Quantcast
Channel: Earth Headlines on One News Page [United States]
Viewing all 46736 articles
Browse latest View live

Arnold Schwarzenegger challenges President Trump on Earth's future | Cherrie Short

$
0
0
Arnold Schwarzenegger challenges President Trump on Earth's future | Cherrie Short I just wish the US president was listening Reported by Wales Online 8 hours ago.

This insane golden chamber contains water so pure it can dissolve metal, and is helping scientists detect dying stars

$
0
0
This insane golden chamber contains water so pure it can dissolve metal, and is helping scientists detect dying stars· *The Super-Kamiokande neutrino detector is a physics experiment the size of a 15-storey building, buried under a mountain in Japan.*
· *Neutrinos are sub-atomic particles that pass through us all the time, and studying them can tell us about supernovas and the composition of the universe.*
· *The detector is full of ultra-pure water, which can leach the nutrients out of your hair and dissolve metal.*

--------------------Hidden 1,000 metres under Mount Ikeno in Japan is a place that looks like a supervillain's dream.

Super-Kamiokande (or "Super-K" as it's sometimes referred to) is a neutrino detector. Neutrinos are sub-atomic particles which travel through space and pass through solid matter as though it were air.

Studying these particles is helping scientists detect dying stars and learn more about the universe. Business Insider spoke to three scientists about how the giant gold chamber works — and the dangers of conducting experiments inside it.

*Seeing the sub-atomic world*

Neutrinos can be very hard to detect, so much so that Neil deGrasse dubbed them "the most elusive prey in the cosmos." In this video, he explains that the detection chamber is buried deep within the earth to stop other particles from getting in.

"Matter poses no obstacle to a neutrino," he says. "A neutrino could pass through a hundred light-years of steel without even slowing down."

But why catch them at all?

"If there’s a supernova, a star that collapses into itself and turns into a black hole," Dr Yoshi Uchida of Imperial College London told Business Insider. "If that happens in our galaxy, something like Super-K is one of the very few objects that can see the neutrinos from it."

Before a star starts to collapse it shoots out neutrinos, so Super-K acts as a sort of early-warning system, telling us when to look out for these dazzling cosmic events.

"The back-of-the-envelope calculations say it’s going to be about once every 30 years that a supernova explodes in the sort of range that our detectors can see," said Dr Uchida. "If you miss one you’re going to have to wait another few decades on average to see the next one."

*Firing neutrinos through Japan*

Super-K doesn't just catch neutrinos raining down from space.

Situated on the opposite side of Japan in Tokai, the T2K experiment fires a neutrino beam 295 km through the Earth to be picked up in Super-K on the west side of the country.

Studying the way the neutrinos change (or "oscillate") as they pass through matter may tell us more about the origins of the universe, for example, the relationship between matter and anti-matter.

"Our big bang models predict that matter and anti-matter should have been created in equal parts," Dr Morgan Wascko of Imperial College told Business Insider, "but now [most of] the anti-matter has disappeared through one way or another." Studying neutrinos might be one way of figuring out how this came to be.

*How Super-K catches neutrinos*

Buried 1,000 metres underground, Super-Kamiokande is as big as a 15-storey building, and looks a little something like this.

The enormous tank is filled with 50,000 tonnes of ultra-pure water. This is because when travelling through water, neutrinos are faster than light. So when a neutrino travels through water, "it will produce light in the same way that Concord used to produce sonic booms," said Dr Uchida.

"If an aeroplane is going very fast, faster than the speed of sound, then it’ll produce sound — a big shockwave — in a way a slower object doesn’t. In the same way a particle passing through water, if it’s going faster than the speed of light in water, can also produce a shockwave of light.”

The chamber is lined with 11,000 golden-coloured bulbs. These are incredibly sensitive light-detectors called Photo Multiplier Tubes, which can pick up these shockwaves. Here's one close up:

** **



A post shared by Kim Nielsen (@knielsen73) on May 28, 2018 at 7:08am PDT



Dr Wascko describes them as "the inverse of a lightbulb." Simply put, they can detect even minuscule amounts of light and convert it into an electrical current, which can then be observed.

*Terrifyingly pure water*

In order for the light from these shockwaves to reach the sensors, the water has to be cleaner than you can possibly imagine. Super-K is constantly filtering and re-purifying it, and even blasts it with UV light to kill off any bacteria.

Which actually makes it pretty creepy.

"Water that’s ultra-pure is waiting to dissolve stuff into it," said Dr Uchida. "Pure water is very, very nasty stuff. It has the features of an acid and an alkaline."

"If you went for a soak in this ultra-pure Super-K water you would get quite a bit of exfoliation," said Dr Wascko. "Whether you want it or not."

When Super-K needs maintenance, researchers need to go out on rubber dinghies (see above) to fix and replace the sensors.

Dr Matthew Malek, of the University of Sheffield, and two others were doing maintenance from a dinghy back when he was a PhD student.

At the end of the day's work, the gondola that normally takes the physicists in and out of the tank was broken, so he and two others had to sit tight for a while. They kicked back in their boats, shooting the breeze.

"What I didn’t realise, as we were laying back in these boats and talking is that a little bit of my hair, probably no more than three centimeters, was dipped in the water," Malek told Business Insider.

As they were draining the water out of Super-K at the time, Malek didn't worry about contaminating it. But when he awoke at 3 a.m. the next morning, he had an awful realisation.

"I got up at 3 o’clock in the morning with the itchiest scalp I have ever had in my entire life," he said. "Itchier than having chickenpox as a child. It was so itchy I just couldn’t sleep."

He realised that the water had leeched his hair's nutrients out through the tips, and that this nutrient deficiency had worked its way up to his scalp. He quickly jumped in the shower and spent half an hour vigorously conditioning his hair.

Another tale comes from Dr Wascko, who heard that in 2000 when the tank had been fully drained, researchers found the outline of a wrench at the bottom of it. "Apparently somebody had left a wrench there when they filled it in 1995," he said. "When they drained it in 2000 the wrench had dissolved."

*Super-K 2.0*

Super-Kamiokande may be massive, but Dr Wascko told Business Insider that a yet bigger neutrino detector called "Hyper-Kamiokande" has been proposed.

“We’re trying to get this Hyper-Kamiokande experiment approved, and that would start running in approximately 2026,” he said.

Hyper-K would be 20 times bigger than Super-K in terms of sheer volume, and with about 99,000 light detectors as opposed to 11,000.

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: This conveyor belt can move in any direction Reported by Business Insider 5 hours ago.

8 perfect astronaut selfies for when you just need some space

$
0
0
Earth selfies are so two centuries ago. 

If you want to impress us, you've got to take your picture from space. 

Whether they're outside performing maintenance on the International Space Station during a spacewalk or hanging out inside the flight deck, astronauts prove time and time again that the selfies we take on Earth are wack.

SEE ALSO: Epic Photos from ISS Spacewalks Prove Space Makes Everything Better

Apollo 11 astronaut Buzz Aldrin kicked off the space selfie trend back in the day but it's continued on decades later. Nearly every astronaut that travels to orbit these days beams home at least one rad selfie. Read more...

More about Space, Space Photos, International Space Station, Astronaut, and Selfie Reported by Mashable 2 hours ago.

FICPA Appoints Cherry Bekaert’s Steven Wolf to Committee Chair

$
0
0
Cherry Bekaert Partner Steven Wolf has been appointed as chair of the 2018-2019 Florida Institute of Certified Public Accountants Valuation, Forensic & Litigation Services Committee.

(PRWEB) June 23, 2018

Cherry Bekaert, one of the largest CPA and advisory firms in the country, congratulates Partner Steven Wolf, CPA, CFE, ABV/CFF, ASA, on his appointment as chair of the 2018-2019 Florida Institute of Certified Public Accountants (“FICPA”) Valuation, Forensic & Litigation Services Committee. Wolf previously served as a member on this committee, in which he was vice chair in 2017-2018.

As chair, his leadership responsibilities include planning and presenting a two-day conference that is attended by an estimated 200 CPAs and other financial professionals each year. The committee chair also plays an influential and integral role in shaping the future of the profession.

With 30 years of professional advisory experience, Mr. Wolf leads Cherry Bekaert’s Forensic and Litigation Services practice. He specializes in matters involving complex litigation, business valuation, investigative, and transaction advisory services. He has been recognized as an expert in forensic accounting and business valuation matters.

About Cherry Bekaert LLP
As a nationally recognized, growth-oriented firm, Cherry Bekaert has the resources to take your business as far as you want to go. The Firm’s industry specialists already know your marketplace, so they can help you make the most of emerging opportunities while minimizing compliance headaches. With their down-to-earth style and wealth of practical advice, you will find Cherry Bekaert an indispensable part of your team.

Ranked among the largest accounting firms in the country, Cherry Bekaert specializes in offering solutions that impact their clients’ ability to grow. For 70 years, global corporations, private businesses, government entities, nonprofits, emerging firms and successful individuals have relied on Cherry Bekaert to guide them forward as their growth partner.

Cherry Bekaert LLP is an independent member of Baker Tilly International. Baker Tilly International is the world’s 8th largest accountancy and business advisory network by combined fee income of its independent members. Baker Tilly International member firms specialize in providing accountancy and business advisory services to entrepreneurial, growing businesses and mid-market listed corporates worldwide. | cbh.com Reported by PRWeb 3 hours ago.

Flick picks: ‘Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom’ injects pulpy fun into gothic horror

$
0
0
Jurassic Park is closed in the latest installment of the 25-year-old dino franchise, “Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom” — as it should be. To keep returning to the idea of a theme park built around the fiercest creatures that ever walked the Earth would be ill-advised, both within the narrative of the movies and as a creative strategy for the series. To its credit, “Fallen Kingdom” tackles the evolution of hubris that motivated humans to resurrect them in the first place, while injecting… Reported by bizjournals 2 hours ago.

Hillary Clinton big fan of Kiwi jeweller Billy Zeemann

$
0
0
Hillary Clinton big fan of Kiwi jeweller Billy Zeemann A down-to-earth Kiwi jewellery designer living in California has hit the big-time with A-listers such as Hillary Clinton, Katy Perry, Meryl Streep and K.D Lang all fans.The high-profile women are among the politicians, movie stars... Reported by New Zealand Herald 24 minutes ago.

Dangerous skies: Parachutists' near miss with helicopter

$
0
0
Dangerous skies: Parachutists' near miss with helicopter Skydivers parachuting to earth looked down to see the rotors of a helicopter - one of a growing number of near misses reported in New Zealand skies.The incident at Franz Josef is one of 50 incidents recorded by the Civil Aviation... Reported by New Zealand Herald 6 minutes ago.

Past generations created a climate crisis for Millennials and Generation Z. Today marks 30 years of inaction.

$
0
0
Past generations created a climate crisis for Millennials and Generation Z. Today marks 30 years of inaction.· *On June 23, 1988, NASA climate scientist James Hansen told the US Senate it was time to acknowledge that climate change was happening and take action to limit its effects.*
· *Thirty years later, the world has continued to burn fossil fuels faster and faster, cranking planet-warming carbon dioxide levels higher than they've been for millions of years.*
· *Without taking action soon, it'll cost future generations trillions to try to deal with the problem.*

--------------------

Exactly 30 years ago, James Hansen, the director of NASA's Institute for Space Studies, told the US Senate that the question of the day — whether climate change was happening — was no longer in doubt.

"It is time to stop waffling so much and say that the evidence is pretty strong that the greenhouse effect is here," Hansen told reporters at the time.

Hansen's testimony before the Senate Committee on Energy and Natural Resources on June 23, 1988 — coincidentally the hottest June 23 in the District of Columbia's recorded history — is frequently considered the most important climate change hearing in history.

The greenhouse effect that Hansen described — in which the widespread combustion of fossil fuels causes a heat-trapping buildup of gases like carbon dioxide in the Earth's atmosphere — has since become almost common knowledge. For more than 400,000 years, the concentration of atmospheric CO2 fluctuated between just under 180 and 300 parts per million (ppm). Levels are now over 400 ppm and climbing.

The most alarming consequences of that change, like an uninhabitable planet, are still far off. But the near-term effects of climate change, things people alive today will see, include rising sea levels, exaggerated temperature extremes, and stronger hurricanes and typhoons.

The question Hansen's testimony raised was what would be done about that threat. Leading scientists had spoken; political leaders had the information; and even ExxonMobil researchers had privately concluded that "major reductions in fossil fuel combustion" would be needed to prevent "potentially catastrophic events," according to prizewinning investigative reporting.

But the answer to that question, 30 years later, is very little.

The more time passes, the more difficult and expensive fixing the climate problem will get. Hansen is still sounding alarms — in a study published last year, he calculated that future generations could be forced to spend more than $530 trillion cleaning C02 out of the atmosphere (something we don't yet know how to do efficiently). For context, the entire US budget is about $4 trillion annually.

That's quite a burden to leave the children of the future.

*The leaders that got us here*

After Hansen's testimony, the Senate Committee on Environment and Public Works sent a letter to Lee Thomas, the EPA administrator, asking for an examination of policy options that would help stabilize greenhouse gas emissions.

"It was shelved," Mary Wood, head of the University of Oregon School of Law's Environmental and Natural Resources Law Center, told Business Insider.

In 1988, George H.W. Bush, who would take the presidential oath the following January, vowed to "fight the greenhouse effect with the White House effect."

That didn't happen. In fact, at the 1992 Earth Summit in Rio de Janeiro, Bush famously declared that "the American way of life is not up for negotiation."

The members of the 101st Congress in 1989 hailed mostly from the Silent Generation (the average age was about 53) and to be fair, they were stuck with a problem created by past generations, too. But by the time those leaders were in power, they had access to knowledge about the scale of the problem that previous generations' representatives did not.

Of course, behavioral psychologists and economists know that humans aren't good at coming together to deal with problems whose consequences seem far off.

"On any issue, it takes an enormous amount of effort to overcome the status quo," environmentalist and author Bill McKibben told Business Insider. "In the case of climate change, it's doubly hard, since you have to deal with the entire world. In a certain way, we shouldn't be too surprised about how difficult it's all been."

But the biggest barrier to action hasn't been cooperation, nor a lack of information.

"It turned out that we were not engaged in an argument for which more evidence and data was the cure — we'd won the argument long ago," McKibben said. "It was a fight, and it was about money and power … And that one we were losing."

*The power of money and misinformation*

Energy company executives have long known the scientific consensus on global warming. Exxon leaders were informed by company scientists that there was general scientific agreement on the topic in the 1970s. Oil giant Shell created a film in 1991 explaining the future threats of extreme weather, flood, famine, and climate-related conflict.

But they also knew that a serious fight against climate change would hurt their businesses, and lobbied against regulation.

In the early 2000s, groups connected to energy billionaires like the Koch brothers also started funding efforts to discredit climate science. As Jane Mayer explained in her book "Dark Money," political consultant Frank Luntz showed these groups how to persuade voters that the science wasn't clear.

"On cue, organizations funded and directed by the Kochs tore into global warming science and the experts behind it," Mayer wrote. From 2005 to 2008, the Kochs spent almost $25 million funding anti-climate groups, according to the book.

Such groups poured money into political campaigns, directed at candidates (often Republicans) who voiced doubts about the established science. According to a 2013 study, organizations connected to fossil fuel companies have spent almost half a billion dollars on "a deliberate and organized effort to misdirect the public discussion and distort the public's understanding of climate."

And lo and behold, political inaction continued. In 2001, George W. Bush rejected the Kyoto Protocol, which would have gone into effect and required emissions cuts by 2008. (Bill Clinton initially signed it.)

In the most recent presidential election, Republican candidates had already been given a total of more than $100 million from fossil fuel barons by March 2016. President Trump's administration is now full of officials who don't accept the scientific consensus on climate change.

"A government decision maker that has taken money from the fossil fuel industry cannot simply turn around and take action on the climate the next day," Wood said. "They've been compromised, they've breached the duty of loyalty."

The influence that fossil fuels companies now have in politics, Wood added, has created a conflict of interest between government officials and citizens that's "the size of the Gulf of Mexico." Ironically, the Gulf is particularly at risk of being destroyed by the thousands of oil spills that happen there every year.

*A straightforward solution*

Those in office during Hansen's initial testimony may have been part of the Silent Generation, but by the 111th Congress in 2011, the average age of leaders in the House and Senate marked them as Baby Boomers. And their generation has failed to confront the problem, too.

Of course, it's wrong to blame two full generations for our climate crisis (as tempting as that may be for future generations). Many people have spent their lives pushing for solutions, and it's unfair to villainize the average layperson for the actions of politicians or the 100 companies that are responsible for 71% of global carbon emissions since 1988.

However, the window in which action can still avert the most devastating consequences of climate change is rapidly shrinking. Hansen recently told reporters that his study last year suggested putting the problem off for even a few more years could create a situation where "the costs of trying to maintain a livable planet may be too high to bear."

That means that the Baby Boomers currently running our country and energy companies are in a unique position. They may be our last line of defense, our final chance to fix the situation.

"It's a historic moment, because we're at the last possible moment of opportunity to avert irrevocable catastrophe," Wood said.

The solution is simple.

"The irony of all this is that it's been entirely clear from the beginning what we need to do," McKibben said. "It has to look like the very rapid conversion to 100% renewable energy."

Eventually, the world will run out of fossil fuels and be forced to make that switch — though if we burn through all oil, gas, and coal before we do so, the planet will be drastically different. Many researchers believe the right policies can facilitate a much faster transition.

"We undertake enormous expenditures to do things that we think are in the long term interest, national security expenses for example, undertaken with a view that they protect us against future threats," Larry Karp, an economist at UC Berkeley, told Business Insider.

Wood also likens the threat of climate change — and necessary action — to military efforts.

"There was certainly a consensus in World War II when everyone stepped up to the threat. Car manufacturers made military equipment, toy manufacturers made gun bets — that kind of war effort was incredible then and that's exactly what's needed now," said Wood. "It takes a real leader to meet that threat."

There are substantial bipartisan arguments in favor of switching to renewable energy: It's the only way for the US to achieve energy independence, and the falling price of renewables has already created a market trend towards cleaner energy.

Plus, the cost of such a transition would be far cheaper than the alternative. A 2014 report by the International Energy Agency estimated that transitioning away from fossil fuels by 2050 would cost the world $44 trillion. But by cutting fuel use, the report estimates, we'd avoid $115 trillion in fuel costs, which would more pay for the switch (not to mention the fact that the costs of wind and solar have fallen significantly since those calculations were done).

*Rising activism around the world*

As older leaders continue to stall, millions of individuals in younger generations are now pushing for policies and investments that could avert the worst effects of climate change.

"It became clear, we've got to organize for some power of our own," said McKibben — a Boomer who's devoted his career to this cause.

McKibben's organization 350.org, is filled with young activists leading initiatives to fight projects like the Keystone Pipeline and other new oil, coal, and gas developments.

Climate-related lawsuits are on the rise around the world as well. In the US, a group of 21 kids, aged 9 to 21, are currently suing the federal government. They argue that by engaging in actions that contribute to climate change despite long-held knowledge of its dangerous consequences, the government has violated their constitutional rights to life, liberty, and property.

Hansen's granddaughter Sophie Kivlehan is one of those kids. If their lawsuit succeeds, the case could establish a fundamental right to a stable climate and compel agencies to pursue that goal.

Advocacy like this has contributed to the emergence of a stronger global consensus about the need to curb emissions.

"Paris was a success, though you have to squint a little bit to see it — at least everyone agreed there was a problem," McKibben said.

Although President Trump has said the US is withdrawing from the agreement, cities and states around the country have vowed to meet the Paris agreement's emissions reduction goals anyway. Other countries, including China and the EU, have said they plan to stick to their pledges no matter what.

The question, however, is whether any of these efforts can yield results quickly enough.

"In order to catch up with the physics of climate change we have to go at an exponential rate," McKibben said. "It's not as if this was a static problem. If we don't get to it very soon, we'll never get to it."

*The looming cliff*

More Gen Xers and Millennials are assuming positions of authority every day. But the threat of climate change is quickly getting harder to deal with.

I am a Millennial — I was born five years before Hansen's testimony — and I'm also a father. I wonder every day if we will solve this in time for my son to avoid the most disastrous versions of climate model projections.

"He's going to look back and think, 'what the hell were you all thinking,'" McKibben said of my son. "And the answer will be that we weren't thinking enough."

"Huge swaths of the world will be living in places that by the end of the century will have heat waves so deep that people won't be able to deal with them, you have sea level rising dramatically, to the point that most of the world's cities are drowning, the ocean turning into a hot, sour, breathless soup as it acidifies and warms," McKibben said.

The legislators currently in power cannot, of course, be held responsible for that stark future. And they're not to blame for a problem that started at the beginning of the industrial era. But by virtue of their position at this moment, they're the ones with the power to finally do something.

"They're sitting in a historic moment that is cast upon them by nature itself," Wood said. "Everybody in the future will know that we sat in this one fleeting moment of time. Everybody will know who stood up and who stood on the sidelines."

This story was originally published on July 22, 2017. It has been updated for the anniversary of James Hansen's testimony.

*SEE ALSO: The world faces a future of floods, famine, and extreme heat — here’s what it’ll take to bounce back*

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: Why pandas are the most overrated animals on the planet Reported by Business Insider 9 minutes ago.

Bitcoin Magazine’s Week in Review: Fortunes and Fallacies

$
0
0
Bitcoin Magazine’s Week in Review: Fortunes and Fallacies This week, leading South Korean crypto exchange Bithumb experienced a major hack, while Mt Gox, the most notorious exchange to be hacked in bitcoin history, is also back in the news.In Switzerland, the Bank of International Settlements is spreading some misinformation about digital currencies and blockchains; meanwhile, attorney Pamela Morgan is in the U.S. sharing great information regarding how you can plan for cryptoasset inheritance. In China, the asset management firm Reality Shares is giving investors access to blockchain-based companies at the forefront of this brave new world.

Featured stories by Jimmy Aki, Shawn Gordon, Nick Marinoff and David Weiss.

Stay on top of the best stories in the bitcoin, blockchain and cryptocurrency industry. Subscribe to our newsletter here.

“No Grounding In Reality”: BIS Report Tells A Strange Crypto Story

This week, the Bank of International Settlements (BIS) in Switzerland issued a new document as part of its annual economic report that warns citizens of the dangers of digital currencies. Many leaders in the crypto community have argued that the BIS is incorrect in much of what it seems to state as fact.

“The report is correct about price stability and potential scaling issues,” Jeremy Gardner, CEO of Ausum Ventures, told Bitcoin Magazine. “The rest is garbage.”

As for the rest, the article dredges up old arguments about Bitcoin mining’s energy consumption and the vulnerability of centralized exchanges. In sum, it covers very little new ground and shows a narrow understanding of blockchain technology.

South Korean Bithumb Exchange Loses $30M in Latest Cryptocurrency Hack

Hackers have reportedly made away with cryptocurrencies worth $30 million from South Korean cryptoexchange Bithumb. The company has stated on Twitter that they would be compensating the affected users.

Leading Bithumb writes in a blog update, "Due to security issues; we are changing our system regarding deposits of cryptocurrency. All of our customers should stop depositing cryptocurrency until we notify that it is safe to deposit cryptocurrency."

Till Death Do Us Fork: Planning for Cryptoasset Inheritance

Think ahead to the days right after your last days on earth. How qualified is your will’s executor to manage your balance sheet of bitcoin, ether, Ripple, ZenCash and Ada? Are your loved ones ready to receive your private keys and open your hardware wallet? A recent episode of The Tatiana Show podcast tackled this question in an interview with Pamela Morgan, Esq., who’s been working exclusively with Bitcoin and open blockchains since 2014. The impetus for the appearance was the publication of her new book, Cryptoasset Inheritance Planning: A Simple Guide for Owners.

Asset Management Firm Launches Chinese Blockchain ETF

Asset management firm Reality Shares is launching China’s first blockchain ETF, which gives investors access to Chinese companies at the forefront of the blockchain revolution. The Index, will focus on China-based companies that are fully invested in blockchain technologies. Created as a joint partnership between Reality Shares and Nasdaq in January, the fund will “identify and invest” in such companies that are applying blockchain technology as the “first native digital medium of value.”

Mt. Gox Creditors to Be Reimbursed in Bitcoin Under Civil Rehabilitation

The Japan-based Mt. Gox exchange had its bankruptcy stayed due to a petition filed by some of the creditors for the commencement of civil rehabilitation proceedings in Tokyo District Court on November 24, 2017, and heard on June 22, 2018.

At issue primarily is the exchange rate of bitcoin at the time of the hack, approximately $480 per bitcoin. By staying in criminal bankruptcy, the creditors would have been paid back at the exchange rate at the time of the filing; but bitcoin has risen in value significantly since then, trading at over $6,100 per bitcoin today. This change means that creditors could be paid in terms of the amount of bitcoin lost and not the value of the bitcoin at the time of the loss: a significant difference.

This article originally appeared on Bitcoin Magazine. Reported by Bitcoin Magazine 18 minutes ago.

How Jurassic Park led to the modernization of dinosaur paleontology

$
0
0
How Jurassic Park led to the modernization of dinosaur paleontology Paleontologist Steve Brusatte loves Jurassic Park. Without it, he jokes, he wouldn’t even have a job. So he’s not going to criticize all the inaccuracies in the Hollywood franchise. But he’s also studied dinosaurs his whole life (real ones, with feathers), so he loves talking about giant creatures that ruled over the Earth millions of years ago.

In his new book The Rise and Fall of the Dinosaurs: A New History of a Lost World, Brusatte, a professor at the University of Edinburgh in Scotland, charts the origins of dinosaurs from the beginning of the Triassic period all the way to their abrupt disappearance about 66 million years ago. He also takes a close look at the evolution of the field of paleontology, and how it has diversified and... Reported by The Verge 16 minutes ago.

From peak CO2 to record-low sea ice: making sense of climate news

$
0
0
In recent weeks,  Earth has passed a series of “critical” climate milestones. How do readers know which headlines to pay attention to? Reported by Christian Science Monitor 6 hours ago.

Einstein Proved Right In Another Galaxy

$
0
0
An international team of astronomers have made the most precise test of gravity outside our own solar system.

By combining data taken with NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope and the European Southern Observatory’s Very Large Telescope, their results show that gravity in this galaxy behaves as predicted by Albert Einstein’s general theory of relativity, confirming the theory’s validity on galactic scales.

In 1915 Albert Einstein proposed his general theory of relativity (GR) to explain how gravity works. Since then GR has passed a series of high precision tests within the solar system, but there have been no precise tests of GR on large astronomical scales.

It has been known since 1929 that the Universe is expanding, but in 1998 two teams of astronomers showed that the Universe is expanding faster now than it was in the past. This surprising discovery – which won the Nobel Prize in 2011 – cannot be explained unless the Universe is mostly made of an exotic component called dark energy. However, this interpretation relies on GR being the correct theory of gravity on cosmological scales. Testing the long distance properties of gravity is important to validate our cosmological model.

A team of astronomers, led by Dr Thomas Collett of the Institute of Cosmology and Gravitation at the University of Portsmouth, used a nearby galaxy as a gravitational lens to make a precise test of gravity on astronomical length scales.

Dr Collett said: “General Relativity predicts that massive objects deform space-time, this means that when light passes near another galaxy the light’s path is deflected. If two galaxies are aligned along our line of sight this can give rise to a phenomenon, called strong gravitational lensing, where we see multiple images of the background galaxy. If we know the mass of the foreground galaxy, then the amount of separation between the multiple images tells us if General Relativity is the correct theory of gravity on galactic scales.”

A few hundred strong gravitational lenses are known, but most are too distant to precisely measure their mass, so they can’t be used to accurately test GR. However, the galaxy ESO325-G004 is amongst the closest lenses, at 500 million light years from Earth.

Dr Collett continuesx “We used data from the Very Large Telescope in Chile to measure how fast the stars were moving in E325 – this let us infer how much mass there must be in E325 to hold these stars in orbit. We then compared this mass to the strong lensing image separations that we observed with the Hubble Space telescope and the result was just what GR predicts with 9 per cent precision. This is the most precise extrasolar test of GR to date, from just one galaxy.”

“The Universe is an amazing place providing such lenses which we can then use as our laboratories,” added team member Professor Bob Nichol, Director of the Institute of Cosmology and Gravitation. “It is so satisfying to use the best telescopes in the world to challenge Einstein, only to find out how right he was.” Reported by Eurasia Review 4 hours ago.

Democrats Unhinged By Korea – OpEd

$
0
0
The process of Donald Trump’s meeting with Kim Jong Un was as singular as the event itself. His ignorance, incompetence and egomania moved him from “fire and fury” and “little rocket man” to scheduling a meeting to cancelling the meeting to finally holding the summit. But a process has begun which might free two nations from American threats and put them in charge of their own destiny. The Democrats are left with nothing except attacking Trump from the right.

The Democrats like war, interventions and United States hegemony. They always have. If anyone wants proof they need only look at their collective hissy fit regarding the Trump and Kim summit. Part of the reaction is caused by fear of Trump getting credit for a foreign policy achievement. But Democrats are also true believers in imperialism. The last thing they want to see is any reduction in the American military presence in Korea or anywhere else.

There are many parties to thank for bringing about a possibility of peace in the region. The two Koreas themselves, the Democratic Peoples Republic of Korea in the north and the Republic of Korea in the south have made great strides towards peacefully co-existing. Their neighbors China and Russia have also played a role in minimizing tensions. Republic of Korea President Moon Jae-In  made a positive statement about the Trump and Kim agreement and called it “a historic event that has helped break down the last remaining cold war legacy on earth.” Corporate media make no mention of his support for the possibility of a diplomatic breakthrough.

Not one member of the Democratic Party has acknowledged that South Korea is supportive of a process that impacts it most directly. Democratic senators Tammy Duckworth and Chris Murphy have actually proposed an amendment to the National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA ) that would require Pentagon approval for Trump to remove any of the nearly 30,000 American troops stationed there.

The so-called double freeze, which was encouraged by China and Russia, promised a cessation of nuclear testing in exchange for an end to the war games. For good measure Trump added the possibility of a future removal of United States troops. The only downside to these proposals is that they are overseen by the impulsive and unpredictable Donald Trump.

If Democrats were as progressive as they claim to be  they would pressure Trump to follow through and end the 70-year old American intervention in Korea. But they support America’s professed right to invade and intervene in the affairs of countries all over the world, The bipartisan war making consensus is in full effect. Russia and China share borders with North Korea but the pundits and politicians disregard them and their rights to engage with their neighbors.

Democratic Party imperialists like Rachel Maddow  point out Russia’s proximity to Korea as proof of evil intent. The highest rated cable television talk show host dispenses war propaganda to millions of people every day with idiotic and dangerous comments.“Russia is also increasingly straining at its borders right now and shoving back U.S. and western influence, especially U.S. and western military presence anywhere near what it considers to be its own geopolitical interests. And one of the things that they started to loudly insist on is that the U.S. drop those joint military exercises with South Korea.”

Of course Russia asserts its own geopolitical interests. Every nation wants to do that. Inane remarks from the likes of Maddow are a standard talking point for the Democrats. They eagerly uphold the model of the United States as world’s police force as much as the Republicans do.

The two war parties and their partners in media conspire to keep Americans ignorant. Even people who strive to stay informed have no idea that their government’s actions are resisted around the world. They are unaware that China and Russia are jointly leading a process to escape dollar dominion and strengthen their own economic sphere of influence. People who call themselves liberal recoil at the idea that other nations should be able to assert their rights of sovereignty. It is considered a given, an accepted dogma, that the United States ought to have 800 military facilities in the rest of the world.

In his own contradictory way Donald Trump provides an opportunity to begin a new conversation. Americans suffer very directly from the military industrial complex. Defense spending steals money that should be used to meet their needs. The United States military presence all over the world causes suffering to millions of other people. The entire paradigm needs to be changed, but Trump derangement and adherence to beliefs in Manifest Destiny prevent a conversation from ever taking place.

There is no good reason for 30,000 United States troops to be in Korea at all. Anyone calling themselves progressive need to point this out. Of course the Korea situation exposes a larger problem and that is the need to break free from the two major political parties who agree more often than they disagree. Every opportunity for sovereignty and equality among nations must be enthusiastically supported. The conversation shouldn’t be dismissed because Trump’s contradictions brought it into being. The power of the war party must finally come to an end. Reported by Eurasia Review 3 hours ago.

LocusLabs Partners with Dallas Fort Worth International Airport to Give Travelers a Personalized Augmented Reality Experience

$
0
0
LocusLabs Partners with Dallas Fort Worth International Airport to Give Travelers a Personalized Augmented Reality Experience- 3D mapping technology company builds first scalable AR tool to customize the mobile experience in the largest buildings on earth.

OAKLAND, Calif. (PRWEB) June 24, 2018

Today, LocusLabs, the leading indoor location platform, is giving airports and airlines tools to create highly personalized augmented reality experiences for travelers. By piloting its new technology at Dallas Fort Worth International (DFW), the company is working to ensure that millions of passengers can now maximize their time from curb to gate like never before.

Since its initial launch in 2015, LocusLabs has been digitizing the indoor world by providing global venues, enterprises, and brands a location platform to share, manage and communicate about their physical space. Their unique toolset for location-based content management has led to their success and partnerships with the largest travel brands in the world. These same tools are now allowing airports to place virtual objects and indicators throughout their physical space, visible to passengers via mobile applications.

“Augmented Reality provides an entirely new canvas to view information about our world,” said Campbell Kennedy, co-founder of LocusLabs. “We know it will provide value to passengers at the airport, but the technology does come with its own set of challenges within large indoor environments where information accuracy is critical. LocusLabs is the only company today who can implement this at the scale required due to our reality capture technology.”

The pilot program launched in February 2018 and will run through September. Dallas-Fort Worth has seen success and received positive feedback thus far.

“DFW continually looks for the best ways to improve the customer experience, and augmented reality offers some unique solutions for wayfinding in an airport that covers five terminals,” said Megan Bozarth, Senior Manager of Digital Marketing for DFW. “We’ve developed several digital mapping tools to help customers get from the curb to the gate or find their favorite restaurant. Augmented reality maps enhance those capabilities and make it very clear where to turn, stop or find the best shop for last minute gifts.”

How it works· Using the LocusLabs AR solution, users navigate key portions of their airport journey using augmented reality. With the app open and holding their mobile device upright vertically, the user can see:
· Contextualized Signage: existing signs and displays in the airport now have virtual overlay in the user’s native language, and information is specific to that user’s travel journey
· Personal Navigation: when a user is navigating to their gate, indicators appear on the along the floor showing them the most optimal route
· Curated Retail: suggested and popular items are highlighted when the user approaches a restaurant or shop

Check out the short demo here: https://youtu.be/GTnF6rSG9Uc

“Certain information is made more intuitive and more contextual in an augmented reality experience,” says Kennedy. “But other use cases may be best viewed within a 2D or 3D map. These considerations are what we are discovering throughout the course of our pilot programs. In the end, it comes down to how we communicate information about the physical world.”

To generate all the data necessary to build complete augmented reality experiences, LocusLabs uses its proprietary reality capture technology. The system uses LiDAR, the same technology used in self-driving vehicles, to build a 3D model of the entire interior of the building.

This year, LocusLabs is taking its technology and platform into other vertical markets with a focus on campus-wide experiences and efficiencies.

About LocusLabs
LocusLabs digitizes the indoor world by providing customers a geospatial location platform to share, manage and communicate about their physical space. Their proprietary Reality Capture System creates and manages detailed maps of indoor spaces and enables applications to become location-aware on a micro level. Global venues, enterprises and brands then create contextual experiences for customers or employees to search, navigate and discover what they are looking for in spaces all over the world. The company currently has hundreds of millions of mobile users and partnerships with American Airlines, United Airlines, Delta Air Lines, Lufthansa and others. Find out more at LocusLabs.com, or follow us on Twitter. Reported by PRWeb 1 hour ago.

👉 14 Pictures That Should Make Anyone On Earth Go, "What The Actual Fuck?" via Hvper.com

$
0
0
Reported by Upworthy 29 minutes ago.

Trilobites: Magnetic Sense Helps Billions of Moths on an Australian Migration

$
0
0
Researchers say this is the first reliable evidence that insects can use Earth’s magnetic field for navigation. Reported by NYTimes.com 3 days ago.

O&G's Masonry Division and Earth Products Showcase Releases the Latest Update on the Showroom Renovations

$
0
0
Well underway are the renovations at O&G’s Earth Products Showcase showroom space at 325 Hancock Avenue in Bridgeport, CT.

TORRINGTON, Conn. (PRWEB) June 24, 2018

Distributors of fine tile, natural stone and masonry products, O&G's Masonry Division and Earth Products Showcase reveals the latest update of the renovations in its Bridgeport showroom, the news was announced today by Anita Goerig, Director of Marketing. New vignette designs featuring the latest trends in masonry products are well underway in the spacious 25,500 S/F showroom.

A sneak peak of the showroom makeover emphasizes design aesthetics and material selections in an array of textures and colors that will inspire consumers. Once complete the new showroom will feature kitchen vignettes, bath vignettes, a glorious working fireplace surround, numerous floor to ceiling tile vignettes, multiple floor vignettes, product displays, and plenty of workspaces for clients, professionals, and staff to meet.

"Our first Earth Products Showcase opened in Bridgeport over twenty years ago with the specific purpose to display natural stone, brick, tile and paver products to inspire consumers with design ideas," remarked Kara Oneglia, Assistant Vice-President of O&G Industries. "A facelift of the original space allows us to update showroom vignettes featuring core products consumers love and new products trends they desire." The showroom remains open to the public during renovations and is scheduled for completion in October 2018. We invite you to stop in, browse our showroom, and be inspired.

About O&G Industries Masonry Division
Since its inception in 1923, O&G Industries, Inc. has grown to become one of the most diversified construction companies in the Northeast and one of the largest suppliers of masonry products and services in New England. Headquartered in Connecticut, the masonry division's facilities include:

o Seven Mason stores and stone yards,

o Six Earth Products Showcase showrooms,

o Fabrication and Distribution Center for custom stonework.

Sales professionals work with professionals and homeowners alike where the scope of the plans ranges from commercial to residential projects. Customers receive expert consultation from staff that guides clients through the broadest selection of earth-based material available to meet design specifications and budgets. Earth Products Showcases offer professionals and homeowners a place to view elegantly appointed vignettes from classic to contemporary in design. For more information about O&G Industries Masonry Division, call Anita Goerig at 203-881-5192 or navigate to O&G's website at https://mason.ogind.com Reported by PRWeb 2 hours ago.

17 incredibly useful Google products and services you didn't know existed (GOOG, GOOGL)

$
0
0
17 incredibly useful Google products and services you didn't know existed (GOOG, GOOGL) Most of us have heard of Google's well-known and much-loved tools — Gmail, Google Earth, Google Maps, and many more. Those products and services are used by millions of people around the world every day.

What many people don't know, however, is that Google actually has a bunch of other features and tools that are incredibly useful.

For example, did you know Google has a massive free font library, an interactive map of the galaxy, and a service that finds your fine-art doppelgänger?

*Here are 17 under-the-radar services Google offers.*

Jillian D'Onfro contributed to an earlier version of this story.

*SEE ALSO: How to use IGTV, the new Instagram app for watching and creating long-form videos*

-Google Keep is a killer notes and reminder app that works across both desktops and smartphones.-

You can download Google Keep for iOS or Android.-You can set a timer on Google (and get an alarm to sound when time is up) by Googling any amount of time followed by "timer."--Google Sky lets you explore the far reaches of the universe using images from NASA satellite, the Sloan Digital Sky Survey, and the Hubble Telescope.-

Check it out on Google Sky. 
See the rest of the story at Business Insider Reported by Business Insider 42 minutes ago.

A big solar storm could wreak havoc on GPS and everything else on your phone

$
0
0
A big solar storm could wreak havoc on GPS and everything else on your phone· *Solar storms, which involve magnetized particles that shoot out of the sun, can shake up the balance of Earth's magnetic field.*
· *If a solar storm were strong enough, it could de-orbit satellites and cripple the electric power grid.*
· *The sun has been extremely calm lately. But that's not necessarily a good sign.*

--------------------

 

We may not always notice what the sun is up to, sitting some 93 million miles away here on Earth. But there's always a chance that it could shoot nasty space weather our way.

On the surface of the sun, giant fiery eruptions can send magnetically charged particles out into space. If these particles come in contact with Earth's magnetic field, they can have dangerous effects. 

If a solar storm pierces Earth's atmosphere, it can send solar particles down onto the planet and weaken our protective magnetic bubble. The biggest solar storms can cause ripple effects in our power systems, heating and even destroying electrical infrastructure. That can send electronic communications haywire, and it's happened several times before.

The biggest, most dangerous solar storms are prompted by coronal mass ejections, which are essentially great balls of fire that shoot out from the sun. Scientists still aren't sure what causes these bursts, but they know they're related to the sun's magnetic field. Researchers can observe the bursts about eight minutes after they take off from the sun, which is how much time it takes signals to travel from the sun to Earth.

"The problem is we can’t control that large ball of garbage at the center of the solar system," astrophysicist Scott McIntosh, who directs the High Altitude Observatory at the National Center for Atmospheric Research, told Business Insider.

He said Earth's upper atmosphere is "wickedly" impacted by the sun's magnetic spewing, which can throw off our delicate modern balance of technology and metal wires. 

"It's real even if you don't feel it every day," he said. "You might not, your banking institution might, your power grid company almost certainly does, and your telephone company absolutely does."

*Solar storms can do major damage*

Space forecasters usually get between 17 and 36 hours of warning that a cloud of these dangerous particles is on its way to Earth from the sun. Then they run models to see where the impacts of the magnetic disturbances might land. It's important lead time because electromagnetism drives a lot of our technology. When the Earth's magnetic balance is off, wires and cables don't work like normal, and satellites can even fall out of geosynchronous orbit. 

McIntosh said the US government is so worried about these threats that it is aggressively stepping up a plan to build more super-transformers that can weather the geomagnetic storms.

"All your infrastructure is toast," he said. That can be especially true at higher latitudes and places where minerals underground have high conductivity, like the Northeastern US. "Could you imagine DC or New York City being without power for six months, or eight months a year because of a solar event that they didn't forecast well?"

Space forecasters who monitor the sun's activity from an observatory in Hawaii do their best to avoid that fateful scenario. They call power suppliers in vulnerable spots around the country whenever they think the Kp index (which measures geomagnetic activity) could pass a crucial threshold. Their recommendation is usually to crank down the voltage on the power lines for a few days to avoid blowing out transformers. 

On average, federal forecasters say they alert power companies about dangerous incoming solar spinoffs about once a month. Usually, it all unfolds outside the awareness of the general public.

The Aurora Borealis can also be a sign that a solar storm is toying with the Earth's magnetic field. Typically, that spectacle is reserved for people near the poles. But when the light show starts to drift into more temperate latitudes, the dancing sky is giving us a hint that there are disturbances in the magnetosphere.

*Big solar storms have hit us before*

Perhaps the most infamous Earth-bound solar shot was the 1859 Carrington flare. The flare spread "northern" lights as far south as Hawaii.

"That was blowing up telegraph lines all over the world," McIntosh said.

Scientists have estimated that a great flare rivaling 1859's would cripple our modern energy grid, and that it could take $2 trillion to rebuild big power systems in the first year of recovery.

In 2012, Earth narrowly missed a major solar storm as big as the Carrington flare. 

"If the eruption had occurred only one week earlier, Earth would have been in the line of fire," astrophysicist Daniel Baker said after he published a study of the storm in 2013.

Other flares have impacted Earth more recently, though. In 1989, 6 million people in Quebec lost power for nine hours because of solar flare. Then there were the Halloween solar storms of October and November 2003, when 17 flares erupted on the sun at once. Airplanes were re-routed, spacecraft instruments were powered down, and the power went out in Sweden for about an hour, NASA said. That year, the northern lights were seen in Texas and Florida. 

And just last year, when the trifecta of hurricanes Irma, Harvey and Maria were blasting the Caribbean and Gulf of Mexico, the Earth got slammed with the biggest solar flare we'd seen in a decade. As hurricane clouds were making it challenging for radio waves to travel efficiently, the sun doubled down and rendered ham radios (a staple of disaster relief work) temporarily useless. 

*Is a big one on the way?*

While much of the sun's activity is still mysterious, we know that the big orange ball is operating on an 11-year cycle of high to low activity. Recently, the sun has been getting quieter with each cycle. Right now, we're at the lowest recorded solar minimum in 100 years. McIntosh predicts the next cycle will be 25% weaker than this. But a quiet sun is not a calm sun.

"The biggest geomagnetic storms come when the sun's very weak," he said.

A big solar storm could make modern life a mess, since without power, sewage can back up in cities. And what would happen if satellite-powered GPS is keeping a self-driving car on the road as a big solar storm hits? 

"I’d hate to be like the boy that cried wolf," McIntosh said, "but if something bad did happen, could we cope?"

In 2014, physicist Pete Riley estimated that the odds of a big, Carrington-sized storm hitting the Earth in the next decade are about 12%. That's more than a one-in-ten chance.

McIntosh said we only know of one good way to weather a solar storm of that scale: "You batten down the hatches electronically, you power everything down, and try and ride it out. And you hope that when you come back up, it's still there."

*SEE ALSO: A 40-year-old mystery about rising temperatures on the moon has been solved — and it was probably the Apollo astronauts' fault*

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: A paraglider braved severe weather to fly across the Northern Lights Reported by Business Insider 1 day ago.

The week ahead: the USD as a carry currency and safe haven - Nordea

$
0
0
In a review of the upcoming week, Nordea Research is noting the USD's strength despite Friday's capitulation, and the Greenback's safe haven status could see further gains in the week ahead.

*Key quotes*

"While the trade war rages, the USD has had another relatively strong week, especially against currencies like the AUD, the CAD and the NZD. The reason is pretty obvious; the USD is a carry currency and a safe haven at the same time currently. And recently periods of risk off have coincided with a relative re-steepening of the USD curve versus the EUR curve, which has tended to coincide with lower EUR/USD (when the USD curve has re-steepened) over the past 1-2 years.

Over the weekend Trump has added to the trade worries, by promising a 20% tariff on European car exports to US, if European trade barriers on autos are not lowered. We still hold the view that a trade war is ultimately long-term USD positive.

Next week the EU summit could prove to be a market mover as a weak final message from the EU leaders would add fuel to the lately de-integrating sentiment in the Euro area after the Italian worries. Thus, the EU summit risks spell more trouble for the EUR and widen the intra-Euro-area bond spreads, if no further progress is made on the integration measures. And with the recent mudslinging between CDU and CSU, Merkel is not in an optimal position to agree on further EU integration measures just now. We are not betting on a particularly fruitful meeting. We stick to short EUR/USD, if not for spot reasons, then at least for carry reasons.

The Fed is gradually letting its balance sheet shrink at a quicker and quicker pace, with a maximum shrinkage of USD50bn/month reached in Q4, 2018 (of which 30bn can be bonds and notes). On some days, liquidity shrinks a lot, most other days not at all. Interestingly, on days when the daily impact on US liquidity is large, the dollar has tended to gain, and risk sentiment has been weak.

As the company report season approaches, we would.like remind our readers about one interesting consequence from the recent rise of the dollar. As roughly half of S&P500 revenues stem from abroad, the recent dollar move will cut analysts’ 2019 and 2020 EPS forecasts, possibly by 2-2.5%. As an example from the recent past, when the dollar had picked up speed during the third quarter report season of 2014, it prompted lower EPS forecasts for 2015 and 2016. 

As we mentioned in the beginning of this edition of the weekly, we consider the reason for the USD strength versus CAD, NZD and AUD very obvious. As the USD yields better than the CAD, the NZD and the AUD, why on earth should investors decide to “park” the money in either of the three in the current global environment marked by increasing trade risks? The USD is simply the best carry currency in the world at the moment and hence we also stick to our AUD/USD short for the time being.

The commodity currency with the net longest positioning is currently NZD and it should be the one that is most obviously vulnerable to further setbacks in the risk sentiment as a consequence. We therefore decide to add a short NZD leg to our long JPY case ahead of the election in the Liberal Democratic Party in September, due to the risk that Shinzo Abe will be ousted from his post (a JPY positive risk scenario). We think that the market will have to price in a positive risk premium in JPY due to this election rather sooner than later." Reported by FXstreet.com 14 hours ago.
Viewing all 46736 articles
Browse latest View live




Latest Images