objects, cool geometry, and it ends quite literally with a bang.

The Universe is a pretty interesting and astonishing place, if you look at it carefully enough.

*Some people call them "failed stars", which is a term I don't like, for two reasons: They aren't stars at all, they're their own class of object; and why call them that when you could be more positive and call them really overachieving planets?

[N.B.: In the title of this post, I refer to the brown dwarf as a star. As I describe in the text, technically it isn't. But in a title I have to be brief, and if I said, "... one of the components..." it would read oddly, and distract from the main point. I struggled with this, to be honest, trying to figure out a good way to say this while still be being accurate. It was surprisingly difficult (note that I never refer to this as a "binary star" in the text, but instead call it a system or a binary system). Being scrupulously accurate in terminology can make things harder on the reader sometimes, and in this case I decided to ease up on the pedantry to allow an easier understanding. If you agree or disagree, I'd be curious to hear your opinion. There's probably an interesting article all by istelf on this topic!]

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WD 1202 is a weird binary: One of the stars used to be inside the other one! - SYFY WIRE (blog)

Jerry Nelson, astronomer who built advanced telescopes, dies – WTOP

SANTA CRUZ, Calif. (AP) Jerry Nelson, an astronomer who designed advanced telescopes that help scientists glimpse far reaches of the universe, has died in California. He was 73.

The University of California, Santa Cruz, where Nelson was a professor emeritus of astronomy and astrophysics, said he died June 10 at his home. No cause was given.

Nelsons design using dozens of segmented mirrors rather than a single large one was the basis for the Keck Observatorys twin 10-meter telescopes on Mauna Kea, a dormant volcano in Hawaii. Those telescopes, among the largest in use, have allowed scientists to measure the black hole at the center of the Milky Way and to spot planetary bodies outside our solar system.

Jerrys impacts on the field of astronomy and astrophysics are legendary, and we will all benefit from his legacy for many years to come, said Claire Max, director of UC Observatories.

Nelsons concept has since been used for other large ground-based telescopes around the world. The space-based James Webb telescope, which is under construction, also has a segmented primary mirror design.

Nelson also played an important role in the development of adaptive optics technology, which sharpens the images from ground-based telescopes by correcting for the blurring effect of Earths atmosphere, the university said.

Even after a stroke in 2011 that left him partly disabled, Nelson continued work for the Thirty Meter Telescope, a project to build the largest telescope in the Northern Hemisphere.

His endless curiosity always pushed the scientists around him to think more deeply, and his persistence and continued excellence after his stroke were inspirational to everyone, said Michael Bolte, a professor of astronomy and astrophysics at UC Santa Cruz.

Born near Los Angeles, Nelson earned an undergraduate degree from the California Institute of Technology and a Ph.D. in physics at UC Berkeley, where he taught for years before moving to Santa Cruz. He also worked for more than a decade at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory.

Nelson is survived by his wife, sister, two children from his first marriage and three grandchildren. His first wife died in 1992.

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Jerry Nelson, astronomer who built advanced telescopes, dies - WTOP

How Artificial Intelligence Makes Lead Generation Smarter – MarTech Advisor

Senraj Soundar, CEO, ConnectLeader discusses how AI-driven software can eliminate a great deal of manual work, helping sales reps make decisions about how to approach prospects, personalize conversations, and most importantly, focus on the leads that deserve follow-up

In 1996, IBM introduced a supercomputer called Deep Blue to the world. Deep Blue challenged world chess champion Garry Kasparov to a series of chess matches and Deep Blue won. In 2011, IBM introduced Watson, another supercomputer, which beat two of Jeopardy's greatest champions. In 2016, Go Master Lee Sedol played a match against an ominous new challenger, a super computer from Google named, DeepMind, which won the match, making it the first time a computer had defeated a Go master.

Watson was the beginning of a new era in computing. Computing started with mechanical switches that counted things. It then moved to programmable systems. The computer was told what to do and it improved our productivity. Watson was the first computer built for big data, for extracting an understanding from massive amounts of data to help humans make better decisions. As it was given data and given outcomes, it learned. The more data it got, the smarter it got. And it never forgot. As Watsons father John Kelly, senior vice president of IBM said, We wanted to help humans that were basically in this cognitive overload because of information. We wanted to help them make better decisions.

Yet, Stephen Hawking, Bill Gates and Elon Musk have all raised concerns about the threat that artificial intelligence (AI) poses. According to Musk, advanced AI could be more dangerous than nukes, while Hawking suggested that it could lead to the end of humanity. But, humans have always been masters of technology--steam power, coal, electricity, and now computerization--and it seems every new technology comes with its scare. Every day now we hear stories about AI, data and robotics, about the jobs threatened in manufacturing, retail, transportation, even in the legal, medical, and high finance worlds. The research firm PwC found that nearly 4 out of 10 jobs in the United States could be vulnerable to replacement by robots in the next fifteen years. Ford plans to invest $1 billion into AI. The goal is to have a fully autonomous vehicle on the commercial market by 2021.

Jeff Bezos, the founder of Amazon, seems to have infiltrated every aspect of our lives, especially with his personal assistant, Alexa, that delivers us the news, weather, and the fastest way to get to work. Buoy Health has launched a digital symptom-checker designed to simulate a conversation with a real doctor. Scientists at MIT have developed a wearable wrist device that can read the emotions of a conversation. AI seems to be everywhere--the computer part of all we do.

According to computer scientist, inventor and futurist, Ray Kurzweil, AI outperforms humans because of several aspects unique to machines:

In the business world, with sales, its all about understanding behaviors and motivations. An AI-based system can use computing power to find the best prospects. The computer can use masses of market data which can be compared and matched with ideal customer profiles, saving the sales rep hours and hours of manual labor.

Todays best reps use predictive analytics, a form of AI that optimizes decision making around sales efforts. Salesforce and Microsoft have AI-driven tools and investment in AI startups is at an all-time high. This type of software uses techniques that gather customer and prospect data from multiple sources, run it through machine learning models to predict which leads are most likely to convert, and present the findings to a sales team, in the form of best prospects and accounts. AI-driven software can eliminate a great deal of manual work, helping sales reps make decisions about how to approach prospects, personalize conversations, and most importantly, focus on the leads that deserve follow-up.

Here are a few data points which can be taken into consideration by an AI-based platform: size of company; location; recent ventures; length of sales cycle; revenue; growth rate; financial health; recruitments; relocations; funding rounds; installed technologies; intent to buy; social media activity.

AI engines can provide sales reps with quality connects and conversations with qualified buyers from all that data residing in the companys CRM system. By sourcing and analyzing the data coming from different sales channels (emails, calls, social media), the AI algorithms can provide optimal personalized propositions for customers. And when propelled by calling tools, the best leads will be reach at the most optimal time.

And at this point, it may be best to remember the story of John Henry. Unlike those in the beginning of this article who lost their games to supercomputers and had to suffer embarrassment, when John Henry took on the steam shovel and lost, he died. So, . Let advanced AI technology help you stop wasting valuable time and energy, and help make you optimize your lead generation by making you win more sales.

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How Artificial Intelligence Makes Lead Generation Smarter - MarTech Advisor

Brexit: will.i.am says artificial intelligence will be more disruptive to … – The Independent

The reckless rise of artificial intelligence is going to be much more disruptive for the London technology scene in the longer run than Britains departure from the EU, according to musician, entrepreneur and philanthropist will.i.am.

Speaking at an event celebrating his collaboration with Atom Bank, an app-based digital-only bank launched last year, the founding member of The Black Eyed Peas said that by 2030, Brexit will be an old school thought for the UKs rapidly evolving tech industry and AI will present a much more acute challenge.

At the moment no one really understands the things that we should care about, he said. We need to invest in AI in order to stay ahead.

Echoing similar remarks made by Chinese business magnate Alibaba chairman Jack Ma this week, will.i.am said that historically, technology and industrialisation have caused wars.

Technology today hasnt caused turmoil [yet] but we need to make sure it doesnt, he said. We need to work closer together to be inspiring and encouraging, and to protect the youth.

A time when we do everything on our phones from banking to screening our medical health and even voting in elections is just around the corner.

Multimillionaire will.i.am shot to fame in the early 2000s with hip-hop group The Black Eyed Peas. Hes since released several solo albums, collaborated with scores of artists, including Michael Jackson, Justin Bieber, Britney Spears and Lady Gaga. Hes broken into television, with talent show The Voice and has also dabbled in fashion.

Hes a founding shareholder of Beats Electronics, which makes high-end headphones, and an avid philanthropist through his foundation dedicated to providing education to underprivileged students. In the UK, his foundation collaborates with The Princes Trust.

Earlier this year, Durham-based Atom announced that will.i.am had been appointed as the banks first strategic board advisor.

As a consumer technology investor, Atom at the time said that the 42-year old, whose real name is William James Adams, would provide an external perspective on culture, philanthropy and technology.

At this weeks event, hosted in a Shoreditch hotel, Anthony Thomson, founder and chairman of Atom, elaborated on the perhaps not quite obvious partnership.

He said that he had pitched to the musician around two years ago after trying to determine who Atom would be if it were a person.

Hes a guy who has all the qualities were looking for [in the bank], Mr Thomson, who is also the founder and chairman of Metro Bank, said.

will.i.am told The Independent that he had chosen to work with Atom because of its progressive approach to banking and the way in which it strives to educate especially young people about saving, in a prescient manner.

When he got his first pay cheque after securing a record deal at 20 years old, he had no clue how to manage his finances. He said that he developed a habit of stashing the cheques he was receiving in the locked glove compartment of his car. That was my idea of saving.

A new age type of banking company, as will.i.am describes Atom, will ensure that young peopleespecially those from a deprived background who have little understanding of personal finance are given the opportunity to learn how to manage their savings. He said that he grew up in a poor neighbourhood in east Los Angeles and could relate to youngsters today trying to make living.

As a celebrity, he said, he can help Atom raise awareness and drive adoption and help the lender be to the larger, established banks what a true disruptor, like Uber is to the traditional taxi industry.

This is all about preparing for tomorrow, he said. No one wants to play catch up.

Atom, which received its banking licence in June 2015, currently offers several savings products and has entered the mortgage market by partnering with brokers. In March it raised 83m from major institutional investors, including Spains BBVA, veteran fund manager Neil Woodford and Toscafund. It said that it intends to launch further products this year.

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Brexit: will.i.am says artificial intelligence will be more disruptive to ... - The Independent

GE mixing drones and artificial intelligence in Niskayuna – Times … – Albany Times Union

Photo: John Carl D'Annibale, Albany Times Union

Director of robotics at GE Global Research looks over his team's Euclid aerial inspection system autonomous drone Tuesday June 20, 2017 in Niskayuna, NY. (John Carl D'Annibale / Times Union)

Director of robotics at GE Global Research looks over his team's Euclid aerial inspection system autonomous drone Tuesday June 20, 2017 in Niskayuna, NY. (John Carl D'Annibale / Times Union)

GE Global Research advanced robotics' Euclid aerial inspection system autonomous drone during a test flight Tuesday June 20, 2017 in Niskayuna, NY. (John Carl D'Annibale / Times Union)

GE Global Research advanced robotics' Euclid aerial inspection system autonomous drone during a test flight Tuesday June 20, 2017 in Niskayuna, NY. (John Carl D'Annibale / Times Union)

Pilot in command Doug Forman monitors GE Global Research's Euclid aerial inspection system autonomous drone during a test flight Tuesday June 20, 2017 in Niskayuna, NY. (John Carl D'Annibale / Times Union)

Pilot in command Doug Forman monitors GE Global Research's Euclid aerial inspection system autonomous drone during a test flight Tuesday June 20, 2017 in Niskayuna, NY. (John Carl D'Annibale / Times Union)

Members of GE Global Research advanced robotics team pose with their Euclid aerial inspection system autonomous drone Tuesday June 20, 2017 in Niskayuna, NY. (John Carl D'Annibale / Times Union)

Members of GE Global Research advanced robotics team pose with their Euclid aerial inspection system autonomous drone Tuesday June 20, 2017 in Niskayuna, NY. (John Carl D'Annibale / Times Union)

GE mixing drones and artificial intelligence in Niskayuna

Niskayuna

In a picnic area at General Electric Co.'s Global Research Center, a group of scientists and engineers are working on a new industrial revolution that will involve robots, drones and artificial intelligence.

GE has been developing robot and artificial intelligence technologies for many years now.

But these researchers in Niskayuna are part of GE's latest effort to monetize that technology with the launch of Avitas Systems, a new GE-created company being incubated in Boston with help from scientists here in the Capital Region.

Avitas is creating technologies that will be artificial intelligence, or AI, combined with robots and predictive data analytics and software to provide high-tech inspection services to energy and transportation companies.

On Tuesday, a team supervised by John Lizzi, director of robotics at GE Global Research, and Judy Guzzo, a project leader, were performing drone testing on a simulated oil rig flare stack.

"Really the concept for the business and the technology came out of the Global Research Center here," Lizzi said. "We've been experimenting with drones and other types of robotics for a while. Eventually that gained momentum as a real business opportunity."

Currently, oil and gas companies use human workers hooked onto harnesses to inspect flare stacks for wear and damage. The inspections are dangerous and require the drilling companies to temporarily pause their operations, costing them valuable time away from drilling.

GE's drone technology being offered by Avitas eliminates all of that human work that is so costly and dangerous. And GE's software creates so-called digital twins of industrial equipment that can predict when the actual equipment will break down or need servicing.

The technology is currently being targeted for customers of GE's oil and gas business. Guzzo spent two months in the Gulf of Mexico on an oil rig a year ago testing sensor technology that is also used by Avitas.

"Unplanned asset downtime is a top issue for the oil and gas industry, and can cost operators millions of dollars," Kishore Sundararajan, the chief technology officer of GE Oil & Gas, said. "Avitas Systems will help enhance the efficiency of inspections, and can help our customers and others avoid significant costs by reducing downtime and increasing safety."

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GE mixing drones and artificial intelligence in Niskayuna - Times ... - Albany Times Union

Can resume-reading software help companies make better hires? – Chicago Tribune

While some fear artificial intelligence may take jobs from humans, technology company SAP sees it as a way to potentially make better hires and increase diversity.

The German technology company, which employs more than 1,500 people in the Chicago area, is introducing a tool that will allow recruiters to use machine learning to sift through thousands of applications much faster.

SAP Resume Matching applies machine learning to the process of matching resumes and job descriptions, said DJ Paoni, SAPs Chicago-based Midwest managing director. SAP will roll the product out to its own recruiters this year and will also sell it to clients.

Paoni said the tool extracts information such as skills and experience from resumes and scores them against particular open positions. That can allow a recruiter to more easily whittle down a pool of a thousand to several dozen that are worth further consideration, he said.

It really allows recruiters to focus on the important part of that whole process, which is interacting with the candidates, as opposed to poring through resumes and trying to match job descriptions, Paoni said.

He said SAP plans to use this tool to help make better hires. Over the past eight years or so, the company has shifted to taking on more young, entry-level employees for the first time. As a result, its paying more attention to hiring and retention trends, such as the impact of employee well-being on productivity, diversity and inclusion, the use of part-time or supplemental workers and continuous feedback rather than annual reviews.

To make SAP a better workplace based on those trends, it needs to be quicker and better at finding the best hires, he said.

Automating the resume sorting process could also help remove bias from the hiring process, Paoni said, creating a more diverse candidate pool.

SAP also plans to use machine learning to score job descriptions themselves a process that could help identify unconscious bias in listings. For example, terms like rockstar or ninja may be more attractive to men than women. The company is developing a new machine learning tool that would detect this kind of language using sentiment analysis, then suggest alternatives.

Its similar to a grammar check that you might do on a document, Paoni said. The system will recommend alternative words for terms that might hint at a pattern of unconscious bias.

He said that will help SAP as it pushes for more diversity and inclusion. But Paoni said the machine learning tools are intended to speed up and supplement the recruiting process, not replace it.

If you rely too much on the technology, you lose that personal feel, he said. It's a delicate balance.

aelahi@chicagotribune.com Twitter @aminamania

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Can resume-reading software help companies make better hires? - Chicago Tribune

Baldwin County targets aerospace growth at Paris Air Show – Made In Alabama

UTC executives hosted an Alabama team at a meeting Tuesday at the companys Paris Air Show exhibition base. Present were Governor Kay Ivey, Commerce Secretary Greg Canfield, Lawson and Baldwin County Commission Chairman Chris Elliott.

Last year, the Charlotte-based company announced a $30 million, 260-job expansion at its aerostructures plant in Foley that will supply jet engine systems to the Airbus A320 Family assembly line in Mobile.

We chose Foley to expand because of its proven track record of performance, our desire to be near a key customer, and the tremendous cooperation weve had from the state, county and the city, he said when the project was announced.

Baldwin Countys other aerospace companies include KLX Aerospace Solutions, Wesco Aircraft Corp., Continental Motors and Segers Aerospace.

INDUSTRY SUPPORT

Elliott said the county offers a host of assets for aerospace companies.

Baldwin County is the fastest growing county in the state of Alabama and 8th fastest-growing MSA in the U.S, so we offer a place where talented people want to live, he said. We have a workforce that is successfully supporting the industry across our region, we also have training assets with Coastal Alabama Community College overseeing the State Aviation and Aerospace College now.

We can offer not only a great place to do business, but we offer aerospace companies a turnkey solution for long-term success and sustainability.

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Baldwin County targets aerospace growth at Paris Air Show - Made In Alabama