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Mon, 27 Sep 2021
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United Arab Emirates launches probe to Mars, communication established

mars probe uae
© REUTERS / KYODO
The United Arab Emirates has successfully launched the Al Amal ("Hope") probe to Mars, the mission announced, saying that communication has already been established with Hope Probe.

"Launch process complete: The Hope Probe has successfully separated from the launch vehicle," the mission said on its official Twitter account, where the launch was broadcast live.

Hope was launched from the space center on the Japanese island of Tanegashima on Sunday at 21:58 GMT using a Mitsubishi H-IIA booster.
"Two-way communication established. The ground segment has received and communicated the first signals with the Hope Probe," the mission said on Twitter shortly after the launch.

Hearts

Dogs may use Earth's magnetic field to take shortcuts

dachshund

Video cameras and GPS allowed researchers to track the navigation of hunting dogs, such as this wire-haired miniature dachshund named Hurvinek Valentinka.
Kateřina Benediktová and Hynek Burda
Dogs are renowned for their world-class noses, but a new study suggests they may have an additional — albeit hidden — sensory talent: a magnetic compass. The sense appears to allow them to use Earth's magnetic field to calculate shortcuts in unfamiliar terrain.

The finding is a first in dogs, says Catherine Lohmann, a biologist at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, who studies "magnetoreception" and navigation in turtles. She notes that dogs' navigational abilities have been studied much less compared with migratory animals such as birds. "It's an insight into how [dogs] build up their picture of space," adds Richard Holland, a biologist at Bangor University who studies bird navigation.

There were already hints that dogs — like many animals, and maybe even humans — can perceive Earth's magnetic field. In 2013, Hynek Burda, a sensory ecologist at the Czech University of Life Sciences Prague who has worked on magnetic reception for 3 decades, and colleagues showed dogs tend to orient themselves north-south while urinating or defecating. Because this behavior is involved in marking and recognizing territory, Burda reasoned the alignment helps dogs figure out the location relative to other spots. But stationary alignment isn't the same thing as navigation.

Comment: See also:


Satellite

Venus found to have active volcano-like structures on its surface

venus
© Michael Benson / AFP
Venus
Venus is geologically active and has as many as 37 recently 'live' volcanic structures called coronae that are dotted across its surface, according to astrogeologists.

This overturns a previous theory that these 'volcanic structures' - first spotted through satellite observations of the planet - were long extinct.

Researchers from the University of Maryland and the Institute of Geophysics, Zurich, created 3D models to investigate whether the coronae could be geologically active.

They found that rather than coronae being formed from geological activity more than 500 million years ago, they come from currently active processes. The ring-like structures are formed when hot material from deep inside the planet rises through the mantle and erupts through the crust.

This discovery 'significantly changes' the way in which scientists will view the second planet from the Sun in future, according to the team behind the research.

Comment: See also: The Seven Destructive Earth Passes of Comet Venus


Book 2

The truth according to social justice: A review of 'Cynical Theories'

cynical theories

Cynical Theories (l), Michel Foucault (r)
A review of Cynical Theories: How Activist Scholarship Made Everything about Race, Gender, and Identity―and Why This Harms Everybody, by Helen Pluckrose and James Lindsay, Pitchstone Publishing (August 25th, 2020), 352 pages.

In November 1964, the American historian Richard Hofstadter published an essay in Harper's Magazine about the paranoid style in American politics, arguing that "American politics has often been an arena for angry minds" ripe for "conspiratorial fantasy." Arguably, many elites in contemporary mainstream American institutions appear to believe that anybody expressing concern about a so-called cancel culture has been in possession of such a paranoid mindset. Even when 150 artists and writers signed an open letter in none other than Harper's Magazine, decrying "a new set of moral attitudes and political commitments that tend to weaken our norms of open debate and toleration of differences in favor of ideological conformity," the response from many has been to mock these concerns and dismiss them as "paranoid," or "privileged."

The backlash to the Harper's Letter comes on the heels of John McWhorter's thesis that anti-racism is a new religion, David French suggesting that a secular fundamentalist revival is occurring on the Left, and Andrew Sullivan asking whether "intersectionality [is] a religion?" In short, there is indeed something of a militant crusade that lies at the heart of what Helen Pluckrose and James Lindsay call "Social Justice in Action," the title of chapter nine in their sensational new book, Cynical Theories, which explains "How Activist Scholarship Made Everything about Race, Gender, and Identity―and Why This Harms Everybody."

Fireball

Astronomers have identified asteroids of interstellar origin inhabiting the solar system

asteroid centaur class
© NASA
Discovery by Brazilian researcher reported in Royal Astronomical Society's Monthly Notices provides clues for understanding the star nursery from which the Sun emerged.
A study conducted by scientists at São Paulo State University's Institute of Geosciences and Exact Sciences (IGCE-UNESP) in Rio Claro, Brazil, has identified 19 asteroids of interstellar origin classified as Centaurs, outer Solar System objects that revolve around the Sun in the region between the orbits of Jupiter and Neptune.

An article on the study titled "An interstellar origin for high-inclination Centaurs" is published in the Royal Astronomical Society's Monthly Notices. The study was supported by FAPESP.

"The Solar System formed 4.5 billion years ago in a stellar nursery, with its systems of planets and asteroids. The stars were close enough to each other to foster strong gravitational interactions that led to an exchange of material among the systems. Some objects now in the Solar System must therefore have formed around other stars. Until recently, however, we couldn't distinguish between captured interstellar objects and objects that formed around the Sun. The first identification was made by us in 2018," Maria Helena Moreira Morais, one of the two coauthors, told Agência FAPESP.

Comment: More on the Centaur class of asteroids, which have to potential to become comets:


Better Earth

Biosphere 2: What happens when you seal eight people in a giant bubble?

Biosphere
© Joe Sohm/Visions of America/UIG via Getty Images
From oxygen shortages to divisive factions, Mark Nelson recalls the challenges of two years in the Biosphere 2 ecosystem - and the media circus it spawned
WE "BIOSPHERIANS" knew living together for two years in our enclosed mini-world would be a challenge. Imagine sharing 2193 meals with the same seven people. We entered as friends, but feared the stress of isolation. We hoped for paradise and braced for hell.

Indeed, disaster was never far away. We faced accumulating carbon dioxide and disappearing oxygen. We risked being choked by pollution or starved by crop failures. Some critics thought our experiment would be over within months. But we persevered.

We called our 3-acre ecosystem in the Arizona desert Biosphere 2. It was an attempt to create a new type of laboratory for studying global ecology, by replicating features of Biosphere 1 - better known as Earth.

Comment: See also:


Mars

Giant Martian lava caves could be prime location to find alien life and house human colonies

Mars
© NASA/ JPL
Sometimes, there's more to a lava flow than meets the eye. Beneath a fresh, sterile, and steaming hot surface, molten rock can still be chewing its way into the ground, carving caves that can stretch dozens of kilometers. On Earth, such lava tubes (once cooled) are a challenge for spelunkers. On the moon and Mars, these features are piquing the interest of planetary geologists, astrobiologists, and explorers.

Besides providing a window into geological history, lava tubes offer environmental conditions that are relatively stable and likely to be more hospitable than those found on a planet's surface. This may make the tubes appealing to life-forms of all sizes, from microbes to spacefaring colonists from Earth.

If Mars ever hosted life, it may have moved into such refugia as the planet evolved and surface conditions became increasingly harsh. Indeed, some researchers suggest that microbial life may yet hang on in the Red Planet's underground havens. "On Mars and other places, lava tubes have the potential to have made the difference between life and death," says Pascal Lee, a planetary researcher at NASA Ames Research Center in Mountain View, CA.

Wherever lava tubes are found, they'll be scientifically exotic, says Lee. And if a mission to another world is designed to explore such an underground feature as well as the surface, "it'll be like getting two planets for the price of one," he notes.

Control Panel

"COVID Vaccines" and "Genetically Modified Humans"

altering DNA
Dr. Carrie Madej is an osteopathic-trained internal medicine physician.

In the following video, she questions what it is to be human. Why? Because the so-called "COVID" vaccines deploy recombinant DNA/RNA technology that "rewrites" the genetic code much as Monsanto, for example, rewrites the genetic code of tomato and other seeds.


Comment: Here's a slightly shorter Facebook version with an introduction:




Moon

Iconic 'dark side' of the moon photo turns 5 years old

earth moon dark side hurricane delores
© NASA
The Deep Space Climate Observatory captured a unique view of the moon as it passed between the spacecraft and Earth on July 16, 2015.
On July 16, 2015, the Deep Space Climate Observatory (DSCOVR) satellite captured this incredible image of the moon's dark side with Earth shining from behind.

For the past five years, a satellite orbiting nearly 1 million miles from home has been capturing images of the Earth, but early in its mission, it revealed a side of the planet's cosmic partner that goes unseen even to the largest telescopes.

On Feb. 11, 2015, NASA and NOAA launched the Deep Space Climate Observatory (DSCOVR), a satellite that sits around 1 million miles away from the Earth. At this precise spot, the satellite is in what is called a "neutral gravity point" between the Earth and sun, allowing it to continuously monitor the two objects at the same time with little interference.

Info

High iron levels linked to shorter lifespan

Iron Levels and Aging
© Cristian Newmann/Unsplash
A massive new study has found evidence that blood iron levels could play a role in influencing how long you live.

It's always important to take longevity studies with a big grain of salt, but the new research is impressive in its breadth, covering genetic information from well over 1 million people across three public databases. It also focused on three key measures of ageing: lifespan, years lived free of disease (referred to as healthspan), and making it to an extremely old age (AKA longevity).

Throughout the analysis, 10 key regions of the genome were shown to be related to these measures of long life, as were gene sets linked to how the body metabolises iron.

Put simply, having too much iron in the blood appeared to be linked to an increased risk of dying earlier.

"We are very excited by these findings as they strongly suggest that high levels of iron in the blood reduces our healthy years of life, and keeping these levels in check could prevent age-related damage," says data analyst Paul Timmers, from the University of Edinburgh in the UK.