Monthly Archives: February 2022

Students With Perseverance Receive Personalized Messages From Mars Courtesy of NASA – SciTechDaily

Posted: February 21, 2022 at 6:42 pm

This illustration depicts NASAs Perseverance rover operating on the surface of Mars. Credit: NASA

The first set of middle-schoolers in the agencys Youve Got Perseverance! campaign was honored with a message from the Red Planet and a chat with the rover team at JPL.

A group of 20 young students who have shown the character trait that NASAs Perseverance rover is named for received messages of encouragement directly from that six-wheeled scientist on Mars.

Nominated by educators and community leaders from across the country, the cohort is the first group in the agencys Youve Got Perseverance! awards, which honor U.S. students in sixth through eighth grade who have shown that nothing will deter them from their educational journey.

Twenty students along with their parents, teachers, and classmates met virtually with Mars rover team members at JPL, where they received personalized messages beamed from NASAs Perseverance rover as part of the Youve Got Perseverance campaign. Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech

On a February 15 video conferencing call, the students got to see the rover team working in a control room at the agencys Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Southern California as Perseverance Surface Mission Manager Jessica Samuels walked them virtually through the facility. In the 60-minute program, students got to ask questions of dozens of rover team members and learn how Perseverance used its Seq. Echo capability to send the messages (generated by the team on Earth, then relayed to Mars and back). Samuels introduced a video featuring the individualized text messages the rover had sent to the students from some 200 million miles (320 million kilometers) away. This is the first time students have received personalized messages from a rover on another planet.

Perseverance had this message for Shannon Hayes, an eighth-grader from Lake Worth, Florida: Shannon, you show nothing will stop you if you put your mind to it. Way to go!

Jennifer Trosper, Mars Perseverance project manager, leads rover team members at JPL in a round of applause for students who were honored through the Youve Got Perseverance campaign for overcoming obstacles in pursuit of their educational goals. Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech

Shannon has a genetic condition that makes her medically fragile and prevents her from attending school in person, her teacher said in nominating her for the opportunity. Despite the students severe physical limitations, her work is impeccable and detailed, and shows amazing grasp of concepts. Her maturity and positive attitude are the best I have ever seen, the teacher wrote.

For her part, when it came to the Q&A, Shannon wanted to know about the difficulty of driving the rover in Mars low gravity. Other students had questions about evidence of water on Mars, the types of samples Perseverance has collected, how the rover uses plutonium for power, and how its designed to survive the harsh environment on the Red Planet. Perseverance Project Manager Jennifer Trosper told the kids their questions made her certain they were on a path to success, and she said she teared up reading nomination forms for the students, some of whom have overcome serious obstacles.

I read your stories and I was so inspired, Trosper told the kids, going on to say, That perseverance and grit and determination thats what it takes to succeed.

The program connects students with the rover team at JPL, whose members have faced several challenges during the rovers development, journey to Mars, white-knuckle landing, and mission on the surface all during a global pandemic that has prompted much of the team to work remotely.

Students who have likewise persisted, showing tenacity, self-motivation, and the ability to overcome obstacles in pursuit of their goals, are eligible to be honored by the rover team and NASA.

Candidates must be nominated by an educator or community leader with firsthand knowledge of the students academic improvement through adversity, and a second nominator must validate the submission. After entries are screened to ensure students meet the criteria, selection for participation is made through a lottery.

The Youve Got Perseverance program is continuing through the rest of this school year. Three more nomination windows are planned, including a window thats open now and closes February 28. The next groups awardees will be announced March 24.

More About Perseverance

A key objective for Perseverances mission on Mars is astrobiology, including the search for signs of ancient microbial life. The rover will characterize the planets geology and past climate, pave the way for human exploration of the Red Planet, and be the first mission to collect and cache Martian rock and regolith (broken rock and dust).

Subsequent NASA missions, in cooperation with ESA (European Space Agency), would send spacecraft to Mars to collect these sealed samples from the surface and return them to Earth for in-depth analysis.

The Mars 2020 Perseverance mission is part of NASAs Moon to Mars exploration approach, which includes Artemis missions to the Moon that will help prepare for human exploration of the Red Planet.

JPL, which is managed for NASA by Caltech in Pasadena, California, built and manages operations of the Perseverance rover.

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Freefall flights test feasibility of making oxygen on the moon and Mars – Chemistry World

Posted: at 6:42 pm

Electrolysis of water to produce oxygen to breathe on bases on the moon or Mars could be up to 11% less efficient due to their lower gravities compared with the Earth, UK researchers have found. The finding supports the viability of the approach but it highlights the importance of limiting the effects of low gravity in the development of such systems for future missions.

Gravity on the moon and Mars is only 0.16g and 0.37g respectively, compared with the Earths 1g. Scientists knew that electrolysis of water is less efficient at zero-g, owing to oxygen bubbles being less buoyant and collecting around electrodes. However, technical challenges had meant that no one had studied the process at micro-g levels between 0.01g and 1g, and therefore how lunar or Martian gravity would affect oxygen production.

Now, a team led by Mark Symes at the University of Glasgow, UK, have conducted water electrolysis experiments within this range for the first time. They used a centrifuge system on board freefall flights with the help of the European Space Agencys Fly Your Thesis! programme.

The extent of this reduced efficiency at lunar gravity is comparably mild: maybe only 11% or so less efficient, says Symes. That means electrolysis of water could be a viable route to producing oxygen on the moon, at least in terms of efficiency.

The centrifuge system, which included an electrolysis cell, can be spun to simulate gravitational forces anywhere from 1g to 8g. The researchers mounted this system inside Frances Novespaces Zero-G airbus, which flew in parabolic arcs to bring the system and the researchers into zero gravity. The centrifuge was then spun to simulate gravitational forces between 0.01g and 1g.

The results suggest that mitigating the 11% drop in the efficiency of oxygen production under lunar gravity would require around 1% more power to match production on Earth. It is important to know what sort of performance and efficiency can be expected as every watt of power needs to be budgeted for on space missions, says Symes.

The work demonstrates once more that electrolytic oxygen production on the moon and Mars is feasible, says Katharina Brinkert, who studies oxygen production in microgravity at the University of Warwick, UK. However, challenges regarding the required additional energy input due to hindered gas bubble desorption remain.

Symes suggests solutions to overcome the effects of low gravity could include structuring electrodes so that bubbles detach more easily or simply shaking the electrolyser to dislodge bubbles. Our cell is by no means optimised, so more realistic cells definitely need to be built and tested, adds Symes.

Testing and optimising electrolysis systems could now be much quicker and easier thanks to the results that the team obtained. As a benchmark, it means oxygen evolution on the moon or Mars can be predicted without always taking costly and time-consuming parabolic flights. It would just require ground-based high g centrifuge experiments and extrapolating the results to lunar and Martian gravity levels. This is particularly beneficial given the long-term testing requirements for oxygen-evolving systems before their application on the moon and Mars, adds Brinkert.

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Stream It Or Skip It: Rabbids Invasion: Mission to Mars on Netflix, a Spinoff Special of the Cartoon Series That Extends the Silliness to Feature…

Posted: at 6:42 pm

So many of us can live the rest of our lives in blissful satisfaction now that Netflix has released Rabbids Invasion: Mission to Mars, a spinoff special of the animated series in which little rubbery rabbit-like aliens gibber nonsense-speak and participate in endless cartoon violence. Theyre indestructible squeak toys that never shut up and constantly smack each other around. And now theyre going to Mars! That these obnoxious creations deserve the feature-length treatment is dubious at best but will they inspire a few laughs, or make us wish they were truly being shot into outer space? Lets find out.

The Gist: Theres this Rabbid who isnt like the other Rabbids. For starters, he has an Amish beard/combover combo, and looks like your ninth-grade earth science teacher. Hes also not an unapologetically raving moron with the IQ of a hammer (a peen hammer of some kind, Id wager). In fact, hes a math maniac and science wiz. And when he learns that big-tech CEO Frank Nebula wants to send Rabbids to Mars their indestructible nature allows them to survive Mars harsh atmosphere, see our bearded protagonist does everything he can to prove hes worthy of the mission. It shouldnt be hard, right? I mean, the other Rabbids couldnt be dumber, unless they were QAnon devotees.

So our guy makes his way to Nebula HQ, where a roomful of Rabbids take part in incessant antics: screaming, trying to eat fireworks, dancing to brainless instrumental electro-disco, making fart noises and watching Sunny Love Beach, a Magnum P.I.-meets-Baywatch TV show that makes Emily in Paris look like The Wire. Beardo earns the trust of a couple lower-rung scientists who name him Scribbles, and, after many false starts, finally get him a seat on the rocket to the Red Planet. Scribbles will be joined by a shrieking baby Rabbid, a Rabbid obsessed with taking selfies and the disco Rabbid in legwarmers and a butthugger speedo. They could be more obnoxious, they could be less. Lets just say their obnoxiousness inspires ambivalence.

Of course, nothing goes according to plan. Antics on the rocket turn into antics on the surface, especially after the Rabbids discover bloblike tri-eyed Martians, who also participate in antics. But, as anyone smarter than a Rabbid suspected, Frank Nebula has an ulterior motive, a nefarious plan-beneath-the-plan that cements his status as the bad guy. Whatd you expect from a big-tech CEO? The selfless non-capitalist pursuit of scientific discovery for the good of all humankind?

What Movies Will It Remind You Of?: Id say Rabbids are outright ripoffs of Minions, but the bulging-eyed noseless little white things predate the bulging-eyed noseless little yellow things by four years. I will say Shaun the Sheep says a lot more while saying nothing than any of these characters, though.

Performance Worth Watching: Kudos to Scribbles for staying true to himself even when he doesnt fit in with others of his ilk. Theres a moment where he pretends to be your run-of-the-mill stumbling-idiot Rabbid, and hes either really bad at being stump-stupid, or a lousy actor.

Memorable Dialogue: Mm mm-mmm? Ba BA ba. this could be Rabbid Shakespeare for all we know

Sex and Skin: None.

Our Take: Well, antics do not make for compelling drama. It takes half the runtime of RI:MtM for the flibbertigibbet to wane before the plot gets in gear and things start happening. Not that six-year-olds will give a crap; flibbertigibbet is their life, and perhaps in the Rabbids random lunacy, young children will see themselves. But hopefully those selves will never try to eat fireworks.

My theory for this special, one that perhaps extends to Rabbids Invasion in general cartoon shorts, video games, etc. is that its creators are actively seeking to convey no message whatsoever. No subtext, no moralizing, no lessons in civic duty a la those self-righteous little shit dogs on Paw Patrol. Maybe Mission to Mars brushes up against satire, of 1980s TV series, of the big-tech CEO as a cartoon villain. But I assert that such things are byproducts of my being older than 11.

Our Call: Rabbids Invasion: Mission to Mars is jabberwocky for jabberwockys sake. If that appeals to you, then STREAM IT after you get off the bus from elementary school.

John Serba is a freelance writer and film critic based in Grand Rapids, Michigan. Read more of his work at johnserbaatlarge.com.

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Stream It Or Skip It: Rabbids Invasion: Mission to Mars on Netflix, a Spinoff Special of the Cartoon Series That Extends the Silliness to Feature...

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The Mystery of Methane on Mars Thickens – Eos

Posted: at 6:42 pm

Editors Vox is a blog from AGUs Publications Department.

The presence and concentration of methane (CH4) in the martian atmosphere is of paramount importance to planetary scientists and exobiologists because it could be the signal of present or past microbial life. Alternatively, it could be related to nonbiological processes including present or past volcanism or hydrothermal activity.

The discrepancy between the CH4 detection from measurements by Curiosity on the surface in Gale Crater and the CH4 non-detection by the ExoMars Trace Gas Orbiter (TGO) from orbit has led to a vibrant debate in the scientific community. Two recent articles published in AGU journals (Luo et al., 2021 and Videz-Moreiras et al., 2021) start from the premise that both measurements are correct and use innovative approaches to characterize the potential source regions of the CH4 emissions and resulting implications that would reconcile the different data sets. They converge on a surprising result.

Earth-based and orbital observations of methane in the Martian atmosphere have been reported since 1999 and they are at odds since the beginning. They show highly variable and inconsistent methane concentrations, with global averages ranging from 5 to 33 ppbv (Pla-Garca et al., 2019). Over the last years, Curiosity has observed in Gale a background level of ~0.41 ppbv with a few episodic spikes up to ~21 ppbv (Webster et al., 2021). Intriguingly, concurrent TGO observations of the atmosphere in the vicinity of Gale resulted in no detection, with estimated global (planet-average) upper limits as small as 0.02 ppbv (Montmessin et al., 2021).

To pinpoint the possible source areas of CH4 emissions, the study by Videz-Moreiras et al. (2021) uses atmospheric dispersion modeling while Luo et al. (2021) uses back trajectory analysis.

Based on prevailing modeled winds, Videz-Moreiras et al. (2021) map out downstream emission regions by predicting how much methane released at a given area and time can reach Curiosity (Eulerian approach), while Luo et al. (2021) map out upstream emission regions by transporting backwards in time the amount of methane measured by Curiosity (Lagrangian approach).

In both cases, Curiosity measurements provide the ground truth, and the upper limits of TGO measurements provide the boundary condition for the maximum global average CH4 concentration.

The seemingly contradictory observations used as constraints and combined with a rigorous scientific logic lead the authors of the two studies to infer that only very small CH4 emissions coming from a source located in the northwestern rim of Gale Crater, i.e., from very close to the rover, can lead to a detection by Curiosity and non-detection by TGO. The result also excludes globally all other sources of methane as such sources would generate a global background level larger than the upper limit (0.02 ppbv) observed by TGO.

The Martian scientists are therefore left with the following alternative scenarios, all of which have difficulties: (1) Curiosity has landed on or right next to the only CH4 source on the planet, which is extremely unlikely, (2) there is something wrong with the measurements, but this possibility has been investigated in detail and ruled out (Webster et al., 2018, 2021), 3) CH4 lifetime in the Martian atmosphere is for some unknown reason much shorter than predicted by known chemistry, including the possibility of an unknown fast removal mechanism, which should not affect significantly other species, since the known chemistry explains well their behavior. The possible scenarios are nailed down but the mystery thickens.

Germn Martnez (gmartinez@lpi.usra.edu; 0000-0001-5885-236X), Associate Editor, JGR: Planets; Anni Mttnen ( 0000-0002-7326-8492), Editor, JGR: Planets; and David Baratoux ( 0000-0002-1785-5262), Editor, Earth and Space Science

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Objective Mars: Inserm, from science to health – Vaughan Today

Posted: at 6:42 pm

A loyal partner of the Futuroscope, Inserm returns for the third time to the Chasseneuil-du-Poitou Park, near Poitiers. After opening a photo exhibition there in 2009, and then helping to design the virus-attack gravity in 2014, the institute this time teamed up with the National Center for Space Studies (Cnes) to imagine the Objectif Mars gravity, which was launched in June 2020.

Inserm has set out a fun trail overlooking the parks first roller coaster ride and very innovative. For fun of course but with the ambition to travel to Mars! The new attraction collides from the start: it appears to be down at the end of the park, but some of the solid outer bars, slightly sprawling and visible from afar, are interesting. With its 20 million investment, the largest to date for a Futuroscope, this roller coaster marks the beginning of a new era, highly immersive, and even more sensual. Screams of carriage escape partly permeate the waiting outside, as well as pre-boarding. This is where Inserm comes in.

Before embarking on a three-minute rail ride which is the norm in the park follow the handrails of a science course. Across the panels that line it, the visitor gathers a wealth of information, both amusing and incongruous, allowing to fix some solid knowledge about the space. Why do we age faster outside the atmosphere? Can you walk around Mars in a T-shirt? Covid-19 obliges, some trials planned, based on small manipulations, temporarily inaccessible. The fact remains that settling in the rickety seat of the astronaut, in the rocket before takeoff, sets the tone towards Mars, the rest will be minimal. Finally, the boarding platform shows the flow of passengers from very high; Nothing like it to raise the pressure a bit.

Every hour, about 1,000 people are propelled at 55 km/h (more than enough!) in small spinning carts that rush down the roller coaster. This means that the pace is continuous. The ride has a few surprises in store: At its most intense moment, youll experience solar flares, encounter strong magnetic fields, and then pick up speed, until an absolutely stunning finish. When you think youve done the job, the attraction suddenly loses height We wont say more than that. If the buggies were really inspired by the original NASA training equipment, the experience remains affordable: they heat up, then they vibrate. In short, a captivating experience that combines science and relaxation. Thanks to Inserm, you might be able to answer this thorny question: Will you hear screeching on Mars, too?

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Can You Grow Chickpeas on Mars? Plants Go to Space to Find Out – The Beet

Posted: at 6:42 pm

As the Shuttle lifts off Saturday with its first-ever crop of chickpea plants, we may be thinking: Why dont we do everything we can to save this planet, rather than worry about whether its possible to grow chickpeas in space? To live more sustainably, here on Earth, skip the ham sandwich and instead grab a tub of hummus and veggies.

If we want to elongate life on our planet, switch out the animal protein for plant protein like legumes, and chickpeas make a great snack and salad staple.

For the sake oflearning more aboutfood systemson this planet, scientists and astronauts are sending chickpea plants into spaceas researchersare hoping to find out more about how to grow plants more efficiently here on Earth. Space gives us a unique opportunity to do that.

"As climate change continues and Earth's population increases we will need to find a way to grow more using fewer resources.Plant control is a promising way forward. By controlling the plants we can tell them to grow faster or slower depending on the demand and available resources," says lead researcher on project Space Hummus Yonatan Winetraub, an instructor at Stanford University who holds a Ph.D. in biophysics.

"Space amplifies these issues, as we have very few resources available to grow plants in orbit. If we can grow plants on the moon, we can definitely help world hunger."

A mini greenhouse is ready for blastoff:Yonatan Winetraub (below) holdsa mini greenhouse that is heading to the International Space Stationwhere astronauts will grow chickpeas in zero-gravityin what's been dubbed, Project "Space Hummus."

Researchers With Project 'Space Hummus' Send A Mini Greenhouse To The International Space Station

Chickpeas going to space is a new frontier. Think of the idea of eating hummuson your moonwalk.

When Don't Look Up was the movie of the month, everyone was trying to talk about the ending without giving it away. Spoiler alert: A small group makes it to Mars and finds a veritable garden of Eden. They intend to "start over" there, with new plants and species.

In reality, there is little life on Mars, and its hard to fathom growing anything, so this week, a group of scientists will send chickpeas into space on the shuttle,on the cargo mission bound for the International Space Station. The question they are seeking to answer: Can you grow chickpeas, and other essential plant-based foods and proteins, without Mother Nature's own sunshine, earth, and atmosphere?

And if any of us live long enough to visit Mars, what will be on the menu, other than astronaut food? And once that runs out, will it be possible to grow, say, a garden salad, or crudites with a side of hummus?

This is not the first time that vegetables and plants have been attempted to be grown in outer space, or for that matter in simulations of lunar and Martian soil. For one thing, Matt Damon did a pretty amazing job of fictionally growing potatoes from spuds while stranded in his Mars module in the movie, The Martian, keeping himself alive for months by eating the offspring crops of 12 potatoes, until he could fix his spaceship and get back to Earth.

The first known plants to be grown in Martian soil were simulations, from rocks harvested in the Mojave Desert. (In the movie, Matt Damon uses soil made from his own feces.) In reality, neither desert soil nor self-fertilized soil will be used.

Then in 2014, German astronauts grew lettuce and a few other salad crops in highly controlled environments in space, watered by purified urine, which it turns out is a nifty way to re-introduce nitrates to the soil.

These chickpeas are being grown in a nutrition gel specifically designed for chickpeas. There is confidence among the scientific community that the plants will grow, based on light and soil, moisture, and oxygen in their controlled environment. But in a zero-gravity environment, will the plants grow up to the light? Gravity plays a role in the growth of vegetables. (That is why fiber exists, to help the plants stand and reach for the light.)

The other important question is will it act the same way without gravity? The other question the researchers want to answer is: How do you control the growth of the plants once they get them going since you want to make sure they don't use up all your oxygen or resources once they take hold. So what happens if it is too successful? Can you shut it off?

Success is affirming that chickpeas can be a viable product grown on Mars or in space, that can be started and stopped at will by scientists and future generations of hummus lovers, said a spokesperson close to the project. The goal is to maximize productivity and allow efficient management of resources on future space colonies on the moon and Mars.

Sabra, the hummus company is as excited as any chickpea lover that this is happening. If you are as amped as they are, you can get in on the action by trying to win a limited-edition T-shirt that they are giving away co-created with @haveanicedayy_. So, if you want to win one, and celebrate your love of hummus, chickpeas on Mars, and the epic occasion, head to their social posts to find out how to enter for your chance to win.

So far, scientists have grown nine vegetables in a simulatedMartianor lunar soil: Tomatoes, radishes, peas, garden cress, rocket (greens), radishes, rye, quinoa, chives, and leeks. More importantly, the seeds from some of these plants were able to produce new crops, vital to sustaining life on our planet. The only chance humans have of sustainable living is to figure out how to grow generations of food, long after what they bring in their spaceships run out.

A recent story in the Daily Mail quotes a study that found ninevegetables can successfully grow on Mars Scientists found nine vegetables that can successfully grow on Mars including quinoa, radishes, and tomatoes. Some of the seeds from the crops can be used to grow a new generation of crops.

Back in2016,Wieger Wamelink, a plant ecologist based at Wageningen University, hosted a meal at the New World Hotel in the Netherlands, treating his 50 guests to a dinner of foods that had been grown in a simulation of the Mars atmosphere. The dishes includedpea puree appetizers, potato and nettle soup with rye bread, and radish foam,followed by a carrot sorbet. If these foods can be grown on Mars, then certainly the mighty chickpea can too.

Fast forward to the latest initiative, called the "Red Thumbs" project at Villanova University in Pennsylvania, where researchers have now added tomatoes, garlic, spinach, basil, kale, lettuce, rocket, onion, and radishes, according to Science Focus.As with every crop, there have been ups and downs, but kale turned out to grow better on the simulated Martian soil than it does on regular soil. The biggest excitement surrounding the success of barley and hops, since the students hoped to be able to growMartian beer!

Other crops struggled, such as the much-needed and calorie-dense potatoes. It turns out potatoes prefer more loose, uncompacted soil and failed to grow as the simulant soils became heavy and impenetrable when watered, which led to the potatoes being choked out.

This Out-of-This World hummus recipe is for your guests as your watch the shuttle take off on Saturday, with the precious cargo of baby chickpea plants on board. Make it any day.

Tomato Hummus on Flatbread

Sabra is giving away free t-shirts

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Excited space boffins think they’ve found ‘female pleasure device’ on Mars – Daily Star

Posted: at 6:41 pm

A snap taken by NASAs Curiosity rover shows a bizarre rock that could be evidence Mars was once home to water but the scientific discovery has been quickly mocked on Twitter for looking like a dildo.

Freelance space expert Paul Scott Anderson uploaded a picture of the Martian geology find to the site to trigger scientific discussion.

But the rock was ridiculed on Twitter by people who said it looked like a sex toy.

One user joked: I recognize that its a Martian female pleasure device must have been dropped.

Whilst another labelled it as a Martian pleasure stimulator device.

But not everyone on the platform agreed with its explicit look-a-like and some reckoned it actually resembled a pair of alien high-heeled shoes.

One person commented: A Martian shoehorn! Now at least we know the shape of their foot whilst another claimed: Thats an alien high heel.

But the real reason for the rocks smooth shape could be much more exciting, boffins say.

It could be down to the planet once housing water and having huge crater lakes billions of years ago.

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The rock could have been formed by water spilling over from the lakes to carve the huge valleys that remain on the surface today.

But even with all the discussion surrounding alien dildos and high-heeled shoes, the replies to the tweet got weirder still as a company claimed they owned the image of the rock as an NFT.

A letter sent to Anderson after his post claims they have reserved all rights to the rock and says he should delete the picture even though it was made publicly available by NASA.

Last month, claims that Mars houses alien life were boosted when a UFO conspiracy theorist spotted an alien figure watching over the Mars rover.

Self-professed expert Scott C. Waring said the sight was "100% proof of intelligent life" after catching a glimpse of the foot-tall being with a pink body from his home in Taiwan.

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The Trouble with Gambling – Relevant Radio

Posted: at 6:40 pm

We just passed the biggest gambling event of the year in the Super Bowl and were about to enter the second biggest gambling event of the year in March Madness. As a more relevant topic than ever and as a growing practice for many sports fans around the world, Cale spent a segment of The Cale Clarke Show diving into the concept of gambling and his experience with it.

As the gambling world has evolved with the age of technology by introducing apps and digital sites for betting, so too have the bets themselves evolved. You can bet on the length of the National Anthem, the outcome of the coin toss, the number of penalties, the color of someones shoes, the length of the halftime show, and a million other things. Its an attempt to get as many people involved in sports gambling as possible, whether they follow sports or not. And its working.

But thats not immoral on its own. As a business, you want to attract as many customers as possible. Thats understandable. But when discussing the morality of something like gambling, you need to look at factors like the intrinsic nature of gambling, the methods of attraction, potentially predatory practices, and just what stakeholders in gambling companies are doing to assure the well-being of all users.

Cale actually worked in the gambling industry for a while in his early 20s when they introduced a casino to his town of Cole Harbor in Nova Scotia. Out of the hundreds of people wrapped around the block looking to apply for a job there, Cale was one of the select few to get hired. While he started humbly in the parking lot, he was soon bumped up to a position on the in-house marketing team.

He remembers being trained to begin a promotional campaign inside the casino itself and one of the superiors told him that he should not be surprised if he witnesses people refusing to leave the slot machines to eat or go to the bathroom. Its so addicting that people posted up there for hours. Throughout his time in the casino, Cale learned the tricks of the casino. He noticed that there were no windows and there were no clocks. They purposely wanted people to lose track of time and spend as much time as possible inside.

And, as everybody knows (or should know) the odds are always in the houses favor. To misquote The Hunger Games, the odds are [never] in your favor, said Cale. Theres no such thing as a sure thing, and if you stick around betting for long enough, youll end up in the red. Thats why casinos owners want you in their establishment for as long as possible. But, as Cale pointed out, its a money-making venture. You should know the risk going into it and thats why youre required to be 21 to gamble.

When Cale first started his position at the casino, he saw gambling as just another form of entertainment. For instance, people pay to go to sporting events. They pay to go bowling or to a movie. People are similarly paying for this gambling experience (unless you win money). However, the more time Cale spent there, the more he realized that theres nothing entertaining about losing your money. And, he said, the majority of people he noticed going to bet their hard-earned money were people who could not afford to do so.

The ironic part was that in the end, gambling has absolutely nothing to do with money. People dont get addicted because theyre chasing a win or trying to keep a streak going. People get addicted because theyre obsessed with the feeling, the thrill. Its an artificial trigger of dopamine that makes you feel good. Eventually, Cale began getting uncomfortable with his role in the casino and he turned to his spiritual director.

Do you think gambling is wrong? Cale asked Father Mike. Well, he said, I think gambling and this whole industry plays on an inherent weakness of human beings, which is the temptation to fall for the love of money. One of the most commonly misquoted passages of the Bible is in 1 Timothy. People often say that money is the root of all evil when the passage actually says, For the love of money is the root of all evils, and some people in their desire for it have strayed from the faith and have pierced themselves with many pains. (1 Timothy 6:10) Money is not the cause of problems, but an inordinate love for money is.

Games of chance(card games, etc.) orwagersare not in themselves contrary to justice. They become morally unacceptable when they deprive someone of what is necessary to provide for his needs and those of others. The passion for gambling risks becoming an enslavement. Unfair wagers and cheating at games constitute grave matter, unless the damage inflicted is so slight that the one who suffers it cannot reasonably consider it significant. (CCC, #2413)

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Is Gambling Sinful?

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AGA Wants Government Intervention for Offshore Gambling – GamblingNews.com

Posted: at 6:40 pm

Among issues confronting the US legal sports betting industry, particularly the web-based segment, is the test presented by offshore sportsbooks. The American Gaming Association (AGA) is calling for government intervention to target the unlicensed market. This segment, it asserts, is hindering the growth of the legal market. At the same time, while other countries are clamping down on gambling advertisements, the AGA cautions that advertising is the only thing that can separate the good from the bad.

Most operators yield that the offshore sites actually control most of the advanced games wagering market. Thus far, theres been no significantly viable counter-methodology to prevent bettors from going to any alternative where they might feel theyre improving their odds, regardless of the legal status of the site.

AGA President Bill Miller responded to media inquiries on an assortment of themes last week after providing an update on the state of gambling in the US. He asserted, when asked about federal government involvement, that the government should crack down on offshore gambling like it did online poker in 2011. He suggested that the Department of Justice, the Department of State and other agencies should be involved.

Miller added, This is the one area where we talk about what can the federal government do to help our industry. This is (a) really important (one).

For some time, theres been a decent measure of conversation that the forceful feel of sports wagering in TV advertising could cause consternation on the part of consumers. This would, in turn, lead to greater federal intervention in gambling advertising.

In Europe and the UK, guardrails, regardless of whether willfully or forced, have been put in place for betting advertising. This, regulators assert, is due to a perceived inappropriate or overpowering nature of the commercials. Similar restrictions are expected for the US market, as well.

However, Miller cautions against it. He explained that getting legal sports wagering right is about moving clients from the offshore sites and into the protected, legal market. He asserted, Look at New York and Louisiana (where online sports betting launched just prior to the Super Bowl). Does anybody reasonably think that millions of people just decided to try out sports betting for the first time last month? Of course not.

Miller added, Raising the awareness and attracting players to legal sportsbooks is how we protect consumers, generate needed tax revenue for states, and how well stamp out the illegal market and advertising has helped to fuel this change.

The AGAs boss is using a commonsense approach to manage an issue. However, whether that approach can be understood by lawmakers remains to be seen.

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AGA Wants Government Intervention for Offshore Gambling - GamblingNews.com

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NHS to open two additional gambling addiction clinics – Casino Beats

Posted: at 6:40 pm

The NHS has confirmed the opening of two new clinics this year to specialise in gambling addiction treatment as it cites record demand for specialist support.

Opening in May, the two centres, located in Southampton and Stoke-on-Trent, will join the five current NHS clinics in London, Leeds, Manchester, and Sunderland, as well as the pilot childrens and young persons clinic.

Gambling addiction is a cruel mental health condition that can devastate peoples lives our pilot clinics are already having a lasting impact in helping people to take back vital control of their lives, expressed NHSs Mental Health Director, Claire Murdoch.

The opening of two new gambling clinics in May, as a part of our 2.3bn investment into mental health services, will mean we can help even more people with the most serious gambling problems.

In addition to the aforementioned, the service also plans to initiate a Gambling Harm Network and Clinical Reference Group later this year, with the goal of consolidating expertise together and enabling clinical teams to share best practices on the treatment of problem gambling.

This comes after the NHS made the decision to cut its financial ties with the gambling industry, stating that it will no longer be accepting contributions from operators and fully funding its treatment services including the newly planned clinics via its own resources.

Patients and clinicians asserted through feedback that they had reservations about the potential for conflict of interest from the gambling industry, due to the sector generating 14bn annually whilst funding treatment for addiction.

In an open letter to Zoe Osmund, CEO at GambleAware, Murdoch revealed that the NHS will cease accepting RET contributions from the betting sector, a development that had been anticipated by industry stakeholders.

Murdoch noted: It is also absolutely right that the NHS now funds these clinics independently, recognising the harmful effects this addiction can have on the nations mental health, and that predatory tactics from gambling companies are part of the problem, not the solution.

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NHS to open two additional gambling addiction clinics - Casino Beats

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