Science & Technology
We performed follow-up measurements of this object while it was still on the PCCP webpage.
Stacking of 16 unfiltered exposures, 90 seconds each, obtained remotely on 2020, July 27.05 from X02 (Telescope Live, Chile) through a 0.6-m f/6.5 astrograph + CCD, shows that this object is a comet with a diffuse coma about 8" in diameter (Observers E. Guido, M. Rocchetto, E. Bryssinck, M. Fulle, G. Milani, C. Nassef, G. Savini, A. Valvasori).
Our confirmation image (click on it for a bigger version)
Have we lost our collective minds? Yes.
You may not be one of them. In fact, I'm guessing the people who actually take the time to read my blog posts are the few remaining who haven't been subsumed by the panic, but can we agree that most have? Jeffrey A. Tucker of the American Institute for Economic Research put it best in his excellent essay on July 10 titled, When will the Madness End?:
"I'm a practicing psychiatrist who specializes in anxiety disorders, paranoid delusions, and irrational fear. I've been treating this in individuals as a specialist. It's hard enough to contain these problems in normal times. What's happening now is a spread of this serious medical condition to the whole population. It can happen with anything but here we see a primal fear of disease turning into mass panic. It seems almost deliberate. It is tragic. Once this starts, it could take years to repair the psychological damage."

The sperm tail moves very rapidly in 3D, not from side-to-side in 2D as it was believed.
More than three hundred years after Antonie van Leeuwenhoek used one of the earliest microscopes to describe human sperm as having a "tail, which, when swimming, lashes with a snakelike movement, like eels in water", scientists have revealed this is an optical illusion.
Using state-of-the-art 3-D microscopy and mathematics, Dr. Hermes Gadelha from the University of Bristol, Dr. Gabriel Corkidi and Dr. Alberto Darszon from the Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico, have pioneered the reconstruction of the true movement of the sperm tail in 3-D.

NASA’s New Horizons spacecraft captured different faces of Pluto as it flew past the dwarf planet in 2015.
"I expected Pluto to be a scientific wonderland, but it did not have to be so beautiful," says Leslie Young, a planetary scientist at the Southwest Research Institute in Boulder, Colorado, and a deputy project scientist on the New Horizons mission.
Although scientists caught that first jaw-dropping glimpse nearly five years ago, they are still seeing images of the world for the first time.
Comment: See also:
- Did Earth 'Steal' Martian Water?
- Electric currents driven by solar wind create Saturn's auroras, heat planet's atmosphere - NASA
- Unexpected metal on moon could signal close connection with early earth
- MindMatters: The Lighter Side of Space Rocks - The Holy Grail, Directed Panspermia and the Origin of Life
- MindMatters: The Holy Grail, Comets, Earth Changes and Randall Carlson
- Behind the Headlines: Earth changes in an electric universe: Is climate change really man-made?

The 2015 eruption at Wolf volcano in the Galapagos Archipelago
Many volcanoes produce similar types of eruption over millions of years. For example, volcanoes in Iceland, Hawai'i and the Galápagos Islands consistently erupt lava flows - comprised of molten basaltic rock - which form long rivers of fire down their flanks.
Although these lava flows are potentially damaging to houses close to the volcano, they generally move at a walking pace and do not pose the same risk to life as larger explosive eruptions, like those at Vesuvius or Mt. St. Helens. This long-term consistency in a volcano's eruptive behaviour informs hazard planning by local authorities.
The research team, led by Dr Michael Stock from Trinity and comprising scientists from the US, UK and Ecuador, studied two Galápagos volcanoes, which have only erupted compositionally uniform basaltic lava flows at the Earth's surface for their entire lifetimes. By deciphering the compositions of microscopic crystals in the lavas, the team was able to reconstruct the chemical and physical characteristics of magmas stored underground beneath the volcanoes.

New research posits that Johannes Vermeer painted View of Delft in September 1659 or 1658.
Art historians have long thought that View of Delft was painted in the late spring or early summer of 1660, but the details of Vermeer's life are so hazy that no one could be sure exactly when the masterwork came to fruition, according to Jennifer Ouellette of Ars Technica.
Donald Olson, an astronomer at Texas State University, and his colleagues used Google Earth and maps from the 17th and 19th centuries to identify landmarks in the painting. Then, they measured the distances and angles of its shadows and highlights. As the Guardian notes, the team even visited Delft firsthand to deduce the position of the sun — and thus the time of year — associated with a slice of light seen on the Nieuwe Kerk tower's belfry in Vermeer's skillful rendering.

Archaeologic excavations at Hall's Cave exposed sediments for geochemical analysis that span from circa 20,000 to 6,000 years.
The evidence is buried in a Central Texas cave, where horizons of sediment have preserved unique geochemical signatures from ancient volcanic eruptions — signatures previously mistaken for extraterrestrial impacts, researchers say.
The resolution to this case of mistaken identity recently was reported in the journal Science Advances.
Comment: There we have it, there was clearly more going on than just volcanoes; and to find out what events converged to bring about global cooling back then, check out Pierre Lescaudron's article Volcanoes, Earthquakes And The 3,600 Year Comet Cycle.
See also:
- The Seven Destructive Earth Passes of Comet Venus
- The Golden Age, Psychopathy and the Sixth Extinction
- Of Flash Frozen Mammoths and Cosmic Catastrophes
- MindMatters: The Holy Grail, Comets, Earth Changes and Randall Carlson
- Behind the Headlines: Earth changes in an electric universe: Is climate change really man-made?

Researchers hope the discovery could help show how marine plant life survives extreme changes in climate
Experts from Heriot-Watt University's Orkney campus analysed the genetic composition of oarweed from 14 areas across the northern Atlantic ocean.
The team found three distinct genetic clusters.
It is hoped the discovery could help show how marine plant life survives extreme changes in climate.
How Powerful Is Natural Selection, Really?
- Venkataram et al., "Evolutionary stalling and a limit on the power of natural selection to improve a cellular module," Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, July 17, 2020.
Overall, our results highlight the fact that it is impossible to fully understand the evolution of a cellular module in isolation from the genome where it is encoded and the population-level processes that govern evolution. The ability of natural selection to improve any one module depends on the population size, the rate of recombination, the supply, and the fitness effects of all beneficial mutations in the genome and on how these quantities change as populations adapt. Further theoretical work and empirical measurements integrated across multiple levels of biological organization are required for us to understand adaptive evolution of modular biological systems. [Emphasis added.]









Comment: See also: Choosy eggs may pick sperm for their genes, defying Mendel's law