Tag Archives: Life

A Unique Mixture of Salts Could Have Sparked Life on Primordial Earth, Study Hints

None of us would be around if organisms hadn’t been sparked into life billions of years ago. The question of just how that spark came about continues to fascinate scientists.

New research looking at how the conditions on primordial Earth might have produced life has identified a mixture of salts that, mixed with heat flows from molten rock, could potentially have contributed to the formation of self-replicating biomolecules.

 

This self-replication is a key part of the ‘RNA world’ hypothesis: the idea that ribonucleic acids (RNA) can both store biological information and perform the required structure folding for life to grow and evolve into the state it is today.

In this case, scientists looked at the mixture of magnesium (Mg) and sodium (Na) as it might have been on Earth in its earliest years: for RNA folding to work, a relatively high concentration of doubly charged magnesium ions and a lower concentration of singly charged sodium is required.

“Accordingly, the question arises as to which environments on early Earth might have provided suitable salt conditions for such prebiotic processes. One geologically probable process that produces saline environments is the leaching of salts from basalt,” the international team of researchers writes in their study.

“As a primary partial melt of the Earth’s mantle, basalt is one of the most abundant rock types to be expected in the Earth’s early crust, as well as the crust of other terrestrial planets in our Solar System.”

The team synthesized basaltic glass – which naturally occurs on Earth when melted basalt is rapidly cooled (by contact with ocean water, for instance) – and characterized it in its various forms, including both rock and glass.

 

An analysis of the amount of magnesium and sodium extracted from the glass, under a variety of temperatures and with a variety of grain sizes, always showed significantly more sodium than magnesium.

What’s more, the levels of magnesium were always significantly lower than necessary for prebiotic RNA folding to properly function. The missing part of the process, the researchers discovered, was convective flows of heat.

“This situation changed considerably when heat currents – which are very likely to have been present, owing to the high levels of geological activity expected in prebiotic environments – were added,” says biophysicist Christof Mast, from the Ludwig Maximilians University of Munich in Germany.

“We have shown that a combination of basaltic rocks and simple convection currents can give rise to the optimal relationship between Mg and Na ions under natural conditions.”

The temperature gradients that feature in the narrow cracks and pores of basaltic glass create the convective flows required for salt optimization and also move more ions against the current – creating what’s known as thermophoresis.

Together, convection and thermophoresis increase the number of magnesium ions in the mix, creating conditions where self-replicating RNA can occur, the study shows. The same sort of chemical reactions may have played out on Earth 4 billion years ago.

This leaching of salts from basalt – found in abundance in Earth’s mantle – fits the template for the RNA world hypothesis to work, the research shows. What’s more, it widens out the possibilities in terms of salt mixes that may have helped spark life.

“The principle demonstrated here is applicable to a broad range of salt concentrations and compositions, and, as such, highly relevant to various origin-of-life scenarios,” write the researchers in their published paper.

The research has been published in Nature Chemistry.

 

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Which Caribbean islands are open only to vaccinated travelers?

Adina Eigen took her first trip to the British Virgin Islands in December 2020. Around that time, it had one of the world’s lowest Covid rates among islands that had reopened.

The 42-year-old mother of four from Sands Point, New York, has since returned twice, checking infection rates — and vaccination statistics — before her trips.

“The staff at Oil Nut Bay is entirely vaccinated,” she said of the luxury resort where her family stayed. “The property is not accessible by land and very closely monitored by sea.”

The British Virgin Islands are part of a rising number of Caribbean destinations that attract vaccinated travelers — while proving less attractive to unvaccinated people.

Travelers to the British Virgin Islands

Vaccinated Partially vaccinated Unvaccinated
June
2021
78% 6% 16%
July
2021
88% 2% 10%
BVI’s Central Statistics Office

Along with Barbados and St. Lucia, the British Virgin Islands allow unvaccinated travelers to enter only if they quarantine for one week. Data shows few are willing to do so, especially when they have other options in the Caribbean that don’t require quarantines or vaccine certificates.

The relative strictness or leniency of entrance requirements in the Caribbean is reshaping travel trends in the region. Unvaccinated travelers are gravitating to the islands that will let them in, while the vaccinated want places that keep the unimmunized out.

Vaccinated travelers only

At least seven Caribbean nations and territories have announced mandatory vaccination policies for incoming adult travelers — Anguilla, Grenada, St. Barts, St. Kitts and Nevis, Trinidad and Tobago, Turks and Caicos, as well as the Cayman Islands.

The Cayman Islands plan to admit vaccinated travelers from Sept. 9 to Oct. 13 during the third phase of its structured reopening. Thereafter, the territory may let unvaccinated travelers enter if they quarantine for 14 days.

People have more interest in traveling to islands where there are vaccination protocols in place.

Eric Bamberger

Zeta Global

Safety is cited as the main reason behind the requirement, but such policies may also be good for business.

Marketing technology company Zeta Global analyzed site traffic to the main tourism websites of several islands after they announced vaccinated-only policies, said Eric Bamberger, senior vice president of hospitality at Zeta Global. 

Following the announcements, travel interest increased to all of them:

  • Grenada — up 25%
  • St. Kitts and Nevis — up 26%
  • Cayman Islands — up 44%
  • Anguilla — up 59%  

The data showed two trends emerging in the Caribbean, said Bamberger.

“People have more interest in traveling to islands where there are vaccination protocols in place,” he said. “And their interest among other islands without vaccination protocols is waning.”  

Data from travel marketing company Adara indicates enthusiasm for vaccinated-only entrance policies. Searches and bookings spiked when Trinidad and Tobago announced it was reopening only to immunized travelers — and then again when the policy was implemented.  

Adventure travel company Intrepid Travel is seeing a preference for destinations with more restrictions, said Matt Berna, the company’s managing director of North America. 

“We have found our customers to be more interested in traveling to Caribbean destinations with more strict and firm policies and travel restrictions related to Covid-19,” he said.

For example, among the most popular trips being booked by North Americans, “none of our tours in Mexico are in the top 20,” he said. Mexico has lenient Covid protocols, but Intrepid Travel does not. Starting Sept. 1, all travelers and tour leaders with the company must be vaccinated, said Berna.

Eigen told CNBC she considered going to Mexico at one point, but found it “scary” to visit a country with few restrictions.

“I am vaccinated and would love to go to an island that only allows vaccinated people in,” she said, a view echoed by several travelers who spoke to CNBC.

“I am vaccinated and would love to go to an island that only allows vaccinated people in,” said Eigen, with her family in Oil Nut Bay in the British Virgin Islands.

Courtesy of Adina Eigen

Caribbean authorities are expressing a positive response to the policies.

“Our arrival figures have been consistent, and load factors continue to improve,” said Petra Roach, the CEO of Grenada Tourism Authority.

Turks and Caicos prepared itself for mixed feedback when it announced its policy earlier this month, said Jamell R. Robinson, the islands’ minister of health and human services.

However, “we have received a hugely encouraging overall response from new and existing visitors,” he said. “We anticipate it will have a long-term positive impact on bookings.”

No vaccine required

In contrast to islands with relatively strict policies, places such as the Dominican Republic, Jamaica, the Bahamas and the U.S. Virgin Islands have entrance policies that rely on testing rather than vaccines.

Data from Adara suggests travel interest was highest to the Dominican Republic before other Caribbean islands put vaccination mandates in place beginning earlier this summer. Most travelers to the Dominican Republic don’t need to present a negative test, but some are subject to Covid-19 breath tests upon arrival.

As vaccination rates increased among the island’s top markets — namely, the United States and Canada — travel interest dropped. Covid infection rates in the Dominican Republic decreased from June to August, but interest and searches did not rebound accordingly.

Site traffic increased to the main tourism websites for Jamaica and the Bahamas in June and July, but visitors spent less time searching and clicked fewer pages, said Zeta Global’s Bamberger.

Vaccinated people want to vacation in places that had stricter requirements, so they aren’t mixing with the unvaccinated.

 “These trends show that … travelers still have more tentative feelings about traveling to areas without vaccination policies,” he said.

Similar sentiments may apply to travelers’ desire to fly. A study by the financial website FinanceBuzz published this month indicates more people would be likely to fly (48%) if airlines required vaccinations, than the amount that disfavors such a policy (27%). 

Line in the sand

These figures suggest that islands with lenient protocols — i.e., those without quarantines or vaccine mandates — are likely attracting unvaccinated travelers while deterring vaccinated ones.  

“Vaccinated people want to vacation in places that had stricter requirements, so they aren’t mixing with the unvaccinated,” said Adara’s chief marketing officer Carolyn Corda.

CNBC asked the Dominican Republic, Bahamas and Jamaica for the percentage of incoming travelers who aren’t vaccinated. The Bahamas said it was unable to provide that figure. Jamaica and the Dominican Republic did not respond to CNBC’s request.

Puerto Rico’s tourism authority, Discover Puerto Rico, has said that the island has a vaccine mandate, though it does not have one.

Discover Puerto Rico’s website says that “vaccinations are required” for guests and employees in its hotels, house rentals, restaurants and bars. Discover Puerto Rico’s CEO separately confirmed the vaccine “mandate” to CNBC.

But a closer look at Puerto Rico’s restrictions shows that a negative Covid test on arrival, and weekly negative tests afterward, will suffice without a vaccine. Asked for clarification, a representative for Discover Puerto Rico told CNBC that “the ‘mandate’ refers to the need for either vaccination or frequent negative testing.”

Discover Puerto Rico’s CEO Brad Dean said vaccination rates among travelers to Puerto Rico rose from 9% in May to 58% in August.

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Iowa Farmworker Gets Life in Prison for the Murder of Mollie Tibbetts

A farmworker was sentenced on Monday to life in prison without the possibility of parole in the fatal stabbing of an Iowa college student in 2018, a crime that Donald J. Trump seized upon as president as he amplified his hard-line policies against illegal immigration.

The farmworker, Cristhian Bahena Rivera, was convicted in May in the abduction and murder of Mollie Tibbetts, 20, a University of Iowa student who disappeared after going for a run.

It took more than a month until Mr. Bahena Rivera led investigators to the body of Ms. Tibbetts, which had been hidden in a cornfield outside Brooklyn, Iowa, her hometown.

The arrest of Mr. Bahena Rivera, who had been described by the authorities as an undocumented immigrant from Mexico, quickly drew the attention of Mr. Trump. The president sought to use the case to his political advantage during the midterm elections in 2018 and in his efforts to build a border wall.

Mr. Bahena Rivera, 27, was expressionless as a caseworker with the state attorney general’s office read a victim impact statement on Monday that was written by Ms. Tibbetts’s mother, Laura Calderwood, in a district court in Montezuma, Iowa.

Ms. Calderwood said in the statement that her daughter had so much to look forward to until the evening of July 18, 2018.

“You chose to violently and sadistically end that life,” Ms. Calderwood said. “Who could harm such a beautiful, vibrant young woman so full of life and promise?”

Ms. Calderwood said that she would never recover from her daughter’s murder and from having to tell Ms. Tibbetts’s grandmother and other family members that her body had been found.

Because of Mr. Bahena Rivera’s actions, she said, Ms. Tibbetts’s boyfriend would never be able to give her the engagement ring that he had gotten for her.

“Because of your actions, Mollie’s father, Rob, will never get to walk his only daughter down the aisle,” Ms. Calderwood said. “Because of your actions, Mr. Rivera, I will never get to see my daughter become a mother.”

Mr. Bahena Rivera, who is planning to appeal his conviction, did not speak at the sentencing. His lawyers also declined to comment.

Credit…Pool photo by Jim Slosiarek

In Iowa, a conviction for first-degree murder carries a mandatory sentence of life in prison. Lawyers for Mr. Bahena Rivera tried unsuccessfully to argue that someone else had committed the killing.

During his trial, The Des Moines Register reported, Mr. Bahena Rivera testified that two armed and masked men had confronted him in his home and had ordered him to drive them to Brooklyn, where one of them killed Ms. Tibbetts, put her body in his trunk and ordered him to drive to a cornfield.

Judge Joel D. Yates of the Eighth Judicial District rejected that defense during the sentencing.

“Mr. Bahena Rivera, you and you alone forever changed the lives of those who loved Mollie Tibbetts,” Judge Yates said.

The judge also ordered Mr. Bahena Rivera to pay $150,000 restitution to Ms. Tibbetts’s family and denied him bond while he appeals his conviction.

Ms. Tibbetts, a psychology student and summer camp counselor, was raised in San Francisco and Brooklyn, a small town between Des Moines and Cedar Rapids.

According to investigators, blood that matched her DNA was found in the trunk of Mr. Bahena Rivera’s car, which had been captured on a home-security camera near where Ms. Tibbetts had been running.

Scott D. Brown, a special assistant state attorney general, called the evidence against Mr. Bahena Rivera “overwhelming” and said it supported a life sentence.

“Based upon the facts and circumstances of this case,” Mr. Brown said, “it is very well deserved.”

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Volcanoes Could Be Responsible For The First Puffs of Oxygen on Earth

Most life needs oxygen to thrive, and science shows that O2 began to show up in Earth’s atmosphere in serious amounts some 2.4 billion years ago. However, there was also a small injection of oxygen around 100 million years earlier than that – and the origin of that earlier breath has so far been a mystery.

 

A new study points to volcanoes as the likely cause of this shorter oxygenation event preceding the major one. Through an analysis of rock records, researchers have spotted a corresponding increase in mercury levels that indicates volcanic activity.

That activity would have led to nutrient-rich lava and volcanic ash fields, the researchers suggest, which then led to the release of those nutrients into rivers and coastal areas through weathering. That, in turn, would have enabled cyanobacteria and other single-celled organisms to flourish – and start pumping out oxygen.

“Our study suggests that for these transient whiffs of oxygen, the immediate trigger was an increase in oxygen production, rather than a decrease in oxygen consumption by rocks or other non-living processes,” says geologist Roger Buick, from the University of Washington.

“It’s important because the presence of oxygen in the atmosphere is fundamental – it’s the biggest driver for the evolution of large, complex life.”

Buick and his colleagues looked at drill-cores taken from the Mount McRae Shale formation in Western Australia, containing geological timelines stretching back 2.5 billion years to before the start of the Great Oxygenation Event.

 

Signs of both mercury enrichment and oxidation weathering convinced the researchers that volcanic eruptions and the subsequent introduction of phosphorus – a key nutrient for modulating biological activity across long timescales – had played a major part in the early oxygen spike.

And while it’s not clear exactly where on Earth this volcanic activity might have taken place, geological records from locations in modern-day India and Canada, among other locations, back up the hypothesis of volcanism and lava flows around this time.

Drill-cores of rocks used for analysis. (Roger Buick/University of Washington)

“During weathering under the Archaean atmosphere, the fresh basaltic rock would have slowly dissolved, releasing the essential macronutrient phosphorus into the rivers,” says astrobiologist Jana Meixnerová from the University of Washington.

“That would have fed microbes that were living in the shallow coastal zones and triggered increased biological productivity that would have created, as a byproduct, an oxygen spike.”

There may well have been other oxygen spikes before the Earth’s atmosphere started transforming in earnest, but even if this study only explains one of them, it’s still a useful bank of evidence for peering back into the earliest moments of life on our planet.

And as with any study of this type, there are implications for research into climate change (showing us how life adapts to less oxygen) and the search for life in space (showing us the sort of atmospheric conditions that microorganisms can exist in).

Questions remain about how life on Earth first got started in its most basic form, a billion years before the Great Oxygenation Event, and answering those questions will need a better understanding of the geology of the planet through time.

“What has started to become obvious in the past few decades is there actually are quite a number of connections between the solid, non-living Earth and the evolution of life,” says Meixnerová.

The research has been published in PNAS.

 

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New Type of Ocean-Covered Exoplanet Could Support Life

When it comes to looking for life elsewhere in the universe, we tend to be very Earth-centric: We look for planets that are similar to our own, assuming that life elsewhere will be similar to us and require similar conditions. However, a new type of exoplanet has been identified by astronomers at the University of Cambridge, and even though it is very different from Earth it could still support life.

The new class of planet is called a “Hycean” planet, meaning an ocean-covered world with abundant hydrogen in its atmosphere. The researchers believe that this type of planet could be common and as they are potentially habitable this significantly increases the possible locations to search for life outside our solar system.

Artist’s impression of a Hycean planet. Amanda Smith

“Hycean planets open a whole new avenue in our search for life elsewhere,” said lead researcher Nikku Madhusudhan from the University of Cambridge’s Institute of Astronomy in a statement.

These planets are typically larger than Earth, at up to 2.6 times its size, and can be hotter as well, with atmospheric temperatures of up to 200 degrees Celsius. However, despite these high temperatures their oceans could still host microbial life, as suggested by another recent study into a large exoplanet with a hydrogen-rich atmosphere. This study found that there could be liquid water on the planet’s surface beneath its atmosphere. If this is true for Hycean planets as well, then the habitable zone — the area around a star where a planet must orbit for liquid water to be able to exist on its surface — could be larger for these planets than for other types of planets.

“Essentially, when we’ve been looking for these various molecular signatures, we have been focusing on planets similar to Earth, which is a reasonable place to start,” said Madhusudhan. “But we think Hycean planets offer a better chance of finding several trace biosignatures.”

Biosignatures are chemical indications of life and are one of the main ways that researchers look for life elsewhere in the universe.

“A biosignature detection would transform our understanding of life in the universe,” said Madhusudhan. “We need to be open about where we expect to find life and what form that life could take, as nature continues to surprise us in often unimaginable ways.”

The research is published in The Astrophysical Journal.

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The Rock’s new Under Armour over-ear headphones pack ANC and a 45-hour battery life

Fans of celeb-endorsed gadgets rejoice. Hollywood’s busiest man Dwayne Johnson has found time to release another pair of workout headphones under the Project Rock line he created with Under Armour. The cans are essentially an updated version of the durable over-ears released in 2018. But, this is more of a trio than a tag team. Built by JBL, the new headphones’ standout upgrades include adaptive noise cancelling and a promised 45-hour battery life. With speed charging, you can get a purported two hours of playback time in just five minutes. 

Like their predecessors, the over-ears are designed to be the ultimate gym buddy. The IPX4 rating means they can withstand your sweaty workouts. While UA provided the extra grip on the headband and supervent materials on the fast-drying cushions, which you can remove and hand wash. 

Under Armor

Johnson, meanwhile, finely tuned JBL’s Charged Sound to his liking. Possibly, so he could listen to his workout playlist on Spotify or relive his atrocious gospel rap ditty, Pie. Just so you know who cooked these up, his Brahma Bull insignia his prominently placed on each ear cup. Additional audio tech includes two ambient modes that filter through external chatter and sounds. Google Assistant and Amazon Alexa are also on hand for when you need voice commands mid-workout.

UA Project Rock Over-Ear Training headphones are out now via JBL and Under Armour for $299.95.

All products recommended by Engadget are selected by our editorial team, independent of our parent company. Some of our stories include affiliate links. If you buy something through one of these links, we may earn an affiliate commission.

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Hycean planets are hot ocean worlds that could support life outside of our solar system

Weird and wonderful planets beyond our solar system

Astronomers have identified a new class of habitable planets, which they call Hycean planets. These are hot, ocean-covered planets with hydrogen-rich atmospheres.

Weird and wonderful planets beyond our solar system

This artist’s illustration shows L 98-59b, one of the planets in a planetary system 35 light-years away from Earth. This planet has half the mass of Venus.

Weird and wonderful planets beyond our solar system

In this artist’s illustration, two gaseous exoplanets can be seen orbiting the bright sun-like star HD 152843.

Weird and wonderful planets beyond our solar system

An artist’s rendering of TOI-1231 b, a Neptune-like planet about 90 light years away from Earth.

Weird and wonderful planets beyond our solar system

This artist’s conception depicts a violent flare erupting on the star Proxima Centauri as seen from the viewpoint of a planet orbiting the star called Proxima Centauri b.

Weird and wonderful planets beyond our solar system

This artist’s illustration shows the night-side view of the exoplanet WASP-76b, where iron rains down from the sky.

Weird and wonderful planets beyond our solar system

After losing its gaseous envelope, the Earth-size core of an exoplanet formed a second atmosphere. It’s a toxic blend of hydrogen, methane, and hydrogen cyanide that is likely fueled by volcanic activity occurring beneath a thin crust, leading to its cracked appearance.

Weird and wonderful planets beyond our solar system

This illustration shows the metaphorical measuring of the density of each of the seven planets in the nearby TRAPPIST-1 system. New measurements have revealed the most precise densities yet for these planets and they’re very similar — which means they also likely have similar compositions.

Weird and wonderful planets beyond our solar system

This artist’s illustration shows the view from the furthest planet in the TOI-178 system.

Weird and wonderful planets beyond our solar system

This artist’s illustration shows TOI-561b, one of the oldest and most metal-poor planetary systems discovered yet in the Milky Way galaxy. Astronomers found a super-Earth and two other planets orbiting the star.

Weird and wonderful planets beyond our solar system

This massive and distant exoplanet, called HD106906 b, has an elongated and angled orbit that causes it to take 15,000 Earth years to complete one lap around its twin stars.

Weird and wonderful planets beyond our solar system

This is an artist’s impression of a free-floating rogue planet being detected in our Milky Way galaxy using a technique called microlensing. Microlensing occurs when an object in space can warp space-time.

Weird and wonderful planets beyond our solar system

This is an artist’s impression of exoplanet WASP-189 b orbiting its host star. The star appears to glow blue because it’s more than 2,000 degrees hotter than our sun. The planet, which is slightly larger than Jupiter, has a tilted orbit around the star’s poles rather than its equator.

Weird and wonderful planets beyond our solar system

For the first time, an exoplanet has been found orbiting a dead star known as a white dwarf. In this artist’s illustration, the Jupiter-sized planet WD 1856 b orbits the white dwarf every day and a half.

Weird and wonderful planets beyond our solar system

This illustration shows a carbon-rich planet with diamond and silica as ts main minerals. Water can convert a carbon-rich planet into one that’s made of diamonds. In the interior, the main minerals would be diamond and silica (a layer with crystals in the illustration). The core (dark blue) might be made of an iron-carbon alloy.

Weird and wonderful planets beyond our solar system

This image shows a young sun-like star being orbited by two gas giant exoplanets. It was taken by the SPHERE instrument on European Southern Observatory’s Very Large Telescope. The star can be seen in the top left corner, and the planets are the two bright dots.

Weird and wonderful planets beyond our solar system

This artist’s impression shows a Neptune-sized planet in the Neptunian Desert. It is extremely rare to find an object of this size and density so close to its star.

Weird and wonderful planets beyond our solar system

This is an artist’s impression of the multiplanetary system of newly discovered super-Earths orbiting a nearby red dwarf star called Gliese 887.

Weird and wonderful planets beyond our solar system

The newly discovered exoplanet AU Mic b is about the size of Neptune.

Weird and wonderful planets beyond our solar system

This artist’s impression shows a view of the surface of the planet Proxima b orbiting the red dwarf star Proxima Centauri, the closest star to the Solar System. Proxima b is a little more massive than the Earth.

Weird and wonderful planets beyond our solar system

This is an artist’s illustration of an exoplanet’s atmosphere with a white dwarf star visible on the horizon. The starlight of a white dwarf filtered through the atmosphere of an exoplanet that’s orbiting it could reveal if the planet has biosignatures.

Weird and wonderful planets beyond our solar system

This is an artist’s illustration of the Kepler-88 planetary system, where one giant exoplanet and two smaller planets orbit the Kepler-88 star. The system is more than 1,200 light-years away.

Weird and wonderful planets beyond our solar system

This is an illustration of newly discovered exoplanet Kepler-1649c orbiting around its host red dwarf star.

Weird and wonderful planets beyond our solar system

This is an artist’s concept of a ringed planet passing in front of its host star. It shows how “puffy” a ringed planet may look to us from afar.

Weird and wonderful planets beyond our solar system

The sizes of the 17 new planet candidates, seen here in orange, are compared to colorized representations of Mars, Earth and Neptune. The green planet is KIC-7340288 b, a rocky planet in the habitable zone of its star.

Weird and wonderful planets beyond our solar system

Artist’s impression of K2-18b. CREDIT Amanda Smith

Weird and wonderful planets beyond our solar system

This is an artist’s illustration a massive planet orbiting a cool, young star. In the case of the newly discovered system, the planet is 10 times more massive than Jupiter, and the orbit of the planet is nearly 600 times that of Earth around the sun.

Weird and wonderful planets beyond our solar system

Welcome to the KELT-9 system. The host star is a hot, rapidly rotating A-type star that is about 2.5 times more massive and almost twice as hot as our sun. The hot star blasts its nearby planet KELT-9b with massive amounts of radiation, leading to a daylight temperature of 7800 degrees Fahrenheit, hotter that most stars and only 2000 degrees cooler than the sun.

Weird and wonderful planets beyond our solar system

This is an artist’s rendering of the Proxima Centauri planetary system. The newly discovered super-Earth exoplanet Proxima c, on the right, has an orbit of about 5.2 Earth years around its host star. The system also comprises the smaller Proxima b, on the left, discovered in 2016. Illustration by Lorenzo Santinelli.

Weird and wonderful planets beyond our solar system

This is an artist’s concept of GJ180d, the nearest temperate super-Earth to us with the potential to support life.

Weird and wonderful planets beyond our solar system

An illustration of WASP-12b as it spirals in a death dance towards its star. The planet will meet its end in three million years.

Weird and wonderful planets beyond our solar system

TOI 700 d is the first potentially habitable Earth-size planet spotted by NASA’s planet-hunting TESS mission.

Weird and wonderful planets beyond our solar system

TOI 1338 b is silhouetted by its two host stars, making it the first such discovery for the TESS mission. TESS only detects transits from the larger star

Weird and wonderful planets beyond our solar system

This artist’s illustration shows a wet exoplanet with an oxygen atmosphere. The red sphere is the M-dwarf star the exoplanet orbits.

Weird and wonderful planets beyond our solar system

This artist’s illustration shows a dry exoplanet with an oxygen atmosphere. The red sphere is the M-dwarf star the exoplanet orbits.

Weird and wonderful planets beyond our solar system

This artist’s illustration of the Kepler 51 system shows newly discovered super-puff exoplanets, which are also called “cotton candy” exoplanets because they’re so lightweight.

Weird and wonderful planets beyond our solar system

This artist’s concept illustration shows an exoplanet with two moons orbiting within the habitable zone of a red dwarf star.

Weird and wonderful planets beyond our solar system

This is an artist’s illustration of two exoplanets colliding in a binary star system.

Weird and wonderful planets beyond our solar system

This is an artist’s illustration of a Neptune-type exoplanet in the icy outer reaches of its star system. It could look something like a large, newly discovered gas giant that takes about 20 years to orbit a star 11 light years away from Earth.

Weird and wonderful planets beyond our solar system

This image shows a comparison of red dwarf star GJ 3512 to our solar system, as well as other nearby red-dwarf planetary systems.

Weird and wonderful planets beyond our solar system

This artist’s illustration showcases exoplanet K2-18b orbiting its host star. It’s currently the only super-Earth exoplanet that has water vapor in its atmosphere and could be within the right temperature to support life.

Weird and wonderful planets beyond our solar system

This is an illustration of an exomoon losing mass as it’s being pulled around the gas giant it orbits.

Weird and wonderful planets beyond our solar system

An illustration shows what the orbit of exoplanet HR 5183 b would look like if it was dropped down in our solar system. It would likely swing from the asteroid belt to out past Neptune, the eighth planet in our solar system.

Weird and wonderful planets beyond our solar system

At least two giant planets, aged 20 million years at most, orbit the Beta Pictoris star. A disk of dust and gas surrounding the star can be seen in the background.

Weird and wonderful planets beyond our solar system

This is an artist’s interpretation of what super-Earth GJ 357 d might look like. It lies within the habitable zone of its star which is 31 light-years from Earth.

Weird and wonderful planets beyond our solar system

An artist’s impression of a circumplanetary disk around PDS 70 c, a gas giant exoplanet in a star system 370 light-years away.

Weird and wonderful planets beyond our solar system

This artist’s illustration shows two gas giant exoplanets orbiting the young star PDS 70. These planets are still growing by gathering material from a surrounding disk. In the process, they have gravitationally carved out a large gap in the disk.

Weird and wonderful planets beyond our solar system

An artist’s illustration of HD 21749c, the first Earth-size planet found by TESS, as well as its sibling, HD 21749b, a warm mini-Neptune.

Weird and wonderful planets beyond our solar system

A “hot Saturn” passes in front of its host star in this illustration. Astronomers who study stars used “starquakes” to characterize the star, which provided critical information about the planet.

Weird and wonderful planets beyond our solar system

Artist’s concept of TESS against background of stars & orbiting planets in the Milky Way. Credit: ESA, M. Kornmesser (ESO), Aaron E. Lepsch (ADNET Systems Inc.), Britt Griswold (Maslow Media Group), NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center & Cornell University

Weird and wonderful planets beyond our solar system

A super-telescope made the first direct observation of an exoplanet using optical interferometry. This method revealed a complex exoplanetary atmosphere with clouds of iron and silicates swirling in a planet-wide storm. The technique presents unique possibilities for characterizing many of the exoplanets known today.

Weird and wonderful planets beyond our solar system

This image shows an artist’s impression of the surface of Barnard’s star b, a cold Super-Earth discovered orbiting Barnard’s star 6 light-years away.

Weird and wonderful planets beyond our solar system

This artist’s illustration shows newly discovered exoplanet K2-288Bb, 226 light-years away and half the size of Neptune. It orbits the fainter member of a pair of cool M-type stars every 31.3 days.

Weird and wonderful planets beyond our solar system

This is an artist’s impression of the exoplanet HAT-P-11b. The planet has an extended helium atmosphere that’s being blown away by the star, an orange dwarf star smaller but more active than our sun.

Weird and wonderful planets beyond our solar system

An artist’s illustration of what the super-Earth found around the orange-hued star HD 26965 (also known as 40 Eridani A) might look like. The recently discovered exoplanet is being compared to the fictional planet of Vulcan because Star Trek creator Gene Roddenberry said the star was the ideal candidate to host Vulcan, Mr. Spock’s home world.

Weird and wonderful planets beyond our solar system

The TRAPPIST-1 star, an ultra-cool dwarf, has seven Earth-size planets orbiting it.

Weird and wonderful planets beyond our solar system

For the first time, eight planets have been found orbiting another star, tying with our solar system for the most known planets around a single star. The Kepler-90 system is in the constellation Draco, more than 2,500 light-years from Earth.

Weird and wonderful planets beyond our solar system

This artist’s illustration shows exoplanet Ross 128 b, with its red dwarf host star in the background. The planet is only 11 light-years from our solar system. It is now the second-closest temperate planet to be detected, after Proxima b.

Weird and wonderful planets beyond our solar system

WASP-121b, 880 light-years away, is considered a hot Jupiter-like planet. It has a greater mass and radius than Jupiter, making it “puffier.” If WASP-121b were any closer to its host star, it would be ripped apart by the star’s gravity.

Weird and wonderful planets beyond our solar system

NASA’s Kepler space telescope team has identified 219 more planet candidates, 10 of which are near-Earth size and in the habitable zone of their stars.

Weird and wonderful planets beyond our solar system

This artist’s concept shows OGLE-2016-BLG-1195Lb, a planet orbiting an incredibly faint star 13,000 light-years away from us. It is an “iceball” planet with temperatures reaching minus-400 degrees Fahrenheit.

Weird and wonderful planets beyond our solar system

LHS 1140b is located in the liquid water habitable zone surrounding its host star, a small, faint red star named LHS 1140. The planet weighs about 6.6 times the mass of Earth and is shown passing in front of LHS 1140. Depicted in blue is the atmosphere the planet may have retained.

Weird and wonderful planets beyond our solar system

An artist’s concept image of the surface of the exoplanet TRAPPIST-1f. Of the seven exoplanets discovered orbiting the ultracool dwarf star TRAPPIST-1, this one may be the most suitable for life. It is similar in size to Earth, is a little cooler than Earth’s temperature and is in the habitable zone of the star, meaning liquid water (and even oceans) could be on the surface. The proximity of the star gives the sky a salmon hue, and the other planets are so close that they appear in the sky, much like our own moon.

Weird and wonderful planets beyond our solar system

Artist’s conception of the binary system with three giant planets discovered, where one star hosts two planets and the other hosts the third. The system represents the smallest-separation binary in which both stars host planets that has ever been observed.

Weird and wonderful planets beyond our solar system

This artist’s impression shows the planet Proxima b orbiting the red dwarf star Proxima Centauri, the closest star to our solar system.

Weird and wonderful planets beyond our solar system

An artist’s rendering shows Earth-sized exoplanets TRAPPIST-1b and 1c in a rare double transit event as they pass in front of their ultracool red dwarf star, which allowed Hubble to take a peek at at their atmospheres.

Weird and wonderful planets beyond our solar system

Out of a new discovery of 104 exoplanets, astronomers found four similar in size to Earth that are orbiting a dwarf star. Two of them have the potential to support life. The craft depicted in this illustration is the NASA Kepler Space Telescope, which has helped confirm the existence of thousands of exoplanets.

Weird and wonderful planets beyond our solar system

This artist’s impression shows a view of the triple-star system HD 131399 from close to the giant planet orbiting in the system. Located about 320 light-years from Earth, the planet is about 16 million years old, making it also one of the youngest exoplanets discovered to date.

Weird and wonderful planets beyond our solar system

An artistic impression of the planet Kepler-1647b, which is nearly identical to Jupiter in both size and mass. The planet is expected to be roughly similar in appearance. But it is much warmer: Kepler-1647b is in the habitable zone.

Weird and wonderful planets beyond our solar system

HD-106906b is a gaseous planet 11 times more massive than Jupiter. The planet is believed to have formed in the center of its solar system, before being sent flying out to the edges of the region by a violent gravitational event.

Weird and wonderful planets beyond our solar system

Kepler-10b orbits at a distance more than 20 times closer to its star than Mercury is to our own sun. Daytime temperatures exceed 1,300 degrees Celsius (2,500 degrees Fahrenheit), which is hotter than lava flows on Earth.

Weird and wonderful planets beyond our solar system

This Jupiter-like planet in the HD-188753 system, 149 light-years from Earth, has three suns. The main star is similar in mass to our own Sun. The system has been compared to Luke Skywalker’s home planet Tatooine in “Star Wars.”

Weird and wonderful planets beyond our solar system

Kepler-421b is a Uranus-sized transiting exoplanet with the longest known year, as it circles its star once every 704 days. The planet orbits an orange, K-type star that is cooler and dimmer than our Sun and is located about 1,000 light-years from Earth in the constellation Lyra.

Weird and wonderful planets beyond our solar system

Astronomers discovered two planets less than three times the size of Earth orbiting sun-like stars in a crowded stellar cluster approximately 3,000 light-years from Earth in the constellation Cygnus.

Weird and wonderful planets beyond our solar system

This artist’s conception shows a hypothetical planet with two moons orbiting in the habitable zone of a red dwarf star. The majority of the sun’s closest stellar neighbors are red dwarfs.

Weird and wonderful planets beyond our solar system

Kepler-186f was the first validated Earth-sized planet to be found orbiting a distant star in the habitable zone. This zone a range of distance from a star where liquid water might pool on the planet’s surface.

Weird and wonderful planets beyond our solar system

Kepler-69c is a super-Earth-size planet similar to Venus. The planet is found in the habitable zone of a star like our sun, approximately 2,700 light years from Earth in the constellation Cygnus.

Weird and wonderful planets beyond our solar system

The Kepler-444 system formed when the Milky Way was just 2 billion years old. The tightly packed system is home to five planets that range in size, the smallest is comparable to the size of Mercury and the largest to Venus, orbiting their sun in less than 10 days.

Weird and wonderful planets beyond our solar system

This artistic concept image compares Earth, left, with Kepler-452b, which is about 60% larger. Both planets orbit a G2-type star of about the same temperature; however, the star hosting Kepler-452b is 6 billion years old — 1.5 billion years older than our sun.

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Britney Spears gushes over boyfriend Sam Asghari: ‘Been with me through the hardest years of my life’

Britney Spears still can’t get enough of her longtime beau Sam Asghari.

Still fully entrenched in her ongoing conservatorship battle with her estate runner and father, Jamie Spears, the singer, 39, took to Instagram on Wednesday to rave about her actor boyfriend, who has acted as a safe haven for Spears through her highest and lowest points.

“Not only has this cute a–hole been with me through the hardest years of my life but he happens to be an extremely good cook!” she quipped of Asghari, 27, in a selfie photo of the pair before throwing on her agent hat for the mixed martial artist.

“Fast & furious franchise, don’t miss out on your next star!” Spears raved of the “Black Monday” performer and personal trainer.

BRITNEY SPEARS’ DOGS FELL ILL PRIOR TO STAR’S ALLEGED ALTERCATION WITH HOUSEKEEPER: REPORT

Asghari recently told photographers in Los Angeles that he is “always going to support [Britney] in whatever she wants” and “if she’s happy, I’m happy.”

Days after a mild fender bender last month, he also joked that the couple had “secretly married” after Spears was spotted with what appeared to be a ring on her special finger during a coffee run.

BRITNEY SPEARS SHARES MORE TOPLESS CONTENT AMID BATTERY ALLEGATIONS

“People don’t know but we’ve been married for about five years and we secretly got married in Hawaii – that’s one of the stories that I don’t know but I see in the newspapers – and we have twins,” he said at the time in footage obtained by TMZ.

Speaking to his down-to-earth personality, a source previously told Fox News that Spears has certainly found an amazing counterpart in Asghari. 

Spears and Asghari made their red carpet debut in 2019 at the premiere of ‘Once Upon a Time … in Hollywood.’
(Photo by Kevin Winter/Getty Images)

“Sam is a beacon of goodness and positivity” in Spears’ life, said the source, adding that Asghari is a consummate “protector” of the “Toxic” songstress as Spears continues to navigate the woes centered on the conservatorship that has loomed over her for some 13 years.

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“Sam is one of the most loyal people Britney has in her life,” the insider maintained, “and ever since he’s been around Britney, [it] has really allowed him to see the real her and that has added another level of protection for Britney that she wouldn’t have if he wasn’t around.”

“They’re a great pairing,” the insider added of Asghari.

On Wednesday, Spears also shared an Instagram video of herself dancing in her home. In the post’s caption, Spears called herself “the queen of posting” while kidding with fans that she had landed a role as Tinkerbell, a new Tim Burton film.

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“It was a nice thought and s–t … you never know right ???” she wrote in the lengthy caption of the video she said was from April. “I’m excited either way !!!! Explaining myself as to why I’m the queen of posting would get exhausting so I’ll just be honest and say … it’s because I like to SHARE !!!! Sharing is caring ….. and lots of times that can be daring !!!!! I mean do I dare post again today ???? DO I REALLY CARE what people think.”

Earlier this month, Spears’ father, Jamie P. Spears, agreed to step down as her estate conservator once a proper plan is in place. 



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New class of habitable exoplanets represent a big step forward in the search for life

Astronomers have identified a new class of habitable planets, dubbed ‘Hycean’ planets – hot, ocean-covered planets with hydrogen-rich atmospheres – which could represent a big step forward in the search for life elsewhere. Credit: Amanda Smith, University of Cambridge

A new class of exoplanet very different to our own, but which could support life, has been identified by astronomers, which could greatly accelerate the search for life outside our Solar System.

In the search for life elsewhere, astronomers have mostly looked for planets of a similar size, mass, temperature and atmospheric composition to Earth. However, astronomers from the University of Cambridge believe there are more promising possibilities out there.

The researchers have identified a new class of habitable planets, dubbed ‘Hycean’ planets—hot, ocean-covered planets with hydrogen-rich atmospheres—which are more numerous and observable than Earth-like planets.

The researchers say the results, reported in The Astrophysical Journal, could mean that finding biosignatures of life outside our Solar System within the next two or three years is a real possibility.

“Hycean planets open a whole new avenue in our search for life elsewhere,” said Dr. Nikku Madhusudhan from Cambridge’s Institute of Astronomy, who led the research.

Many of the prime Hycean candidates identified by the researchers are bigger and hotter than Earth, but still have the characteristics to host large oceans that could support microbial life similar to that found in some of Earth’s most extreme aquatic environments.

These planets also allow for a far wider habitable zone, or ‘Goldilocks zone’, compared to Earth-like planets. This means that they could still support life even though they lie outside the range where a planet similar to Earth would need to be in order to be habitable.

Thousands of planets outside our Solar System have been discovered since the first exoplanet was identified nearly 30 years ago. The vast majority are planets between the sizes of Earth and Neptune and are often referred to as ‘super-Earths’ or ‘mini-Neptunes’: they can be predominantly rocky or ice giants with hydrogen-rich atmospheres, or something in between.

Most mini-Neptunes are over 1.6 times the size of Earth: smaller than Neptune but too big to have rocky interiors like Earth. Earlier studies of such planets have found that the pressure and temperature beneath their hydrogen-rich atmospheres would be too high to support life.

However, a recent study on the mini-Neptune K2-18b by Madhusudhan’s team found that in certain conditions these planets could support life. The result led to a detailed investigation into the full range of planetary and stellar properties for which these conditions are possible, which known exoplanets may satisfy those conditions, and whether their biosignatures may be observable.

The investigation led the researchers to identify a new class of planets, Hycean planets, with massive planet-wide oceans beneath hydrogen-rich atmospheres. Hycean planets can be up to 2.6 times larger than Earth and have atmospheric temperatures up to nearly 200 degrees Celsius, but their oceanic conditions could be similar to those conducive for microbial life in Earth’s oceans. Such planets also include tidally locked ‘dark’ Hycean worlds that may have habitable conditions only on their permanent night sides, and ‘cold’ Hycean worlds that receive little radiation from their stars.

Planets of this size dominate the known exoplanet population, although they have not been studied in nearly as much detail as super-Earths. Hycean worlds are likely quite common, meaning that the most promising places to look for life elsewhere in the Galaxy may have been hiding in plain sight.

However, size alone is not enough to confirm whether a planet is Hycean: other aspects such as mass, temperature and atmospheric properties are required for confirmation.

When trying to determine what the conditions are like on a planet many light years away, astronomers first need to determine whether the planet lies in the habitable zone of its star, and then look for molecular signatures to infer the planet’s atmospheric and internal structure, which govern the surface conditions, presence of oceans and potential for life.

Astronomers also look for certain biosignatures which could indicate the possibility of life. Most often, these are oxygen, ozone, methane and nitrous oxide, which are all present on Earth. There are also a number of other biomarkers, such as methyl chloride and dimethyl sulphide, that are less abundant on Earth but can be promising indicators of life on planets with hydrogen-rich atmospheres where oxygen or ozone may not be as abundant.

“Essentially, when we’ve been looking for these various molecular signatures, we have been focusing on planets similar to Earth, which is a reasonable place to start,” said Madhusudhan. “But we think Hycean planets offer a better chance of finding several trace biosignatures.”

“It’s exciting that habitable conditions could exist on planets so different from Earth,” said co-author Anjali Piette, also from Cambridge.

Madhusudhan and his team found that a number of trace terrestrial biomarkers expected to be present in Hycean atmospheres would be readily detectable with spectroscopic observations in the near future. The larger sizes, higher temperatures and hydrogen-rich atmospheres of Hycean planets make their atmospheric signatures much more detectable than Earth-like planets.

The Cambridge team identified a sizeable sample of potential Hycean worlds which are prime candidates for detailed study with next-generation telescopes, such as the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST), which is due to be launched later this year. These planets all orbit red dwarf stars between 35-150 light years away: close by astronomical standards. Planned JWST observations of the most promising candidate, K2-18b, could lead to the detection of one or more biosignature molecules.

“A biosignature detection would transform our understanding of life in the universe,” said Madhusudhan. “We need to be open about where we expect to find life and what form that life could take, as nature continues to surprise us in often unimaginable ways.”


Could life exist in the atmosphere of a sub-Neptune planet?


More information:
Habitability and Biosignatures of Hycean Worlds, Astrophysical Journal (2021). doi.org/10.3847/1538-4357/abfd9c
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University of Cambridge

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New class of habitable exoplanets represent a big step forward in the search for life (2021, August 25)
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Apple Watch saves man’s life after he fainted and hit his head on the floor

From time to time we hear about people who have had their lives saved thanks to the Apple Watch, and recently this happened to Dan Pfau after he fainted and hit his head hard on the floor.

The story comes from the Boston Globe, which talked to Pfau after the accident. At the age of 70, this is not the first time the retired administrative consultant has been saved thanks to his Apple Watch.

Two years ago, Pfau was rescued from a bicycle accident after his Apple Watch called 911. He mentions that at the time he woke up in an ambulance without remembering how he had gotten there. “Pfau doesn’t even recall phoning 911, because he didn’t. The watch did,” says the report in reference to the fall detection feature introduced with Apple Watch Series 4 in 2018.

This time, however, the incident faced by Pfau was “even scarier.” Due to his history of sudden fainting spells, he ended up hitting his head on the hardwood floor and started bleeding significantly. As he felt pain and was unable to move, he quickly used the dictation feature on Apple Watch to call his wife, who was luckily home at the time.

His Apple Watch didn’t dial 911 this time, because Pfau, still conscious, tapped an icon on the watch screen to indicate he was OK. “I assumed it was not that serious, which is my natural reaction,” he said. But when he realized that he wasn’t OK after all, Pfau launched the watch’s texting app, tapped the microphone icon, and dictated a message to his wife, who was downstairs.

Although the situation was quite serious, Pfau was once again quickly taken to a hospital because he was wearing an Apple Watch.

It took nine stitches to close the cut on Pfau’s forehead, but the pain in his neck sentenced him to four days in intensive care — it was a fractured vertebrae. “The doctors said I was extremely lucky not to have paralysis,” he said. Pfau wound up at Mass. General after another helicopter ride. “My wife cracked that I was trying to rack up helicopter frequent flyer miles,” he said.

Boston Globe also spoke with Brad Weiner, one of the doctors who attended Pfau in the hospital. The doctor confirmed that this is not the first time one of his patients has been saved thanks to a smart watch, mentioning another recent case in which the Apple Watch correctly notified a patient to atrial fibrillation detected by the ECG app.

Earlier this month, another man reported that he was also able to call for help after a car accident using Siri on the Apple Watch. Stories like this have become increasingly common since the introduction of Apple’s smart watch in 2015.

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