Rabu, 26 Februari 2020

Scientists discovered the first animal that doesn't need oxygen to live. It's changing the definition of what an animal can be - CNN

Researchers just discovered a unique organism that doesn't need to breathe. Instead, the tiny parasite lives in salmon tissue and evolved so that it doesn't need oxygen to produce energy.
It's a brilliant simplification that proves, sometimes, less is more, said Stephen Atkinson, senior research associate at Oregon State University's Department of Microbiology.
A 550-million-year-old worm was one of the first animals to move and make decisions, a new study says
Atkinson co-authored a paper on the groundbreaking, less than 10-celled Henneguya salminicola that appeared in the journal PNAS this week.
"When we think of 'animals,' we picture multicellular creatures that need oxygen to survive, unlike many single-celled organisms including protists and bacteria," he told CNN. "In our work, we have shown that there is at least one multicellular animal that does not have the genetic toolkit to use oxygen."
The H. salminicola is a myxozoan cnidarian, a type of animal related to jellyfish and coral. It lives inside salmon and "steals ready-made nutrients" from it, Atkinson said, instead of consuming oxygen directly.
The team's findings, he said, expand the definition of what an "animal" can be. It's pretty epic stuff for such a diminutive creature.

The parasite lives in low-oxygen environments, so it doesn't breathe

The organism forms small white cysts in the muscle of salmon. It probably doesn't harm the fish and can't infect humans, the researchers said.
A 300-million-year-old lizard might be the earliest animal to care for its offspring, a new study says
But the environment inside its fish host is largely devoid of oxygen, so for the parasite to survive, it "breathes" without oxygen at all. It's adapted by dropping its mitochondria genome entirely. Mitochondria convert food into energy in most organisms.
"By losing the genome, the parasite is saving energy by not having to copy genes for things it no longer needs," Atkinson said.
An animal this gobsmacking naturally presents more questions than it does answers. The researchers don't know for certain what the parasite relies on instead of oxygen, but Atkinson said he assumes it absorbs molecules from its host that have already produced energy.
Atkinson and his team don't think this species is the last oxygen-free animal, either. He said he expects to discover many more species that can survive without oxygen -- and probably "even weirder modes of existence."

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2020-02-26 13:24:00Z
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Tel Aviv University researchers discover a non-breathing living animal - The Jerusalem Post

Life science researchers at Tel Aviv University (TAU) have stumbled upon a non-breathing animal, challenging current understanding of the animal world, according to a study published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.The research, led by Prof. Dorothee Huchon of the School of Zoology at TAU’s Faculty of Life Sciences and Steinhardt Museum of Natural History, detailed the 10-celled parasite organism called Henneguya salminicola that is found in the muscles of salmon. The research was supported by the US-Israel Binational Science Foundation, and conducted along with Prof. Paulyn Cartwright of the University of Kansas, and Prof. Jerri Bartholomew and Dr. Stephen Atkinson of Oregon State University."The parasite’s anaerobic nature was an accidental discovery," TAU said in a statement. "While assembling the Henneguya genome, Huchon found that it did not include a mitochondrial genome. The mitochondria are the powerhouse of the cell where oxygen is captured to make energy, so its absence indicated that the animal was not breathing oxygen." The animal itself, a "myxozoan relative" of jellyfish and corals, apparently gave up on breathing and consuming oxygen in order to produce energy, somewhere along its evolutionary track. “Aerobic respiration was thought to be ubiquitous in animals, but now we confirmed that this is not the case,” Huchon explains. “Our discovery shows that evolution can go in strange directions. Aerobic respiration is a major source of energy, and yet we found an animal that gave up this critical pathway.”Fungi, amoebas or ciliate lineages living in oxygen-poor environments abandoned the need to consume fresh air quite some time ago, after their evolutionary trajectories followed an anaerobic path. The findings allude to the possibility that the same type of occurrence could happen to an animal if the conditions are right."Its genome was sequenced, along with those of other myxozoan fish parasites," TAU said in a statement. Before the discovery, experts were unsure whether organisms within the animal kingdom could survive without oxygen, given that animals are "multicellular, highly developed organisms, which first appeared on Earth when oxygen levels rose." The findings are important for future evolutionary research.“It’s not yet clear to us how the parasite generates energy," Huchon said. "It may be drawing it from the surrounding fish cells, or it may have a different type of respiration such as oxygen-free breathing, which typically characterizes anaerobic non-animal organisms. It is generally thought that during evolution, organisms become more and more complex, and that simple single-celled or few-celled organisms are the ancestors of complex organisms.“But here, right before us, is an animal whose evolutionary process is the opposite. Living in an oxygen-free environment, it has shed unnecessary genes responsible for aerobic respiration and become an even simpler organism.”

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2020-02-26 12:08:00Z
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Selasa, 25 Februari 2020

NASA says its InSight lander has detected over 450 'marsquakes' - Engadget

IPGP/Nicolas Sarter

Marsquakes are more common but less intense than NASA thought. That's one of the things the agency has revealed in the six papers it recently published on InSight's findings since it landed on the red planet. Apparently, InSight's Seismic Experiment for Interior Structure instrument (SEIS) recorded over 450 seismic signals or "trembling" events since last year. Now, the agency has announced that "the vast majority" of them were probably marsquakes and not merely noise created by environmental factors like the wind.

NASA has also revealed that the largest quake SEIS found was around magnitude 4.0 in size, which is milder than scientists expected. That's not quite strong enough to get readings from the planet's lower mantle and core, though, which scientists are hoping to get. InSight principal investigator Bruce Banerdt described those layers as the "the juiciest parts of the apple" when it comes to learning about the planet's inner structure, which can help shed light on how rocky planets form.

Marsquakes, however, aren't quite like earthquakes. The planet doesn't have tectonic plates, and scientists believe its rumblings come from volcanically active regions and an internal cooling process that causes the core to contract and build stress. In fact, when InSight detected the first potential quake, NASA's Planetary Science Division director Lori Glaze compared the event to a moonquake, which is typically weaker and much longer than earthquakes.

Source: NASA
Coverage: Business Insider
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2020-02-25 13:36:05Z
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NASA has a new idea to get the InSight lander's 'mole' on Mars digging again - Space.com

The "mole" aboard NASA's Mars InSight lander is about to get yet another push.

The mole — a self-hammering tool designed to get InSight's burrowing heat probe at least 10 feet (3 meters) underground — hasn't made much downward progress since its deployment on the Red Planet's surface in February 2019.

The Martian soil at InSight's landing site has proven to be surprisingly slippery, depriving the mole of the friction it needs to dig, mission team members have said. The team has tried several strategies to get the mole moving over the past year. The most recent effort involved pinning the mole against the side of its burrow with InSight's 5.75-foot-long (1.8 m) robotic arm, in an attempt to generate the necessary friction. 

Related: Mars InSight in photos: NASA's mission to probe Martian core

Pinning met with some success initially, but the mole ended up popping back out of its hole. So, the mission team is gearing up to try using the arm in a slightly different way: pushing on the mole's top, also known as the "back cap."

This will be a somewhat delicate operation, because a fragile tether extends from the back cap to InSight's body. This tether is studded with temperature sensors, which are designed to measure the heat flowing through the Martian near-subsurface.

"It might take several tries to perfect the back-cap push, just as pinning did. Throughout late February and early March, InSight's arm will be maneuvered into position so that the team can test what happens as the mole briefly hammers," NASA officials wrote in a mission update on Friday (Feb. 21).

"Meanwhile, the team is also considering using the scoop to move more soil into the hole that has formed around the mole," they added. "This could add more pressure and friction, allowing it to finally dig down. Whether they pursue this route depends on how deep the mole is able to travel after the back-cap push."

InSight's heat probe, officially known as the Heat Flow and Physical Properties Package (HP3), was provided by the German Aerospace Center. HP3 is one of InSight's two main science instruments, the other being a suite of highly sensitive seismometers that has detected about 450 marsquakes to date.

Mission team members are also using radio signals from the lander to track the wobble of Mars' rotational axis over time, which will reveal key details about the planet's core. InSight's data will help scientists better understand Mars' interior structure, as well as the formation and evolution of rocky planets in general, mission team members have said.

The $850 million InSight spacecraft landed near the Martian equator in November 2018, kicking off a surface mission expected to last at least one Martian year (which is nearly two Earth years). On Monday (Feb. 24), the InSight team unveiled the mission's first official science results in a half-dozen papers published in the journals Nature Geoscience and Nature Communications. 

These results show that Mars is a seismically active world, and that InSight is performing well despite the mole's struggles, said mission principal investigator Bruce Banerdt, who's based at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California. 

"I think we're well on our way to getting most, if not all, of the goals that we set for ourselves 10 years ago when we started this mission," Banerdt told reporters during a teleconference last week.

Mike Wall is the author of "Out There" (Grand Central Publishing, 2018; illustrated by Karl Tate), a book about the search for alien life. Follow him on Twitter @michaeldwall. Follow us on Twitter @Spacedotcom or Facebook

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2020-02-25 12:12:00Z
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'Shocked' scientists find brain parasites in baby lizards still in shells - Livescience.com

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'Shocked' scientists find brain parasites in baby lizards still in shells  Livescience.com
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2020-02-25 12:08:00Z
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Taraji P. Henson Honors Late NASA Pioneer Katherine Johnson - msnNOW

Taraji P. Henson standing in front of a mirror posing for the camera © John Shearer/Getty Images

Hidden Figures star Taraji P. Henson has paid tribute to NASA mathematician Katherine Johnson, who died on Sunday at the age of 101.

Henson, 49, depicted Johnson in the 2016 film Hidden Figures, which received three Oscar nominations.

“Thank you QUEEN #KatherineJohnson for sharing your intelligence, poise, grace and beauty with the world!” Henson captioned a black-and-white throwback photo. “Because of your hard work little girls EVERYWHERE can dream as big as the MOON!!! Your legacy will live on FORVER AND EVER!!! You ran so we could fly!!!”

“I will forever be honored to have been apart of bringing your story to life,” Henson continued. “You/your story was hidden and thank GOD you are #hiddennomore🚀 God bless your beautiful family. I am so honored to have sat and broke bread with you all. My thoughts and prayers are with you! #RIHKatherineJohnson #representationmatters 🙏🏾🙏🏾🙏🏾💋💋💋.”

Henson’s co-star, Octavia Spencer, who played Dorothy Vaughan in the movie, then commented, “Beautiful.”

Johnson emotionally addressed the 2017 Oscars audience, taking the stage in a wheelchair.

Janelle Monae, Katherine Johnson, Taraji P. Henson, Octavia Spencer posing for the camera: Janelle Monae, NASA mathematician Katherine Johnson and actors Taraji P. Henson and Octavia Spencer pose backstage during the 89th Annual Academy Awards at Hollywood & Highland Center on February 26, 2017 in Hollywood, California. Christopher Polk/Getty Images © Christopher Polk/Getty Images Janelle Monae, NASA mathematician Katherine Johnson and actors Taraji P. Henson and Octavia Spencer pose backstage during the 89th Annual Academy Awards at Hollywood & Highland Center on February 26, 2017 in Hollywood, California. Christopher Polk/Getty Images

Her work played a significant role in helping Apollo 11 and its crew land on the moon in 1969. Her story gained wider recognition through the Hidden Figures book and movie, which highlighted how women of color contributed to achievements in outer space. An advocate for STEM (science, technology, engineering, mathematics) education, Johnson inspired many around the world.

NASA shared news of Johnson’s death on Monday, tweeting, “We're saddened by the passing of celebrated #HiddenFigures mathematician Katherine Johnson. Today, we celebrate her 101 years of life and honor her legacy of excellence that broke down racial and social barriers.”

Many others paid tribute to Johnson on social media, including former president Barack Obama, who awarded her with the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2015. "After a lifetime of reaching for the stars, today, Katherine Johnson landed among them," Obama tweeted. "She spent decades as a hidden figure, breaking barriers behind the scenes. But by the end of her life, she had become a hero to millions—including Michelle and me."

Actress Viola Davis thanked Johnson for being a "pioneer and hero," while Hidden Figures producer Pharrell Williams saluted her, writing: "RIP Katherine Johnson, thank you for blessing NASA and the world with your gifts and making Virginia proud." 

Politician and activist Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez also took to Twitter, writing, "American Hero. Thank you, Katherine Johnson."

See more on Johnson and Hidden Figures below.

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2020-02-25 10:00:00Z
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An Antarctica heat wave melted 20% of an island's snow in 9 days - msnNOW

A nine-day heat wave scorched Antarctica's northern tip earlier this month. New NASA images reveal that nearly a quarter of an Antarctic island's snow cover melted in that time -- an increasingly common symptom of the climate crisis.

© NASA

The images show Eagle Island on the northeastern peninsula of the icy continent at the start and end of this month's Antarctic heat wave. By the end of the nine-day heat event, much of the land beneath the island's ice cap was exposed, and pools of meltwater opened up on its surface.

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Antarctica experienced its hottest day on record earlier this month, peaking at 64.9 degrees Fahrenheit. Los Angeles measured the same temperature that day, NASA said.

In just over a week, 4 inches of Eagle Island's snowpack melted -- that's about 20% of the island's total seasonal snow accumulation, NASA's Earth Observatory said.

"I haven't seen melt ponds develop this quickly in Antarctica," Mauri Pelto, a geologist at Nichols College in Massachusetts, told NASA's Earth Observatory. "You see these kinds of melt events in Alaska and Greenland, but not usually in Antarctica."

Climate scientist Xavier Fettweis plotted the amount of meltwater that reached the ocean from the Antarctic peninsula. The heat wave was the highest contributor to sea level rise this summer, he said.

A perfect storm of conditions for a heat wave

As Pelot noted, melt events like this are quite rare for Antarctica, even during the summer. It's one of the coldest places on Earth.

This heat wave was the result of sustained high temperatures, he said, which almost never occurred on the continent until the 21st century. It's the kind of weather event that grows increasingly common as global temperatures rise.

This month, high pressure over Cape Horn in Chile's archipelago allowed warm temperatures to build up and travel. Antarctica's northernmost peninsula is typically protected from these high temperatures due to strong winds that cross the Southern Hemisphere, but those winds were unusually weak and couldn't stop the high temperatures from penetrating the continent's northern tip, NASA reported.

Ice caps in Antarctica are already melting rapidly due to heat-trapping gas pollution from humans. Rising sea levels could be catastrophic for the millions of people who live along the world's coasts: Antarctica's ice sheets contain enough water to raise global sea levels by nearly 200 feet, according to the World Meteorological Organization.

And earlier this month, a massive iceberg along the western edge of Antarctica broke off from the Pine Island Glacier. The 116 square mile-chunk of ice likely fractured as a result of warmer sea temperatures, and it's evidence that the glacier is quickly responding to climate change, the European Space Agency said.

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2020-02-25 02:40:00Z
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Senin, 24 Februari 2020

Scientists Detect for the First Time Quakes on Mars - The Wall Street Journal

NASA's InSight Mars lander acquired on Feb. 18 this image of the area in front of it.

Photo: JPL-Caltech/NASA

Mars trembles with quakes as it cools, and the Martian crust shrinks like a wizened apple, according to new findings from the National Aeronautics and Space Administration’s InSight lander. These faint tremors are the first ever detected on Mars or any world other than Earth or the Moon, mission scientists said.

Since the InSight’s safe landing on the red planet almost 15 months ago, the spacecraft’s six onboard seismic sensors have detected more than 450 mild marsquakes, the scientists said. The seismic waves, crisscrossing inside the planet’s crust in a variety of frequencies, are giving scientists their first look under the planet’s skin.

“We have finally for the first time established that Mars is a seismically active planet,” said geophysicist Bruce Banerdt at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif. He directs an international science team drawn from more than three dozen research facilities. “The seismicity is greater than the Moon but less than the Earth.”

On Monday, the scientists published their initial findings about the Martian interior, atmosphere and magnetic field from the $828 million mission in a series of research papers in Nature Geoscience and Nature Communications.

Quakes may be common on Mars, the scientists said. However, the atmosphere around the shallow impact crater—nicknamed Homestead Hollow—where the InSight probe landed is stirred by thousands of dust-devil swirls that make the area home to the planet’s most turbulent winds.

Inside Mars

Sensors on NASA's Mars InSight lander recorded 450 "marsquakes" in the past year or so giving scientists their first look at the planet's hidden interior.

Estimated depths of Mars’s layers

Wind-blown sand and rocky grit make up a surface crust about 16 feet or so deep. It is so compacted that the probe has been unable to drill more than a few inches deep.

 miles

0

Competent basaltic

lava flows

Ancient lava flows make up a layer of heavily fractured bedrock about 5 kilometers thick.

5

Strongly

magnetized

basement rock

10

Rocks with traces of a magnetic field make up a layer from 5 kilometers to about 30 kilometers thick.

15

20

The deep mantle and core of Mars remain a mystery. Scientists hope that stronger marsquakes in the year ahead will generate seismic waves powerful enough to reveal its composition.

Mantle

25

30

Inside Mars

Sensors on NASA's Mars InSight lander recorded 450 "marsquakes" in the past year or so giving scientists their first look at the planet's hidden interior.

Estimated depths of Mars’s layers

Wind-blown sand and rocky grit make up a surface crust about 16 feet or so deep. It is so compacted that the probe has been unable to drill more than a few inches deep.

 miles

0

Competent basaltic

lava flows

Ancient lava flows make up a layer of heavily fractured bedrock about 5 kilometers thick.

5

Strongly

magnetized

basement rock

10

Rocks with traces of a magnetic field make up a layer from 5 kilometers to about 30 kilometers thick.

15

20

The deep mantle and core of Mars remain a mystery. Scientists hope that stronger marsquakes in the year ahead will generate seismic waves powerful enough to reveal its composition.

Mantle

25

30

Inside Mars

Sensors on NASA's Mars InSight lander recorded 450 "marsquakes" in the past year or so giving scientists their first look at the planet's hidden interior.

Estimated depths of Mars’s layers

Wind-blown sand and rocky grit make up a surface crust about 16 feet or so deep. It is so compacted that the probe has been unable to drill more than a few inches deep.

 miles

0

Competent basaltic

lava flows

Ancient lava flows make up a layer of heavily fractured bedrock about 5 kilometers thick.

5

10

Strongly

magnetized

basement rock

Rocks with traces of a magnetic field make up a layer from 5 kilometers to about 30 kilometers thick.

15

20

The deep mantle and core of Mars remain a mystery. Scientists hope that stronger marsquakes in the year ahead will generate seismic waves powerful enough to reveal its composition.

Mantle

25

30

Estimated depths of Mars’s layers

Wind-blown sand and rocky grit make up a surface crust about 16 feet or so deep. It is so compacted that the probe has been unable to drill more than a few inches deep.

 miles

0

Ancient lava flows make up a layer of heavily fractured bedrock about 5 kilometers thick.

Competent basaltic

lava flows

5

10

Rocks with traces of a magnetic field make up a layer from 5 kilometers to about 30 kilometers thick.

Strongly

magnetized

basement rock

15

20

The deep mantle and core of Mars remain a mystery. Scientists hope that stronger marsquakes in the year ahead will generate seismic waves powerful enough to reveal its composition.

Mantle

25

30

Source: NASA, Nature Geosciences

Moreover, surprisingly strong traces of the planet’s primordial magnetic field billions of years ago still linger in some rocks around the landing zone, the scientists said. Unlike Mars, Earth today has a protective magnetic field generated by electric currents from the motion of molten iron in the planet’s core, shielding the surface from cosmic rays and charged solar particles.

“We unexpectedly see that there is today a [magnetic] field about 10 times stronger than predicted by satellite observations,” said mission scientist Catherine Johnson, a geophysicist at the University of British Columbia. “That magnetism is essentially frozen in the rocks.”

Mars appears to experience about two tiny quakes a day, although the number has gradually increased over the past year. The scientists don’t know why.

By contrast, geophysicists normally detect about 14,000 sizable quakes on Earth every year. After a powerful earthquake, such as the magnitude 7.1 Ridgecrest earthquake that shook California’s Mojave Desert last July, scientists recorded about 80,000 or so aftershocks within a few weeks of the event.

Of the 174 marsquakes fully analyzed so far, about 150 are high-frequency seismic squeaks that would not rattle a window on Earth, the scientists said.

In fact, they appear to be so small that the scientists couldn't determine how far away the epicenters were located or their precise magnitude. None of them would pose a danger to future astronauts or colonists, NASA scientists said.

“We can probably say that Mars is a place where the seismic hazard is extremely low,” said Philippe Lognonné, a geophysicist at the Institut de Physique du Globe de Paris and the lead investigator for the InSight’s seismic experiments.

Marsquakes often originate at much greater depths than on Earth, so their energy usually dissipates before reaching the surface.

Generally, most of the marsquakes likely are caused by the planet gradually cooling and shrinking, the scientists said.

Some of these small tremors might have been caused by the impact of large meteors hitting the ground. Scientists set the lander’s onboard cameras to scan the nighttime Martian sky for telltale streaks of shooting stars but so far haven’t detected any, the scientists said.

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They tracked two of the strongest quakes, measuring about magnitude 4.0, to a region called Cerberus Fossae almost 1,000 miles away, an area of fissures, fault lines and lava flows with signs of ancient volcanic activity.

“That is really intriguing,” said mission deputy principal investigator Suzanne Smrekar at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory. “We wouldn’t expect such recent volcanism in that area.”

For now, however, the deep heart of Mars remains a mystery. No marsquake has generated seismic waves strong enough yet to reveal the composition of the planet’s core. The scientists hope that more powerful quakes in the year ahead will reveal its structure and composition.

“Right now, we have a lot more data than we have conclusions,” said Dr. Banerdt. “It’s still a very mysterious situation.”

Write to Robert Lee Hotz at sciencejournal@wsj.com

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2020-02-24 16:00:00Z
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See record-high temperatures strip Antarctica of huge amounts of ice - Livescience.com

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  1. See record-high temperatures strip Antarctica of huge amounts of ice  Livescience.com
  2. New NASA Photos From Antarctica Reveal Shocking Levels of Ice Melt  ScienceAlert
  3. NASA Satellite Images Reveal Dramatic Melting In Antarctica After Record Heat Wave  news9.com KWTV
  4. Antarctic heat wave melted 4 inches of snow in a week on Eagle Island, most northern point: NASA  New York Daily News
  5. Heatwave hits Antarctica, melts nearby glaciers  WFLA
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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2020-02-24 12:57:00Z
52780624714204

NASA Alert: Airburst-Causing Asteroid Currently Headed For Earth - International Business Times

KEY POINTS

  • NASA detected an asteroid approaching Earth
  • The asteroid follows an Earth-crossing orbit
  • The asteroid could cause a powerful mid-air explosion

NASA is currently tracking an Earth-crossing asteroid that’s expected to approach the planet tomorrow morning. Based on the data collected by the agency, the asteroid is capable of causing a mid-air explosion more powerful than several atomic bombs if it hits Earth.

According to NASA’s Center for Near-Earth Object Studies (CNEOS), the asteroid that’s currently approaching Earth is known as 2020 BW13. As indicated in the agency’s database, this asteroid has an estimated diameter of about 66 feet. CNEOS noted that it is currently flying towards Earth at a speed of around 5,400 miles per hour.

Due to its natural trajectory, 2020 BW13 has been classified as an Aten asteroid. Like other asteroids that belong to this group, 2020 BW13 follows a dangerous orbit that occasionally intersects Earth’s path as it makes its way around the Sun.

2020 BW13’s natural orbit suggests that the asteroid could hit Earth if its trajectory slightly changes. If this happens, the asteroid would most likely not cause an impact event on Earth due to its relatively small size. Instead, the space rock would probably create a violent explosion in the sky after entering Earth’s atmosphere.

2020 BW13 is as big as the asteroid that collided with Earth and exploded over Russia in 2013. During that event, an asteroid traveling around 40,000 miles per hour entered Earth’s atmosphere. The extreme pressure and friction from Earth’s protective layer caused the asteroid to explode over the Russian city of Chelyabinsk. The detonation happened at an altitude of around 97,000 feet.

According to reports, the energy released by the explosion caused by the 66-foot-wide asteroid was equivalent to about 30 atomic bombs. Although much of the explosion was absorbed by the atmosphere, the blast was still powerful enough to affect structures on the ground.

The mid-air blast damaged over 7,000 buildings and around 1,500 people were seriously injured.

Fortunately, CNEOS noted that 2020 BW13 is not in danger of hitting Earth during its upcoming visit. According to the agency, this asteroid will fly past Earth on Feb. 24 at 11:10 a.m. EST from a distance of 0.02333 astronomical units or roughly 2.2 million miles away.

Asteroid Image: Artist illustration of an asteroid heading for the Earth Photo: Pixabay

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2020-02-24 01:58:30Z
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Minggu, 23 Februari 2020

Heat wave melts 20% of snow cover from Antarctic island in days - Axios

6 hours ago - Energy & Environment
Images showing Antarctica melting under its hottest days on record

The effects of February's record heat wave on Eagle Island in Antarctica. Photo: NASA

Antarctica's Eagle Island now has a side that's almost ice-free following this month's searing heat wave in the region, images released by NASA show.

Why it maters: "The warm spell caused widespread melting on nearby glaciers," NASA said in its report. It's the third major melt event of the 2019-2020 Southern Hemisphere summer, following warm spells in January and last November, according to the United Nation's World Meteorological Organization (WMO).

Such persistent warmth was not typical in Antarctica until the 21st century, but it has become more common in recent years."
— NASA statement

Driving the news: The Argentine Antarctic research base Esperanza reported a temperature of 64.9°F on Feb. 9 — indicating a "likely legitimate record," per the WMO, which is still verifying the statistics.

  • The island "experienced peak melt" — about 1 inch — on the day of the reported heat record, leading to a loss of 4 inches in total within 10 days, NASA said in a statement Friday.
  • "About 20% of seasonal snow accumulation in the region melted in this one event on Eagle Island," the statement added.

What they're saying: Mauri Pelto, a glaciologist at Nichols College, who observed the warming event as 0.9 square miles of snowpack became saturated with meltwater, said in NASA's report: "I haven’t seen melt ponds develop this quickly in Antarctica. You see these kinds of melt events in Alaska and Greenland, but not usually in Antarctica."

Of note: The event comes after scientists in January found for the first time warm water beneath Antarctica's "doomsday glacier," so-called because it's one of the region's fastest melting glaciers.

The bottom line: "If you think about this one event in February, it isn't that significant," Pelto said. "It's more significant that these events are coming more frequently."

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2020-02-23 06:14:19Z
52780624714204

Jumat, 21 Februari 2020

Frozen bird found in Siberia is 46,000 years old - CNN

Buried and frozen in permafrost near the village of Belaya Gora in north-eastern Siberia, the bird was discovered by local fossil ivory hunters, who passed it on to a team of experts, including Nicolas Dussex and Love Dalén from the Swedish Museum of Natural History, for testing.
Radiocarbon dating revealed the bird lived around 46,000 years ago, and genetic analysis identified it as a horned lark (Eremophila alpestris), according to a paper published Friday in the journal Communications Biology.
Dalén told CNN that research showed the bird may be an ancestor to two subspecies of lark alive today, one in northern Russia and the other on the Mongolian steppe.
"This finding implies that the climatic changes that took place at the end of the last Ice Age led to formation of new subspecies," he said.
The bird was found in north-eastern Siberia at a site which also contained other frozen specimens.
The preservation of the bird is explained in large part by the cold of the permafrost, explained Dussex, but this specimen is in extraordinarily good condition.
"The fact that such a small and fragile specimen was near intact also suggests that dirt/mud must have been deposited gradually, or at least that the ground was relatively stable so that the bird's carcass was preserved in a state very close to its time of death," said Dussex.
The next stage of research involves sequencing the bird's entire genome, said Dalén, which will reveal more about its relationship to present day subspecies and estimate the rate of evolutionary change in larks.
Is it a dog or is it a wolf? 18,000-year-old frozen puppy leaves scientists baffled
Scientists working in the area have also found carcasses and body parts from other animals such as wolves, mammoths and wooly rhinos.
Dussex described such findings as "priceless" as they allow researchers to retrieve DNA and sometimes RNA, a nucleic acid present in all living cells.
"This in turn will open new opportunities to study the evolution of ice age fauna and understand their responses to climate change over the past 50-10 thousands of years ago," added Dussex.
The horned lark was discovered at the same site as an 18,000-year-old frozen puppy, which Dalén and Dussex are also studying.
Using carbon dating on the creature's rib bone, experts were able to confirm that the specimen had been frozen for around 18,000 years, but extensive DNA tests have so far been unable to show whether the animal was a dog or a wolf.
Scientists can normally tell the difference relatively easy, and researchers hope that further tests on the remains will provide more insight into exactly when dogs were domesticated.

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2020-02-21 10:34:00Z
CAIiEGFldVa6Z5hLLv0LebQqk8QqGQgEKhAIACoHCAowocv1CjCSptoCMPrTpgU