Tag Archives: Environment

Move Over ‘Farout,’ Astronomers Confirm ‘Farfarout’ Is the Solar System’s Most Distant Known Object

A view of the night sky from the Uruguayan countryside on May 10, 2019.
Photo: Mariana Suarez (Getty Images)

What astronomers believed to be the most distant object in the Solar System, “Farout,” has lost its title after just two years. That crown now goes to “Farfarout” (zero points for creativity, you guys), a planetoid that is more than 130 times farther from the Sun than Earth is.

As spotted by Inverse, after years of observations, astronomers have confirmed that the planetoid designated by the Minor Planet Center as 2018 AG37, nicknamed Farfarout, is the farthest known Solar System object at 132 astronomical units away from the Sun.

A single AU is the average distance from the Earth to the Sun, aka about 92 million miles or 148 million kilometers. (For reference, the previous titleholder Farout, officially designated 2018 VG18, is “just” 120 AU away.) That means Farfarout is roughly 12.3 billion miles or 19.7 billion kilometers away, or for context, about four times farther away from the Sun than Pluto. At that distance, the planetoid completes a single orbit around the Sun just once in a millennium.

“Because of this long orbital period, it moves very slowly across the sky, requiring several years of observations to precisely determine its trajectory,” said David Tholen, an astronomer at the University of Hawaii’s Institute of Astronomy and member of the team behind the discovery, said in a statement this week.

The team—Tholen, the Carnegie Institution for Science’s Scott Sheppard, and Northern Arizona University’s Chad Trujillo—originally spotted the planetoid in 2018 using the Subaru 8-meter telescope located atop the dormant volcano Mauna Kea in Hawaii. In the years since, they’ve used the Gemini North telescope, also located on Mauna Kea, and the Magellan telescope in Chile to determine Farfarout’s orbit and confirm its status as the farthest known object in our Solar System.

“The discovery of Farfarout shows our increasing ability to map the outer solar system and observe farther and farther towards the fringes of our solar system,” said Sheppard in this week’s statement. “Only with the advancements in the last few years of large digital cameras on very large telescopes has it been possible to efficiently discover very distant objects like Farfarout.”

There’s still much that scientists don’t know about this incredibly distant planetoid, but they’ve uncovered a few clues in their research. The team believes it’s at the “low end” of the dwarf planet scale “assuming it is an ice-rich object,” and has an estimated diameter of roughly 248 miles (400 km). It has an incredibly elongated orbit that crosses paths with Neptune, leading scientists to speculate that Farfarout may once have been a much closer planetary neighbor, but possibly strayed too close to Neptune and was jettisoned to the outer reaches of our Solar System as a result of the much larger celestial body’s gravity.

Astronomers believe that studying Farfarout may offer insight into how Neptune formed and evolved in our Solar System, and the two are likely to interact once again due to their intersecting orbits.

It’s uncertain how long Farfarout will hold onto its title, especially given the rapid advancements of our Earthly telescopes. Sheppard called the planetoid “just the tip of the iceberg of solar system objects in the very distant solar system.” Who knows, maybe by this time next year we’ll have a FarfarFARout on our hands.

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How Whale Songs Can Help Us Explore the Ocean

Photo: David McNew (Getty Images)

Some whale songs can give scientists valuable information about the ocean’s geography, according to a study published Thursday in the journal Science. What’s more, their songs can be used as a form of seismic testing, which uses blasts of sound to map out the ocean floor. Forms of this technology can be harmful to whales and other marine life.

If we’d only listened more closely to whales, we may have not needed to develop certain practices that hurt them.

“I’m not entirely surprised about this study,” said Michael Jasny, director of the Marine Mammal Protection Project at NRDC. “And if you’d asked me to guess which animal this study used, I’d have said fin whales. Fin whale calls have been mistaken for some years as a regular geologic groaning… It took some time before oceanographers figured out this was actually an animal.”

Jasny, who was not involved in this study, noted that scientists and some industries reliant on seismic testing have been exploring for years how to substitute natural sounds, including geologic noises and sounds from animals, for human-made ones.

Fin whales can yell pretty loud, hydrologically speaking. Their calls can reach up to 189 decibels—louder than firecrackers or gunshots and comparable to noises made by large ships, the study explains. They’re also remarkably consistent: Fin whales string together individual calls into long, low-frequency songs that can last for hours, taking short breaks only to surface for air.

This consistent noise, the study found, has valuable information stored inside it. Researchers looked at six separate songs, ranging between 2.5 and 5 hours, from individual whales captured on ocean-bottom seismometer stations off the coast of Oregon, which were initially installed to monitor seismic activity along a fault zone.

“The powerful sound waves these songs produce reverberate and refract through the layers of rock beneath the station,” the study notes. The researchers were able to use these recordings to gather information about the sediment along the floor as well as the crust beneath it. “Our study demonstrates that animal vocalizations are useful not only for studying the animals themselves but also for investigating the environment that they inhabit,” the authors write.

It’s helpful to know what’s going on on the ocean floor for a variety of different reasons. Unfortunately, scouting for oil and gas reserves along the ocean floor has become one of the most common—and most disruptive—uses of the technology. To survey the seafloor, the fossil fuel industry employs seismic guns that fire off incredibly loud blasts, disturbing marine mammals that have evolved to use sound as their primary navigator underwater.

Seismic guns “are towed behind vessels on the surface of the water,” Jasny explained. “The sounds they generate have to go down through the water column, hundreds or thousands of meters, penetrate the seafloor, penetrate layers of sediment—5, 10 miles down to what the industry is interested in—and then the sound has to come back up and be received by the vessel to transmit information that’s worth millions or billions of dollars.”

“Air guns go off roughly every 10 seconds or so for weeks or months on end. It just rips at the fabric of ocean life,” he continued. “There have been studies indicating that it could mask whale songs, particularly fin whales and humpbacks, thousands of kilometers away from the source—so a single seismic survey could interfere with fin whale breeding.”

The study is quick to note that fin whale calls probably aren’t going to replace these types of high-powered seismic surveys. Fortunately, as the price of oil plummets worldwide and scouting for new offshore reserves becomes a riskier financial bet, the industry has suffered a series of blowbacks in its drive to find more oil, including national legislation to ban the practice in certain areas and concentrated local opposition.

Still, there are other uses for seismic technology that don’t serve fossil fuels and that could be helped by new research into using natural sounds. Offshore construction work, for example, including construction of offshore wind turbines and other renewables infrastructure, needs to build on data about what’s on the ocean floor in order to properly site projects.

“In general, there’s a lot of potential in using a whole host of sounds that are geologic as well as biologic…[this is] an exciting study,” Jasny said. “It provokes you to think about the sounds that animals make as another driver of human exploration. There’s so much we don’t know about the oceans.”

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What Are Venus Flytraps Doing With Magnetic Fields?

These predatory plants are more than meets the eye.
Photo: Adam Berry/Getty Images (Getty Images)

A team of researchers recently strapped a dismembered carnivorous plant to a sensitive instrument in Berlin, in a room that shuts out the world’s magnetic noise. It was a Venus flytrap’s “jaw”—really a specialized leaf—and when the team turned up the heat, the jaw summoned the energy to try to close. In that moment, a magnetic field emanated from the trap.

The field was picked up on an atomic magnetometer, an instrument that deduces a change in magnetic fields in the spin of electrons. The team’s research was recently published in the journal Scientific Reports.

“The novelty here is that we show magnetic fields from a multicellular plant system; specifically, action potentials from multicellular plant system,” Anne Fabricant, an atomic physicist at Helmholtz Institute in Mainz, Germany, said in a video call. “And also that we use atomic magnetometers, because the previous two experiments were done with a different kind of magnetic magnetometer.”

The lab traps, with the single trap jaw being examined at bottom right.
Photo: Anne Fabricant (Other)

Magnetic fields had previously been observed in other plants; algae in one study, bean plants in another. The previous magnetometers, called SQUIDs, are large and run at very cool temperatures, and the team needed something more convenient for their use. Different actions on or by a plant can elicit the fields—from being wounded to trying to snap at food within its reach, as was the case with the flytrap. The magnetic field doesn’t correspond with the act itself but the action potential that precipitates the plant’s next move.

While a flytrap normally looks like a cross between Kermit the frog’s mouth and alien eyelids, the researchers excised just one of its flaps for study—the action potential would still occur, and using only one flap kept the object of inquiry still. The team increased the heat in the room as a non-invasive way of catalyzing the same action potential that occurs when the trap is trying to feed. When the action potential coursed through the plant, the electrons of the rubidium atoms in the sensors changed their rotation—to the team, evidence of the magnetic field’s existence.

Eat up, Venus. You deserve it.
Photo: Oli Scarff/Getty Images (Getty Images)

Fabricant, lead author of the new paper, said there wasn’t much doubt that a field would crop up; the issue was how to pick it up. When there are moving charges in physics, electrical and magnetic fields are produced. The trouble is having instruments that can detect them, as the flytrap’s field was found to be about a million times weaker than Earth’s magnetic field. That’s why the researchers had to conduct the search in such a magnetically silent room.

“If [the field were] too small, then we wouldn’t be able to measure it with our sensors,” Fabricant said, adding that, if multiple fields were created but in opposite directions, “they would cancel out when we tried to measure the whole trap. There was a big risk that we would just measure zero.”

Thankfully, that’s not what happened. They picked up magnetic signals with a 0.5 picotesla (very, very small) amplitude, providing evidence that the plant’s action potential results in a similar physical phenomena as other previously tested flora. This being the most complex plant yet examined, the flytrap’s field offers a hint at what else the plant kingdom may have in store.

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Bushfire smoke blankets Australian city under COVID-19 lockdown

SYDNEY, Feb 3 (Reuters) – Smoke haze covered Australia’s fourth largest city of Perth on Wednesday from a fast-moving bushfire that razed dozens of homes, complicating a tight lockdown after Western Australia state’s first COVID-19 case in more than 10 months.

Authorities said the hot, dry conditions that had fuelled the fires in Perth’s northeastern suburbs had eased slightly overnight.

“We had a better night than the previous night, we haven’t had the fire impact any properties overnight and also some milder conditions have allowed us to complete some tracking,” state Fire Services Commissioner Darren Klemm told reporters.

Klemm revised up the number of homes lost from the fires to 71 from 59 while urging residents to remain vigilant as erratic winds could reignite some fires. No fatalities have been reported from the fires, the origins of which are still unknown.

“It is going to continue to be a challenging fire for us for at least the next three or four or five days,” Klemm said.

However, favourable weather could bring some respite with rains possible over the weekend and temperatures expected to drop to around 28 degree Celsius (82 degree Fahrenheit) over the next few days from the mid-30s, authorities said.

A tropical low in the state’s north has brought heavy rains and gusty winds there and the system could move south bringing wet weather over the next few days, Australia’s Bureau of Meteorology said.

Two million residents of Perth, the state capital, are under a five-day lockdown until Friday after a hotel quarantine worker tested positive to the highly contagious variant of COVID-19 first detected in Britain.

Residents must stay home, except for essential work, healthcare, grocery shopping or exercise, with visits to hospitals and nursing homes banned.

But state authorities said fire evacuation orders will take precedence over COVID-19 lockdown rules and residents should plan to shift to alternative places if emergency evacuation orders are issued.

“What we don’t want is indecision from people about whether they should evacuate or not when we require them to evacuate, so that evacuation overrides any quarantining requirements that people may have,” Klemm said. (Reporting by Renju Jose; Editing by Lincoln Feast.)

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Biden to sign executive orders on climate change

U.S. President Joe Biden holds up a face mask as he speaks about the fight to contain the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic, at the White House in Washington, January 26, 2021.

Kevin Lamarque | Reuters

President Joe Biden on Wednesday is set to sign several executive orders to tackle climate change and transition the country to a clean energy economy, the White House said on Wednesday.

The executive actions include establishing climate change as a national security priority, conserving at least 30% of federal land and oceans by 2030 and canceling new oil and gas leases on public lands and waters, according to a review of the orders released by the administration.

Biden’s executive agenda will also focus on creating green jobs and union opportunities as well as environmental justice for communities disproportionally impacted by climate change.

The administration said the climate actions will build modern and sustainable infrastructure while restoring scientific integrity in the federal government. The orders further the president’s agenda to cut carbon emissions from the electricity sector by 2035 and achieve net-zero emissions by 2050.

More from CNBC Environment:
Biden rejoins the Paris climate accord in first move to tackle global warming
2020 was one of the hottest years on record, tied with 2016

Biden, who has staffed the White House with a historic number of climate experts, signed an order last week to rejoin the U.S. into the Paris climate accord, a landmark agreement among nations to curb their emissions. He also canceled construction of the Keystone XL pipeline from Canada to the U.S. 

The president plans to deliver remarks and sign the orders at 1:30 p.m. Biden’s special climate envoy John Kerry and national climate advisor Gina McCarthy are set to brief reporters on the administration’s plans.

The Biden administration will also convene the Climate Leaders’ Summit on April 22, which will gather global leaders to discuss climate change issues. The summit will likely be remote during the coronavirus pandemic.

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Tesla CEO donates to carbon capture technology prize

GRUENHEIDE, GERMANY – SEPTEMBER 03: Tesla head Elon Musk talks to the press as he arrives to to have a look at the construction site of the new Tesla Gigafactory near Berlin on September 03, 2020 near Gruenheide, Germany. Musk is currently in Germany where he met with vaccine maker CureVac on Tuesday, with which Tesla has a cooperation to build devices for producing RNA vaccines, as well as German Economy Minister Peter Altmaier yesterday.

Maja Hitij | Getty Images

Tesla and SpaceX CEO Elon Musk has announced that he is donating $100 million towards a prize for the best technology that can capture carbon dioxide.

Musk, who overtook Amazon founder Jeff Bezos to become the world’s richest person this month, made the announcement on Twitter late Thursday, saying he would share more details next week.

“Am donating $100M towards a prize for best carbon capture technology,” Musk tweeted to his 42.7 million followers.

Carbon capture is the process of trapping waste carbon dioxide either directly from the air, or just before it gets emitted from factories and power plants.

With the latter, the first step is often to install solvent filters on factory chimneys, which catch the carbon emissions before they’re released into the Earth’s atmosphere. Once captured, carbon dioxide can then be shipped or piped somewhere it can’t escape from (often deep underground) to prevent it contributing to global warming.

Most of the captured carbon dioxide remains underground, but some of it can also used to make plastics and fizzy drinks.

Why is carbon capture needed?

Global carbon dioxide emissions have soared over the last 100 years, leading to unprecedented global warming and climate change.

There are currently around 20 carbon capture, usage and storage (CCUS) projects operating commercially worldwide, according to the International Energy Agency.

The agency said that 30 new projects had been agreed since 2017, but stressed that many more were needed to prevent carbon emissions from raising the temperature on Earth by more than 1.5 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels.

The IEA believes CCUS projects could reduce carbon emissions by almost a fifth, while also slashing the cost of tackling the climate crisis by 70%. Adapting heavy industry to run on clean energy is relatively difficult and expensive compared to installing carbon capture systems.

U.S. President Joe Biden has pledged to put more of a focus on cutting emissions than his predecessor and said he wants the U.S. to be carbon neutral by 2050.

‘Plant more trees’

The prize that Musk has said he will contribute to is connected to the Xprize Foundation, TechCrunch reported, citing an anonymous source. The foundation is a nonprofit that puts on competitions to promote and support innovation.

According to the Bloomberg Billionaire Index, Musk has a total net worth of $201 billion, while Bezos has $193 billion. Microsoft founder Bill Gates is the next wealthiest person, with a total net worth of $134 billion.

Musk recently asked his Twitter followers what he should do with his money.

“Critical feedback is always super appreciated, as well as ways to donate money that really make a difference (way harder than it seems),” he tweeted Jan. 8.

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