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Size of Raindrops Help Identify Potentially Habitable Planets Outside Our Solar System

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Raindrops Also Keep Fallin’ on Exoplanets

One day, humankind may step foot on another habitable planet. That planet may look very different from Earth, but one thing will feel familiar — the rain.

In a recent paper published in JGR Planets, Harvard researchers found that raindrops are remarkably similar across different planetary environments, even planets as drastically different as Earth and Jupiter. Understanding the behavior of raindrops on other planets is key to not only revealing the ancient climate on planets like Mars but identifying potentially habitable planets outside our solar system.

“The lifecycle of clouds is really important when we think about planet habitability,” said Kaitlyn Loftus, a graduate student in the Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences and lead author of the paper. “But clouds and precipitation are really complicated and too complex to model completely. We’re looking for simpler ways to understand how clouds evolve, and a first step is whether cloud droplets evaporate in the atmosphere or make it to the surface as rain.”

“The humble raindrop is a vital component of the precipitation cycle for all planets,” said Robin Wordsworth, Associate Professor of Environmental Science and Engineering at the Harvard John A. Paulson School of Engineering and Applied Sciences (SEAS) and senior author of the paper. “If we understand how individual raindrops behave, we can better represent rainfall in complex climate models.”

An essential aspect of raindrop behavior, at least to climate modelers, is whether or not the raindrop makes it to the surface of the planet because water in the atmosphere plays a big role in planetary climate. To that end, size matters.  Too big and the drop will break apart due to insufficient surface tension, regardless of whether it’s water, methane or superheated, liquid iron as on an exoplanet called WASP-76b. Too small and the drop will evaporate before hitting the surface.

Loftus and Wordsworth identified a Goldilocks zone for raindrop size using just three properties: drop shape, falling speed, and evaporation speed.

“The insights we gain from thinking about raindrops and clouds in diverse environments are key to understanding exoplanet habitability.”
Robin Wordsworth, Associate Professor of Environmental Science and Engineering

Drop shapes are the same across different rain materials and primarily depend on how heavy the drop is. While many of us may picture a traditional tear-shaped droplet, raindrops are actually spherical when small, becoming squashed as they grow larger until they transition into a shape like the top of a hamburger bun. Falling speed depends on this shape as well as gravity and the thickness of the surrounding air.

Evaporation speed is more complicated, influenced by atmospheric composition, pressure, temperature, relative humidity, and more.

By taking all of these properties into account, Loftus and Wordsworth found that across a wide range of planetary conditions, the math of raindrop falling means only a very small fraction of the possible drop sizes in a cloud can reach the surface.

“We can use this behavior to guide us as we model cloud cycles on exoplanets,” said Loftus.

“The insights we gain from thinking about raindrops and clouds in diverse environments are key to understanding exoplanet habitability,” said Wordsworth. “In the long term, they can also help us gain a deeper understanding of the climate of Earth itself.”

Reference: “The Physics of Falling Raindrops in Diverse Planetary Atmospheres” by Kaitlyn Loftus and Robin D. Wordsworth, 15 March 2021, JGR Planets.
DOI: 10.1029/2020JE006653

This research was support by the National Science Foundation through grant AST-1847120.



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Size of raindrops can help identify potentially habitable planets outside our solar system

Credit: Pixabay/CC0 Public Domain

One day, humankind may step foot on another habitable planet. That planet may look very different from Earth, but one thing will feel familiar—the rain.

In a recent paper, Harvard researchers found that raindrops are remarkably similar across different planetary environments, even planets as drastically different as Earth and Jupiter. Understanding the behavior of raindrops on other planets is key to not only revealing the ancient climate on planets like Mars but identifying potentially habitable planets outside our solar system.

“The lifecycle of clouds is really important when we think about planet habitability,” said Kaitlyn Loftus, a graduate student in the Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences and lead author of the paper. “But clouds and precipitation are really complicated and too complex to model completely. We’re looking for simpler ways to understand how clouds evolve, and a first step is whether cloud droplets evaporate in the atmosphere or make it to the surface as rain.”

“The humble raindrop is a vital component of the precipitation cycle for all planets,” said Robin Wordsworth, Associate Professor of Environmental Science and Engineering at the Harvard John A. Paulson School of Engineering and Applied Sciences (SEAS) and senior author of the paper. “If we understand how individual raindrops behave, we can better represent rainfall in complex climate models.”

An essential aspect of raindrop behavior, at least to climate modelers, is whether or not the raindrop makes it to the surface of the planet because water in the atmosphere plays a big role in planetary climate. To that end, size matters. Too big and the drop will break apart due to insufficient surface tension, regardless of whether it’s water, methane or superheated, liquid iron as on an exoplanet called WASP-76b. Too small and the drop will evaporate before hitting the surface.

Loftus and Wordsworth identified a Goldilocks zone for raindrop size using just three properties: drop shape, falling speed, and evaporation speed.

Drop shapes are the same across different rain materials and primarily depend on how heavy the drop is. While many of us may picture a traditional tear-shaped droplet, raindrops are actually spherical when small, becoming squashed as they grow larger until they transition into a shape like the top of a hamburger bun. Falling speed depends on this shape as well as gravity and the thickness of the surrounding air.

Evaporation speed is more complicated, influenced by atmospheric composition, pressure, temperature, relative humidity and more.

By taking all of these properties into account, Loftus and Wordsworth found that across a wide range of planetary conditions, the math of raindrop falling means only a very small fraction of the possible drop sizes in a cloud can reach the surface.

“We can use this behavior to guide us as we model cloud cycles on exoplanets,” said Loftus.

“The insights we gain from thinking about raindrops and clouds in diverse environments are key to understanding exoplanet habitability,” said Wordsworth. “In the long term, they can also help us gain a deeper understanding of the climate of Earth itself.”


How would rain be different on an alien world?


More information:
Kaitlyn Loftus et al. The Physics of Falling Raindrops in Diverse Planetary Atmospheres, Journal of Geophysical Research: Planets (2021). DOI: 10.1029/2020JE006653
Provided by
Harvard John A. Paulson School of Engineering and Applied Sciences

Citation:
Size of raindrops can help identify potentially habitable planets outside our solar system (2021, April 5)
retrieved 6 April 2021
from https://phys.org/news/2021-04-size-raindrops-potentially-habitable-planets.html

This document is subject to copyright. Apart from any fair dealing for the purpose of private study or research, no
part may be reproduced without the written permission. The content is provided for information purposes only.



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Cat-scratch fever bacteria bartonella potentially linked to schizophrenia, University of Wisconsin Madison study says

MADISON, Wis. — Infection from bacteria associated with cat-scratch disease could potentially play a role in schizophrenia and schizoaffective disorder, according to a pilot study conducted in part by a UW-Madison veterinary medicine professor.

Researchers took blood samples from 17 people with medically managed schizophrenia or schizoaffective disorder and a control group of 13 healthy adults to test for evidence of Bartonella infection, which is associated with cats exposed to fleas and potentially ticks.

Of the 17 patients with schizophrenia, 12 had Bartonella DNA in their blood, compared to only one of 13 in the control group. Both groups reported similar pet ownership and flea exposures.

The study, published this month in the journal Vector-Borne and Zoonotic Diseases, was not able, by design, to show a causal link between Bartonella infection and schizophrenia. But researchers plan to do a larger study to see whether the preliminary results are borne out.

RELATED: What you need to know about cat-scratch fever

Erin Lashnits, who recently joined the UW-Madison faculty, participated in the research while at North Carolina State University. Researchers have been looking at the connection between bacterial infection and neuropsychiatric disease for a while, with some studies suggesting cat ownership is associated with schizophrenia from a parasite that can cause toxoplasmosis, Lashnits said.

“So, we decided to look at another cat-transmitted infectious agent, Bartonella, to see if there could be a connection,” she said in a statement.

Bartonella are bacteria historically associated with cat-scratch disease, also known as cat-scratch fever, which until recently was thought to be solely a short-lived, or self-limiting, infection. In people, the condition can include a bump or blister at the site of a cat scratch or bite, and lymph nodes may swell. People may also feel tired and have a headache or fever.

“While there is emerging understanding of neuropsychiatric illnesses such as schizophrenia as disorders of brain networks, the question about the actual causes remains unanswered,” co-author Flavio Frohlich, associate professor of psychiatry at the UNC School of Medicine, said in a statement. “To our knowledge, this is the very first work that examines a potential role of Bartonella in schizophrenia.”

(The-CNN-Wire & 2021 Cable News Network, Inc., a Time Warner Company. All rights reserved.)



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How to potentially get a COVID-19 vaccine by volunteering at California clinics

Californians who volunteer at COVID-19 vaccine clinics through a new state website linked to My Turn may be able to be vaccinated themselves at the end of their shift.”A volunteer that completes a shift of four hours or more is eligible to receive a vaccination as long as the clinic administrator provides that approval,” David Smith with California Volunteers said during a meeting Friday of the state’s Community Vaccine Advisory Committee.The new tool, MyTurnVolunteer.ca.gov, lets people sign up to volunteer at nearby vaccine distribution sites that are linked to the state’s My Turn system.The site asks for volunteers who can help with medical or general support needs. After providing your name, ZIP code, email and phone number, you can browse vaccination events or shifts near you to choose among. | More | COVID-19 vaccine clinic volunteers in Yolo County eligible for shots in exchange for serviceMedical opportunities for people like registered nurses, doctors, pharmacists and others include being a vaccinator, patient observer or helper with vaccine prep. General support includes being a greeter, helping with registration, language support or volunteering for a management role. “Thank you for stepping up to meet the moment!” the site says in a nod to a phrase often used by Gov. Gavin Newsom. A news release about the new tool Friday said that California volunteers will partner with AmeriCorps for help from 907 AmeriCorps state and national civilian community corps members to support COVID-19 vaccination and response efforts.”In the face of challenges, Californians come together and our fight to end this pandemic is no different. Volunteers can play an especially important role in supporting our vaccination efforts by serving at a local vaccination site,” Newsom said in the release. “I encourage all Californians to join the My Turn – Volunteer effort in service to their community and together we can reach the light at the end of the tunnel.”Smith said that volunteers do not need to be vaccinated before booking volunteer appointments. “People who are helping to support the vaccination effort are able to receive their vaccinations as well after they have completed a shift,” he said.

Californians who volunteer at COVID-19 vaccine clinics through a new state website linked to My Turn may be able to be vaccinated themselves at the end of their shift.

“A volunteer that completes a shift of four hours or more is eligible to receive a vaccination as long as the clinic administrator provides that approval,” David Smith with California Volunteers said during a meeting Friday of the state’s Community Vaccine Advisory Committee.

The new tool, MyTurnVolunteer.ca.gov, lets people sign up to volunteer at nearby vaccine distribution sites that are linked to the state’s My Turn system.

The site asks for volunteers who can help with medical or general support needs. After providing your name, ZIP code, email and phone number, you can browse vaccination events or shifts near you to choose among.

| More | COVID-19 vaccine clinic volunteers in Yolo County eligible for shots in exchange for service

Medical opportunities for people like registered nurses, doctors, pharmacists and others include being a vaccinator, patient observer or helper with vaccine prep. General support includes being a greeter, helping with registration, language support or volunteering for a management role.

“Thank you for stepping up to meet the moment!” the site says in a nod to a phrase often used by Gov. Gavin Newsom.

A news release about the new tool Friday said that California volunteers will partner with AmeriCorps for help from 907 AmeriCorps state and national civilian community corps members to support COVID-19 vaccination and response efforts.

“In the face of challenges, Californians come together and our fight to end this pandemic is no different. Volunteers can play an especially important role in supporting our vaccination efforts by serving at a local vaccination site,” Newsom said in the release. “I encourage all Californians to join the My Turn – Volunteer effort in service to their community and together we can reach the light at the end of the tunnel.”

Smith said that volunteers do not need to be vaccinated before booking volunteer appointments.

“People who are helping to support the vaccination effort are able to receive their vaccinations as well after they have completed a shift,” he said.

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M1 Mac users report excessive SSD usage, potentially affecting the component’s lifespan

Some advanced users have been reporting an overuse of the SSD for writing and reading data on the newly released Macs with M1, Apple’s first computer chip based on ARM architecture. The issue could eventually affect the lifespan of the internal SSD used in M1 Macs — not to mention the machine itself.

As noted by users on Twitter and also on the Linus Tech Tips forums, macOS indicates that the internal SSD of M1 Macs has registered “extremely high drive writes over relatively short time.” One user points out that in some extreme cases the SSD has already had consumed about 13% of the maximum warrantable total bytes written (TBW).

Some more professional users of the new M1 Macbooks are experiencing extremely high drive writes over relatively short time. The most severe cases have “consumed” about 10-13% of the maximum warrantable TBW value of the SSDs (given their capacity & using values for equivalent market-available NVMe drives). 

Since SSDs are based on chips rather than mechanical parts, they all have a predetermined lifespan based on how much they are used for writing and reading data. The more you write data to an SSD, the faster it will show bad behavior such as slowness or even data corruption. As the internal storage of M1 Macs are soldered to the logic board, users will have to replace the entire computer if affected by an SSD defect.

With a regular use, this can take up to 10 years to take effect, but today’s reports suggest that the lifespan of the M1 Mac internal SSD can be reduced to as little as two years due to macOS behavior. Another user says that a M1 MacBook Pro with 2TB storage and 16 GB RAM has already registered 3% total usage of the internal SSD after only two months.

Unfortunately, the reasons behind this problem are still unknown. This could be either the M1 chip constantly using the Mac’s internal storage for memory swap (which is basically using the SSD as virtual RAM) or just another bug found in macOS Big Sur.

Apple hasn’t yet commented on this issue, but hopefully the company will fix it with a future macOS update.

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HUGE ‘potentially hazardous’ asteroid to skim past Earth in March

Huge ‘potentially hazardous’ asteroid twice the size of the Burj Khalifa, the world’s tallest building, will hurtle past Earth next month, NASA reveals

  • The asteroid – 231937 (2001 FO32) – was discovered by astronomers in 2001
  • It will be about 1.2 million miles from the Earth at its closest approach in March 
  • This is about five times further out than the Moon but it is still classed as a risk
  • The rock is travelling around the Sun every 2.22 Earth years at about 77,000mph
  • ‘Potentially hazardous’ applies to any large asteroid that comes within 4.5 million miles of the Earth and ‘could’ hit the planet at some point in the future

A mile-wide asteroid twice the size of the world’s tallest building will pass Earth in March and has been dubbed ‘potentially hazardous’ by NASA.

The asteroid, named 231937 (2001 FO32), is unlikely to hit the Earth as it will be 1.2 million miles from the planet – five times further away than the Moon. 

However, NASA dubs any space rock that comes within 93 million miles of us a ‘Near Earth Object’, which is three quarters of the 120 million-mile distance to Mars.

The mile-wide by half a mile-long space rock will make its closest approach to our planet at about 16:03 GMT on March 21. It has been branded ‘potentially hazardous’ as it ‘might’ hit the planet at some point in the future of the solar system.  

Asteroid 231937 is the largest space rock to ‘come close’ to the Earth this year and at 1.7km is more than twice the size of the tallest building on Earth – the Burj Khalifa. 

It should be possible to see the asteroid through an eight inch aperture telescope just after sunset on March 21 by looking slightly above the southern horizon. 

Asteroid 231937 is the largest space rock to ‘come close’ to the Earth this year and at 1.7km is more than twice the size of the tallest building on Earth – the Burj Khalifa

NASA dubs any space rock that comes within 93 million miles of us a ‘Near Earth Object’, which is three quarters of the 120 million mile distance to Mars

The asteroid was first detected in 2001 by an array of telescopes in New Mexico that are part of the Lincoln Near-Earth Asteroid Research (LINEAR) program.

The MIT project is funded by the US Air Force and NASA and it detected the space rock on March 23, 2001 and has been under observation ever since.

Using those observations astronomers calculated its orbit, found how close it would get to Earth and determined it would be going at 77,000mph.

SpaceReference.org wrote of the asteroid: ‘Based on its brightness and the way it reflects light, 2001 FO32 is probably between 0.767 to 1.714 kilometers in diameter, making it larger than ~97% of asteroids but small compared to large asteroids.’ 

The asteroid and Earth are seen on the left of this orbital map on the ‘blue’ Earth orbit line – the orbit of the asteroid is visible through the tall white lines

It should be possible to see the asteroid through an eight inch aperture telescope just after sunset on March 21 by looking slightly above the southern horizon. The pink dot is the asteroid and the lighter area is the sky visible from the UK on March 21 after sunset

It may be possible to see the space rock as it hurtles past the planet in March if you have a telescope with an aperture of at least eight inches. 

The asteroid will be low in the southern sky, so may be difficult to spot from the norther hemisphere, according to EarthSky.org.

To find it look just above the horizon in the southern sky  will glide through the southern constellations of Scorpius and Sagittarius.

It will be visible just above the horizon in the southern sky just after sunset if viewed from the UK and just before dawn if viewed from the southern US.

NASA keeps a close eye on all Near Earth Asteroids to determine whether any could come close to hitting the planet.

A massive mile wide asteroid twice the size of the tallest building in the world – the Burj Khalifa (pictured centre) – will ‘skim’ past the Earth in March

It is a broad definition – covering any object within about 93 million miles of the Earth – those dubbed ‘hazardous’ come within 4.6 million miles and are at least 500ft wide.

There are currently no asteroids that pose a significant risk to life on Earth for at least the next century, according to NASA, with just one having a 0.2 per cent chance of hitting the planet in 2185. 

In the meantime space agencies around the world are investigating potential solutions for deflecting a future asteroid from hitting the Earth.

NASA has looked at using gravity from a flying spacecraft to ‘pull an asteroid’ to a new trajectory.

Astronomers are hunting for asteroids larger than 450ft as they can cause ‘catastrophic damage’

Researchers have discovered most of the asteroids that are about a kilometers in size, but are now on the hunt for those that are about 459ft (140m) – as they could cause catastrophic damage.

Although nobody knows when the next big impact will occur, scientists have found themselves under pressure to predict – and intercept – its arrival.

Artist’s impression pictured 

‘Sooner or later we will get… a minor or major impact,’ said Rolf Densing, who heads the European Space Operations Centre (ESOC) in Darmstadt

It may not happen in our lifetime, he said, but ‘the risk that Earth will get hit in a devastating event one day is very high.’

‘For now, there is little we can do.’ 

Source: AFP 



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Potentially habitable exoplanet candidate spotted around Alpha Centauri A in Earth’s backyard

The nearest solar system to our own may actually host two potentially life-supporting planets, a new study reports.

In 2016, scientists discovered a roughly Earth-size world circling Proxima Centauri, part of the three-star Alpha Centauri system, which lies about 4.37 light-years from Earth. The planet, known as Proxima b, orbits in the “habitable zone,” the range of distances from a star at which liquid water could exist on a world’s surface. (A second planet, Proxima c, was later discovered circling the star as well, but it orbits farther away, beyond the habitable zone’s outer limits.)

There’s considerable debate about the true habitability of Proxima b, however, given that its parent star is a red dwarf. These stars, the most common in the Milky Way, are small and dim, so their habitable zones lie very close in — so close, in fact, that planets residing there tend to be tidally locked, always showing the same face to their host stars, just as the moon always shows Earth its near side. In addition, red dwarfs are prolific flarers, especially when they’re young, so it’s unclear if their habitable-zone worlds can hold onto their atmospheres for long.

Proxima b: Closest Earth-like planet discovery in pictures

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The other two stars in the Alpha Centauri trio, however, are sunlike — a pair called Alpha Centauri A and B, which together make up a binary orbiting the same center of mass. And Alpha Centauri A may have its own habitable-zone planet, according to the new research, which was published online today (Feb. 10) in the journal Nature Communications.

The study presents results from Near Earths in the Alpha Cen Region (NEAR), a $3 million project led by the European Southern Observatory (ESO) and Breakthrough Watch, a program that hunts for potentially Earth-like worlds around nearby stars.

NEAR has been searching for planets in the habitable zones of Alpha Cen A and B using ESO’s Very Large Telescope (VLT) in Chile. The NEAR team upgraded the VLT with several new technologies, including a thermal coronagraph, an instrument designed to block a star’s light and allow the heat signatures of orbiting planets to be spotted. 

After analyzing 100 hours of data gathered by NEAR in May and June of 2019, the scientists detected a thermal fingerprint in the habitable zone of Alpha Centauri A. The signal potentially corresponds to a roughly Neptune-size world orbiting between 1 and 2 astronomical units (AU) from the star, study team members said. (One AU, the average Earth-sun distance, is about 93 million miles, or 150 million kilometers.)

But that planet has not yet been confirmed, so it remains a candidate for now.

“We were amazed to find a signal in our data. While the detection meets every criteria for what a planet would look like, alternative explanations — such as dust orbiting within in the habitable zone or simply an instrumental artifact of unknown origin — have to be ruled out,” study lead author Kevin Wagner, a Sagan Fellow in NASA’s Hubble Fellowship Program at the University of Arizona, said in a statement. 

“Verification might take some time and will require the involvement and ingenuity of the larger scientific community,” Wagner added.

Study co-author Pete Klupar said he hopes the new results will inspire astronomers to study the Alpha Centauri system in greater detail, both via new observing programs and closer scrutiny of archived data, which may hold as-yet unrecognized evidence of the exoplanet candidate. 

“It’s like getting a hint in [the board game] Clue,” Klupar, a researcher with Breakthrough Watch’s parent organization, Breakthrough Initiatives, told Space.com. “Now that we’ve got the hint, maybe they can find something.”

And, if the Alpha Centauri A world does indeed exist, it may not be alone.

“In my mind, the most exciting thing about this is, once we find one planet, we tend to find others,” Klupar said.

Even if the Alpha Cen A planet turns out to be a mirage, however, NEAR’s work will not have been in vain, team members said.

“The new capability that we demonstrated with NEAR to directly image nearby habitable-zone planets is inspiring to further developments of exoplanet science and astrobiology,” Wagner said in the same statement.

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

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Red Dead Online Leak Potentially Reveals Big Upcoming Update

A new Red Dead Online leak is making the rounds that possibly reveals what is coming to the popular video game later this year. Since it released Red Dead Online in Beta a month after Red Dead Redemption 2, Rockstar Games has been relatively slow to support it, especially compared to GTA Online, which clearly has priority due to its larger number of players. However, it looks like Rockstar may be cooking up some big things for the online western such as bank robberies and more

Over on YouTube, Silentc0re relays word of some new files added to the game with the recent update. Of course, this by itself isn’t notable nor exciting, but the content of these files have players talking. For one, brand new files for various driveable boats have been found in the files. Meanwhile, there are files that range from new to newly updated that point to bank robberies coming to the game, including files with assets for money bonds, jewelry bags, safes, strong boxes. Of course, bank robberies are something players have been begging for since launch, and it’s something you’d assume Rockstar Games will eventually add, especially considering how popular heists are in GTA Online.

Lastly, there are files that seem to indicate that Rockstar Games has been doing work involving Guarma, the island from the game’s campaign. Right now, the speculation is that a legendary bounty could take players back to the island, much like the Cayo Perico update takes players to an island that is locked to just the mission.

That said, right now, there’s some contention over the leak, with some suggesting these files have been in the game since before launch, which in turn suggests they are nothing more than cut content. However, this wouldn’t explain why Rockstar Games is updating them.

For now, take everything here with a grain of salt. While datamining leaks are typically quite reliable, they can routinely spawn false conclusions and misconceptions.

At the moment of publishing, Rockstar Games has not commented on this leak in any capacity nor has it revealed what it has in store for the game for this year. If either of these things change, we will be sure to update the story. In the meantime, for more coverage on all things Red Dead Redemption 2, click here.

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