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Wednesday, June 30, 2021

The discovery of a new type of supernova illuminates a medieval mystery

JUNE 28, 2021, by University of California - Santa Barbara
https://phys.org/news/2021-06-supernova.html

Las Cumbres Observatory and Hubble Space Telescope color composite of the electron-capture supernova 2018zd (the large white dot on the right) and the host starburst galaxy NGC 2146 (toward the left).
Credit: NASA/STSCI/J. Depasquale; Las Cumbres Observatory

A worldwide team led by UC Santa Barbara scientists at Las Cumbres Observatory has discovered the first convincing evidence for a new type of stellar explosion—an electron-capture supernova. While they have been theorized for 40 years, real-world examples have been elusive. They are thought to arise from the explosions of massive super-asymptotic giant branch (SAGB) stars, for which there has also been scant evidence. The discovery, published in Nature Astronomy, also sheds new light on the thousand-year mystery of the supernova from A.D. 1054 that was visible all over the world in the daytime, before eventually becoming the Crab Nebula.

Historically, supernovae have fallen into two main types: thermonuclear and iron-core collapse. A thermonuclear supernova is the explosion of a white dwarf star after it gains matter in a binary star system. These white dwarfs are the dense cores of ash that remain after a low-mass star (one up to about 8 times the mass of the sun) reaches the end of its life. An iron core-collapse supernova occurs when a massive star—one more than about 10 times the mass of the sun—runs out of nuclear fuel and its iron core collapses, creating a black hole or neutron star. Between these two main types of supernovae are electron-capture supernovae. These stars stop fusion when their cores are made of oxygen, neon and magnesium; they aren't massive enough to create iron.

While gravity is always trying to crush a star, what keeps most stars from collapsing is either ongoing fusion or, in cores where fusion has stopped, the fact that you can't pack the atoms any tighter. In an electron capture supernova, some of the electrons in the oxygen-neon-magnesium core get smashed into their atomic nuclei in a process called electron capture. This removal of electrons causes the core of the star to buckle under its own weight and collapse, resulting in an electron-capture supernova.

If the star had been slightly heavier, the core elements could have fused to create heavier elements, prolonging its life. So it is a kind of reverse Goldilocks situation: The star isn't light enough to escape its core collapsing, nor is it heavy enough to prolong its life and die later via different means.

That's the theory that was formulated beginning in 1980 by Ken'ichi Nomoto of the University of Tokyo and others. Over the decades, theorists have formulated predictions of what to look for in an electron-capture supernova and their SAGB star progenitors. The stars should have a lot of mass, lose much of it before exploding, and this mass near the dying star should be of an unusual chemical composition. Then the electron-capture supernova should be weak, have little radioactive fallout, and have neutron-rich elements in the core.

Artist impressions of a super-asymptotic giant branch star and its core made up of oxygen, neon and magnesium. This is the end state of stars around 8-10 solar masses, whose core is pressure supported by electrons. When the core becomes dense enough, neon and magnesium start to eat up electrons, reducing the core pressure and inducing a core-collapse supernova explosion. 
Credit: S. Wilkinson; Las Cumbres Observatory

The new study is led by Daichi Hiramatsu, a graduate student at UC Santa Barbara and Las Cumbres Observatory (LCO). Hiramatsu is a core member of the Global Supernova Project, a worldwide team of scientists using dozens of telescopes around and above the globe. The team found that the supernova SN 2018zd had many unusual characteristics, some of which were seen for the first time in a supernova.

It helped that the supernova was relatively nearby—only 31 million light-years away—in the galaxy NGC 2146. This allowed the team to examine archival images taken by the Hubble Space Telescope prior to the explosion and to detect the likely progenitor star before it exploded. The observations were consistent with another recently identified SAGB star in the Milky Way, but inconsistent with models of red supergiants, the progenitors of normal iron core-collapse supernovae.

The authors looked through all published data on supernovae, and found that while some had a few of the indicators predicted for electron-capture supernovae, only SN 2018zd had all six: an apparent SAGB progenitor, strong pre-supernova mass loss, an unusual stellar chemical composition, a weak explosion, little radioactivity and a neutron-rich core.

"We started by asking 'what's this weirdo?'" Hiramatsu said. "Then we examined every aspect of SN 2018zd and realized that all of them can be explained in the electron-capture scenario."

The new discoveries also illuminate some mysteries of the most famous supernova of the past. In A.D. 1054 a supernova happened in the Milky Way Galaxy that, according to Chinese and Japanese records, was so bright that it could be seen in the daytime for 23 days, and at night for nearly two years. The resulting remnant, the Crab Nebula, has been studied in great detail.

This composite image of the Crab Nebula was assembled by combining data from five telescopes spanning nearly the entire breadth of the electromagnetic spectrum. 
Credit: NASA, ESA, NRAO/AUI/NSF and G. Dubner (University of Buenos Aires)

The Crab Nebula was previously the best candidate for an electron-capture supernova, but its status was uncertain partly because the explosion happened nearly a thousand years ago. The new result increases the confidence that the historic SN 1054 was an electron-capture supernova. It also explains why that supernova was relatively bright compared to the models: Its luminosity was probably artificially enhanced by the supernova ejecta colliding with material cast off by the progenitor star as was seen in SN 2018zd.

Ken Nomoto at the Kavli IPMU of the University of Tokyo expressed excitement that his theory had been confirmed. "I am very pleased that the electron-capture supernova was finally discovered, which my colleagues and I predicted to exist and have a connection to the Crab Nebula 40 years ago," he said. "I very much appreciate the great efforts involved in obtaining these observations. This is a wonderful case of the combination of observations and theory."

Hiramatsu added, "It was such a 'Eureka moment' for all of us that we can contribute to closing the 40-year-old theoretical loop, and for me personally because my career in astronomy started when I looked at the stunning pictures of the Universe in the high school library, one of which was the iconic Crab Nebula taken by the Hubble Space Telescope."

"The term Rosetta Stone is used too often as an analogy when we find a new astrophysical object," said Andrew Howell, a staff scientist at Las Cumbres Observatory and adjunct faculty at UCSB, "but in this case I think it is fitting. This supernova is literally helping us decode thousand-year-old records from cultures all over the world. And it is helping us associate one thing we don't fully understand, the Crab Nebula, with another thing we have incredible modern records of, this supernova. In the process it is teaching us about fundamental physics: how some neutron stars get made, how extreme stars live and die, and about how the elements we're made of get created and scattered around the universe." Howell also is the leader of the Global Supernova Project, and lead author Hiramatsu 's Ph.D. advisor.



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Tuesday, June 29, 2021

New Report Tracks Counterspace Capabilities of World’s Militaries

April 1, 2021 | By Amanda Miller
https://www.airforcemag.com/new-report-tracks-counterspace-capabilities-of-worlds-militaries/

Air Force Gen. John W. "Jay" Raymond, who led U.S. Space Command command when it was re-established in 2019, and Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for Space Policy Steve Kitay, brief reporters at the Pentagon in Aug. 29, 2019. 
Raymond now leads the U.S. Space Force. 
DOD photo by U.S. Navy Petty Officer 2nd Class James K. Lee.

More of the world’s militaries are reorganizing their command structures to prepare for future wars in space while coming up with ways to counter satellites directly or to interfere with satellite communications, according to a report out April 1.

In the 2021 edition of Global Counterspace Capabilities: An Open Source Assessment, the nonprofit Secure World Foundation rounds up the publicly known or suspected activities, plans, and likely technological capabilities of eight spacefaring militaries in categories from weapons that target satellites in orbit, to jamming of satellite communications, to cyber attacks on satellite ground stations.

As satellite technologies such as GPS have become integral to military activities, more militaries have started figuring out ways to protect their equipment in orbit and on the ground. To elude outside interference, while also being able to disrupt others, is to achieve “space superiority,” according to the report.

The U.S. military established its 11th unified combatant command, the U.S. Space Command, as well as the U.S. Space Force in 2019. More militaries had already reorganized their space entities in recent years or have done so since.

Below are the countries outlined in the report along with their counterspace capabilities:

China

China reorganized its space and counterspace forces in 2015 and placed them, along with electronic warfare (a.k.a. jamming) and cyber units, under the new Strategic Support Force.

Counterspace capabilities: China has tested rendezvous and proximity operations between satellites in low-Earth and geosynchronous orbits but apparently without “an actual destructive co-orbital intercept of a target,” according to the report. Up to three development programs could lead to, or already have led to, a direct-ascent anti-satellite weapon to physically target satellites. China can likely interfere with some satellite communications but doesn’t appear to actively do so.

Details of China’s likely development of directed-energy weapons such as lasers are “scarce.” It is building more ground-based radar stations and telescopes to track and characterize space objects for space situational awareness.

Russia

Russia reorganized its “space forces” in 2015 under the Aerospace Forces responsible for space launches, ballistic missile warning, satellite control and space surveillance networks, and anti-air and anti-missile defense, according to the report.

Counterspace capabilities: Russia has tested rendezvous-and-proximity operations including maneuvers suggesting that a Russian satellite is observing a U.S. reconnaissance satellite. Russia is “almost certainly capable of some limited [direct-ascent, anti-satellite] operations” but isn’t yet likely to pose a “critical threat” in this regard. It has upgraded its electronic warfare systems that jam GPS receivers in local areas. Russia likely can jam uplinks to communications satellites.

With likely international help, Russia tracks a catalog of space objects rivaling the U.S.’s. It’s system is “slightly more robust” in listing objects in high-Earth and geostationary orbits, according to the report. Russia’s ground-based laser ranging system for tracking satellites could serve as a directed-energy weapon to dazzle satellite optics, while Russia is also developing such a weapon carried by airplane.

Iran

Iran announced its Aerospace Force’s new Space Command in April 2020 after the launch of an apparent cubesat.

Counterspace capabilities: Iran has demonstrated interference with commercial satellite signals. Its launch vehicle or ballistic missiles could form part of a direct-ascent anti-satellite weapon, but Iran isn’t thought to be trying that. It may be able to track satellites in low-Earth orbit.

France

France reassigned control of its military satellites from its space agency to its military in 2019 while elevating a command within the country’s air force and renaming that service the French Air and Space Force.

Counterspace capabilities: France wants to fill gaps in its space situational awareness by partnering with other countries in the European Union. Government officials have mentioned the idea of equipping French satellites with lasers to dazzle or blind unfriendly satellites that get too close.

India

India created the Defence Space Agency and Defence Space Research Organisation in 2019 to respectively coordinate among the three branches of the armed forces and perform research and technical support.

Counterspace capabilities: India demonstrated in 2019 that its missile defense system could intercept a low-orbiting satellite. It is expanding its network of facilities for tracking space objects. It may be developing directed-energy weapons but evidently not for counterspace purposes.

Japan

Japan established its military’s Space Domain Mission Unit in 2020 to gather space situational awareness in the interest of tracking and protecting Japanese satellites. Expected to grow to 100 people by 2023, the unit will coordinate with U.S. Space Command.

Counterspace capabilities: Japan’s ballistic missile defense system may be able to reach low-orbiting satellites but hasn’t been tested in this capacity. The government is discussing whether to build a satellite to “intercept foreign threat satellites.”

United States

The United States gave U.S. Space Command responsibility for “space warfighting” and the Space Force responsibility for “operating, training, and equipping” forces in 2019.

Counterspace capabilities: The U.S. has demonstrated technologies that could form a co-orbital anti-satellite weapon and has demonstrated its ship-based anti-ballistic missile interceptor against a satellite. Meanwhile, the U.S.’s ground-based interceptors “have the most potential capability” in the role, putting all satellites in low-Earth orbit within reach, according to the report.

The Space Force’s Counter Communications System Block 10.2 for jamming geostationary satellite connections came online in 2020, the service’s first offensive weapon system. While continuing to lead the world in space situational awareness, the U.S. is upgrading its network of ground-based radar stations and telescopes and adding new ones while also agreeing to share data with other countries and “looking to leverage commercial capabilities.” Like Russia’s, the U.S.’s laser ranging equipment for tracking satellites could dazzle or blind the optical sensors of Earth-imaging satellites.

The report cites North Korea’s ability to jam civilian GPS “within a limited geographical area” and acknowledges that its ballistic missiles could conceivably be developed into a direct-ascent anti-satellite weapon.

Not mentioned is the United Kingdom Space Command announced in 2020.

“The United States has long known, long recognized that access to and freedom to maneuver in space is a vital national interest, as you said. It underpins our national security, it underpins our intelligence efforts, it underpins our treaty verification, it underpins our economy. … It underpins every instrument of national power,” said Chief of Space Operations Gen. John W. “Jay” Raymond at AFA’s virtual Aerospace Warfare Symposium in February.

“The challenge is that the access to space and freedom to maneuver in space can no longer be treated as a given. We have to be able to protect, because there are threats that exist today,” he added.


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Monday, June 28, 2021

Aeronautics Group Introduces its Orbiter 4 Small Tactical UAS, for Maritime Patrol Missions

08.06.2021
http://www.canadiandefencereview.com/news?news/3188


Aeronautics Group - a leading provider of integrated turnkey solutions based on unmanned system platforms, payloads and communications for defense and HLS applications – introduces its Orbiter 4 small tactical UAS, capable of performing long-range, long-endurance maritime patrol missions.

The Orbiter 4’s high-performance EO/IR and MPR payloads are ideal for maritime monitoring, gas and oil rigs protection, illegal activity tracking, and search & rescue. It has already been fully integrated into the operational environment of navy vessels, and meets the requirements of navy operations.

With the Orbiter 4, Aeronautics continues the evolution of its Orbiter product line of small tactical UAS, delivering top mission performance with the lightest, most versatile, and most advanced covert platform available today. Based on the successful aerodynamic structure and properties of the Orbiter 3 STUAS, the Orbiter 4’s exclusive abilities include endurance of over 24 hours, and the ability to carry and operate multi payloads simultaneously.

"There is a growing need today for tactical drones capable of carrying out ISTAR missions in challenging marine environments,” says Matan Perry, Vice President of Marketing & Sales at Aeronautics. “As pioneers in the field of small tactical UAS, we are proud to be able to provide a solution that has been adapted to meet these needs. Having been specifically tailored in this way, we believe it to be the best possible solution to meet all the requirements of the navy."

With advanced image processing capabilities, automatic takeoff and recovery system, and the ability to navigate with or without GPS/ datalink, Orbiter 4 delivers superior performance capabilities, operational flexibility and cost-effectiveness in a small tactical UAS that is unique in its category. Airstrip independent, it is able to take-off and land on any type of vessel. Operated by only three personnel, it is easy to use, maintain, and carries a low logistical footprint.



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SPACE - S0 - 20210628 - Disaster Changes Continue Unfolding, Sun Waking Up

SPACE - S0 - 20210628 - Disaster Changes Continue Unfolding, Sun Waking Up

Good Morning, 0bservers!

    
     
Solar winds spent the weekends gently easing down from their Friday high of 425 KPS (which is still in the nominal range), and is currently riding the 340 KPS line. Particle Density was a lot more variable, and did peak out around 2200 UTC yesterday before staring a steady drop to their lowest point in three days. Temperatures were a bit more variable starting yesterday at 0900, but they seem to be staying in the 5100°K to 4100°K range, with the current readings at the lower end of that spectrum. Phi Angle readings remain generally variable but not to the point of wild instability. The instances of most variability coincide with polarity collisions on the Bt/Bz chart, so no change there. KP-Index readings are generally calm, mostly KP-1s. The Magnetometer's reading a standard sine wave pattern, and both Proton Flux and Electron Flux charts show nominal. The X-Ray Flux is showing slightly elevated background radiation in the lower Class B range, but we did have some spikes into the upper portion of that segment just before midnight and again at around 0800 UTC. A mid-C Class flare popped up at 1000 UTC. From the video loops, the small coronal hole in the North passed the midpoint yesterday, and you can see some evidence of flaring in the two sunspot groups both North and South. There are also a couple more bright spots approaching the Eastern lim, so we should know in a couple of days if they'll pose any issues. The Magnetogram is showing the Northern sunspot group at Alpha to maybe Beta complexity, but the two separate Southern groups are more Beta-Delta, with the upper one perhaps at Beta-Gamma-Delta. Eyes 0pen, folks...
* * *
Another new video from Suspicious0bservers, "Safe Zones, Animal Anomalies, Primary Risks | Advanced Catastrophism".
  
  
Enjoy!

 
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Sunday, June 27, 2021

Evidence on UFOs 'largely inconclusive': US intelligence report

JUNE 26, 2021
https://phys.org/news/2021-06-evidence-ufos-largely-inconclusive-intelligence.html

An image from of US military pilot's sighting of an "unidentified aerial phenomena" that some think is evidence of UFOs.

A highly awaited US intelligence report on dozens of mysterious unidentified flying object sightings said most could not be explained, but did not rule out that some could be alien spacecraft.

The unclassified report said researchers could explain only one of 144 UFO sightings by US government personnel and sources between 2004 and 2021, sightings that often were made during military training activities.

Eighteen of those, some observed from multiple angles, appeared to display unusual movements or flight characteristics that surprised those who saw them, like holding stationary in high winds at high altitude, and moving with extreme speed with no discernable means of propulsion, the report said.

Some of the 144 might be explained by natural or human made objects like birds or drones cluttering a pilot's radar, or natural atmospheric phenomena, the report said.

Others could be secret US defense tests, or unknown advanced technologies created by Russia or China, it said.

Yet others appeared to require more advanced technologies to determine what they are, it said.

The sightings of what the report calls unidentified aerial phenomena (UAP) "probably lack a single explanation," said the report from the Office of the Director of National Intelligence.

"We currently lack sufficient information in our dataset to attribute incidents to specific explanations."

The report made no mention of the possibility of—or rule out—that some of the objects sighted could represent extra-terrestrial life.

The military and intelligence community have conducted research on them as a potential threat.

"UAP clearly pose a safety of flight issue and may pose a challenge to US national security," the report said.

Some could be US rivals' intelligence collection operations or represent other technology so advanced that the United States military has nothing similar.

The report was ordered after more UFO sightings by military pilots became public and pilot and radar videos leaked out showing flying objects behaving strangely with no explanation.

It stressed that pilots and their aircraft are ill-equipped to identify out-of-the-ordinary objects floating around the skies.

The only one of the 144 incidents in the years covered by the report that was explained turned out to be a large deflating balloon.

The nine-page report released Friday did not discuss any specific incidents.

It was the public version of a more detailed classified version being supplied to the armed services and intelligence committees of Congress.

Mark Warner, chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee, said the frequency of UFO reports "appears to be increasing" since 2018.

"Today's rather inconclusive report only marks the beginning of efforts to understand and illuminate what is causing these risks to aviation in many areas around the country and the world.," Warner said in a statement.

"The United States must be able to understand and mitigate threats to our pilots, whether they're from drones or weather balloons or adversary intelligence capabilities," Warner said.

At the Pentagon, Deputy Secretary of Defense Kathleen Hicks issued a memorandum ordering more systematic reporting of UAPs encountered during military training and testing.

"Incursions into our training ranges and designated airspace pose safety of flight and operations security concerns, and may pose national security challenges," said Pentagon spokesman John Kirby.

The department "takes reports of incursions—by any aerial object, identified or unidentified—very seriously, and investigates each one," Kirby said.


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Saturday, June 26, 2021

Why 'nuclear batteries' offer a new approach to carbon-free energy

JUNE 25, 2021, by David L. Chandler, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
https://techxplore.com/news/2021-06-nuclear-batteries-approach-carbon-free-energy.html

This cut-away rendering of the MIT nuclear battery concept shows important components such as the instrumentation and control module, the reactor, and the power module.
 Credit: Massachusetts Institute of Technology

We may be on the brink of a new paradigm for nuclear power, a group of nuclear specialists suggested recently in The Bridge, the journal of the National Academy of Engineering. Much as large, expensive, and centralized computers gave way to the widely distributed PCs of today, a new generation of relatively tiny and inexpensive factory-built reactors, designed for autonomous plug-and-play operation similar to plugging in an oversized battery, is on the horizon, they say.

These proposed systems could provide heat for industrial processes or electricity for a military base or a neighborhood, run unattended for five to 10 years, and then be trucked back to the factory for refurbishment. The authors—Jacopo Buongiorno, MIT's TEPCO Professor of Nuclear Science and Engineering; Robert Frida, a founder of GenH; Steven Aumeier of the Idaho National Laboratory; and Kevin Chilton, retired commander of the U.S. Strategic Command—have dubbed these small power plants "nuclear batteries." Because of their simplicity of operation, they could play a significant role in decarbonizing the world's electricity systems to avert catastrophic climate change, the researchers say. MIT News asked Buongiorno to describe his group's proposal.

Q: The idea of smaller, modular nuclear reactors has been discussed for several years. What makes this proposal for nuclear batteries different?

A: The units we describe take that concept of factory fabrication and modularity to an extreme. Earlier proposals have looked at reactors in the range of 100 to 300 megawatts of electric output, which are a factor of 10 smaller than the traditional big beasts, the big nuclear reactors at the gigawatt scale. These could be assembled from factory-built components, but they still require some assembly at the site and a lot of site preparation work. So, it's an improvement over the traditional plants, but it's not a huge improvement.

This nuclear battery concept is really a different thing because of the physical scale of these machines—about 10 megawatts. It's so small that the whole power plant is actually built in a factory and fits within a standard container. The idea is to fit the whole power plant, which comprises a microreactor and a turbine that converts the heat to electricity, into the container.

This provides several benefits from an economic point of view. You are completely decoupling your projects and your technology from the construction site, which has been the source of every possible schedule delay and cost overrun for nuclear projects over the past 20 years.

This way it becomes sort of energy on demand. If the customer wants either heat or electricity, they can get it within a couple of months, or even weeks, and then it's plug and play. This machine arrives on the site, and just a few days later, you start getting your energy. So, it's a product, it's not a project. That's how I like to characterize it.

Q: You talk about potentially having such units widely distributed, including even in residential areas to power whole neighborhoods. How confident can people be as to the safety of these plants?

A: It's exceptionally robust—that's one of the selling points. First of all, the fact that it's small is good for a variety of reasons. For one thing, the overall amount of heat that's generated is proportional to the power, which is small. But more importantly, it has a high surface-to-volume ratio because, again, it's small, which makes it a lot easier to keep cool under all circumstances. It's passively cooled, to a point where nobody has to do anything. You don't even need to open a valve or anything. The system takes care of itself.

It also has a very robust containment structure surrounding it to protect against any release of radiation. Instead of the traditional big concrete dome, there are steel shells that basically encapsulate the whole system. And as for security, at most sites, we envision that these would be located below grade. That provides some protection and physical security from external attackers.

As for other safety issues, you know, if you think about the famous nuclear accidents, Three Mile Island, Chernobyl, Fukushima, all three of these issues are mediated by the design of these nuclear batteries. Because they are so small, it's basically impossible to get that type of outcome from any sequence of events.

Q: How do we know that these new kinds of reactors will work, and what would need to happen for such units to become widely available?

A: NASA and Los Alamos National Laboratory have done a similar demonstration project, which they called a microreactor, for space applications. It took them just three years from the start of design to fabrication and testing. And it cost them $20 million. It was orders of magnitude smaller than traditional large nuclear plants that easily cost a billion-plus and take a decade or more to build.

There are also different companies out there now developing their own designs, and every one is a bit different. Westinghouse is already working on a version of such nuclear batteries (though they are not using that term), and they plan to run a demonstration unit in two years.

The next step will be to build a pilot plant at one of the national laboratories that has extensive equipment for testing nuclear reactor systems, such as the Idaho National Laboratory. They have a number of facilities that are being modified to accommodate these microreactors, and they have extra layers of safety. Because it's a demonstration project, you want to make sure that if something happens you didn't foresee, that you don't have any release to the environment.

Then, the plant could go through an accelerated program of testing, subjecting it to more extreme conditions than would ever be encountered in normal operation. You essentially abuse it and show by direct testing that it can take all those external loads or situations without exceeding any failure limits. And once it's proven there under rigorous conditions, widespread commercial installations could begin quite quickly.

These nuclear batteries are ideally suited to create resilience in very different sectors of the economy, by providing a steady dependable source of power to back up the increasing reliance on intermittent renewable energy sources such as solar and wind. And, these highly distributed systems can also help to alleviate pressures on the grid by being sited just where their output is needed. This can provide greater resiliency against any disruptions to the grid and virtually eliminate the issue of transmission losses. If these become as widespread as we envision, they could make a significant contribution to reducing the world's greenhouse gas emissions.


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SPACE - S0 - 20210626 - Bird Disaster Mystery, Sunspots Growing Fast

SPACE - S0 - 20210626 - Bird Disaster Mystery, Sunspots Growing Fast 

Good Morning, 0bservers!

    
     
Solar winds remained slightly elevated (not really strong, but above the minimums) since yesterday's report, running back and forth between 360-420 KPS throughout the period. Particle Density stayed steady, but we did see Temperatures drop below 5000°K after midnight UTC, with the latest level at 1000 UTC around 4300°K. There's still a lot of Phi Angle variability on the chart, but it seems to have started to stabilize somewhat after 0800 UTC. That instability seems to have been driven by a number of polarity collisions on the Bt/Bz chart. KP-Index levels are calm, with the latter half of yesterday being KP-1 readings. Nominal readings across the boards for the Magnetometer, Proton Flux and Electron Flux. The X-Ray Flux was somewhat calm yesterday morning, but there was a sharp spike around 1300 UTC into the lower Class C flare range, and another one about five hours later just touching the line. A few perturbations showed up after that. You can see the spark of the flare just on the Northwest lim, a "parting gift" from the departing sunspot group. The coronal hole mentioned yesterday should be crossing the midpoint later today, and there's a lot more activity on those two new sunspot groups both North and South. The Southern one is finally showing up on the Solar Visible Light video, with two negative cores. You can see them bracketing the positive central mass in the Magnetogram. The Northern group seems to be spreading out instead of coalescing, but it's broad and still has sufficient complexity to be of concern.
 
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Friday, June 25, 2021

Defence News: In series of tests, Defense Ministry successfully intercepts targets using airborne laser system

 

In series of tests, Defense Ministry successfully intercepts targets using airborne laser system 


The system is said to have destroyed all of the targets that were launched. The ability to intercept threats in such a manner is seen as a groundbreaking development in terms of Israel's air defense

By Israel Defense, 06/22/2021
https://www.israeldefense.co.il/en/node/50513

Photo: Elbit 


 The Directorate of Defense R&D in Israel's Ministry of Defense, together with Elbit Systems and the IAF, has successfully intercepted several UAVs using an airborne high-power laser weapon system. The UAVs were intercepted at various ranges and altitudes.

For the series of tests conducted under the leadership of the Directorate of Defense R&D (DDR&D), a high-power laser system was installed on an aircraft and tested in a number of scenarios. It successfully intercepted and destroyed all of the UAVs that were launched as targets. The ability to intercept and destroy airborne threats is a groundbreaking development that offers a strategic change in the air defense capabilities of the State of Israel. The tests were conducted at a testing ground in the center of Israel, in close cooperation with the IAF and the "Yanat" unit, Elbit said. 

Defense Minister Benny Gantz said "I would like to congratulate the Directorate for Defense R&D, Elbit Systems and the IAF on the technological breakthrough they have achieved. Today you have brought us closer to yet another important milestone in the development of the multi-tier defense array of the State of Israel and it is significant both in terms of cost-effectiveness and defense capabilities. The laser system will add a new layer of protection at greater ranges and in facing a variety of threats – securing the State of Israel while saving the costs of interception. I am confident that Israel's defense industry will succeed in this important development program, and I will personally work together with the entire defense establishment to ensure its success."

Israel is among the first countries in the world to achieve and demonstrate such capabilities employing an airborne, high-power laser system. The series of tests is the first phase in a multi-year program led by the DDR&D and Elbit Systems to develop a laser system against a variety of long-range threats.

This method of airborne interception has many advantages, including low cost per interception, the ability to effectively intercept long-range threats at high altitudes regardless of weather conditions, and the ability to defend vast areas. The airborne, high-power laser system will complement Israel's multi-tier missile defense array, which includes the Iron Dome, David's Sling and Arrow missile interceptor systems. It will also increase the effectiveness of air defense against existing and future threats in the region, according to Elbit. 

The Head of Research and Development in the DDR&D, Brig. Gen. Yaniv Rotem, said "The Directorate of Defense R&D in the Ministry of Defense, Elbit and the IAF have completed a series of tests employing a powerful, airborne laser system. We successfully intercepted several UAVs in the air, within a range of more than 1km. This is a groundbreaking technological achievement and it is critical for further development of our airborne high-power laser system."

Oren Sabag, General Manager of Elbit Systems ISTAR, said "We are proud to spearhead the development of this strategic capability together with the Ministry of Defense and the IAF. The trials were successful thanks to a range of unique technological assets. We believe that the use of a high-power laser to carry out low-cost airborne interception of rockets and hostile unmanned aircraft, closer to their launching areas and away from population centers, offers a significant change in Israel's defense capabilities."

High-Power Laser Interception Tests, Elbit Systems, June 24th, 2021


 

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First clear view of a boiling cauldron where stars are born

JUNE 23, 2021, by University of Maryland
https://phys.org/news/2021-06-view-cauldron-stars-born.html

The RCW 49 galactic nebula pictured above is one of the brightest star-forming regions in the Milky Way.
 By analyzing the movement of carbon atoms in an expanding bubble of gas surrounding the Westerlund 2 star cluster within RCW 49, a UMD-led team of researchers have created the clearest image to date of a stellar-wind driven bubble where stars are born. 
Credit: NASA/JPL - Caltec/E.Churchwell (University of Wisconsin).




University of Maryland researchers created the first high-resolution image of an expanding bubble of hot plasma and ionized gas where stars are born. Previous low-resolution images did not clearly show the bubble or reveal how it expanded into the surrounding gas.

The researchers used data collected by the Stratospheric Observatory for Infrared Astronomy (SOFIA) telescope to analyze one of the brightest, most massive star-forming regions in the Milky Way galaxy. Their analysis showed that a single, expanding bubble of warm gas surrounds the Westerlund 2 star cluster and disproved earlier studies suggesting there may be two bubbles surrounding Westerlund 2. The researchers also identified the source of the bubble and the energy driving its expansion. Their results were published in The Astrophysical Journal on June 23, 2021.

"When massive stars form, they blow off much stronger ejections of protons, electrons and atoms of heavy metal, compared to our sun," said Maitraiyee Tiwari, a postdoctoral associate in the UMD Department of Astronomy and lead author of the study. "These ejections are called stellar winds, and extreme stellar winds are capable of blowing and shaping bubbles in the surrounding clouds of cold, dense gas. We observed just such a bubble centered around the brightest cluster of stars in this region of the galaxy, and we were able to measure its radius, mass and the speed at which it is expanding."

The surfaces of these expanding bubbles are made of a dense gas of ionized carbon, and they form a kind of outer shell around the bubbles. New stars are believed to form within these shells. But like soup in a boiling cauldron, the bubbles enclosing these star clusters overlap and intermingle with clouds of surrounding gas, making it hard to distinguish the surfaces of individual bubbles.

Tiwari and her colleagues created a clearer picture of the bubble surrounding Westerlund 2 by measuring the radiation emitted from the cluster across the entire electromagnetic spectrum, from high-energy X-rays to low-energy radio waves. Previous studies, which only radio and submillimeter wavelength data, had produced low-resolution images and did not show the bubble. Among the most important measurements was a far-infrared wavelength emitted by a specific ion of carbon in the shell.

A team led by UMD astronomers created the first clear image of an expanding bubble of stellar gas where stars are born using data from NASA's SOFIA telescope on board a heavily modified 747 jet as seen here in this artist's rendering. 
Credit: Artist Rendering by Marc Pound/UMD

"We can use spectroscopy to actually tell how fast this carbon is moving either towards or away from us," said Ramsey Karim (M.S. '19, astronomy), a Ph.D. student in astronomy at UMD and a co-author of the study. "This technique uses the Doppler effect, the same effect that causes a train's horn to change pitch as it passes you. In our case, the color changes slightly depending on the velocity of the carbon ions."

By determining whether the carbon ions were moving toward or away from Earth and combining that information with measurements from the rest of the electromagnetic spectrum, Tiwari and Karim were able to create a 3-D view of the expanding stellar-wind bubble surrounding Westerlund 2.

In addition to finding a single, stellar wind-driven bubble around Westerlund 2, they found evidence of new stars forming in the shell region of this bubble. Their analysis also suggests that as the bubble expanded, it broke open on one side, releasing hot plasma and slowing expansion of the shell roughly a million years ago. But then, about 200,000 or 300,000 years ago, another bright star in Westerlund 2 evolved, and its energy re-invigorated the expansion of the Westerlund 2 shell.

"We saw that the expansion of the bubble surrounding Westerlund 2 was reaccelerated by winds from another very massive star, and that started the process of expansion and star formation all over again," Tiwari said. "This suggests stars will continue to be born in this shell for a long time, but as this process goes on, the new stars will become less and less massive."

Tiwari and her colleagues will now apply their method to other bright star clusters and warm gas bubbles to better understand these star-forming regions of the galaxy. The work is part of a multi-year NASA-supported program called FEEDBACK.



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SPACE - S0 - 20210625 - The Hand in Space, Galactic Sheet, Dino Mystery, Electroquakes

SPACE - S0 - 20210625 - The Hand in Space, Galactic Sheet, Dino Mystery, Electroquakes 

Good Morning, 0bservers!

    
     
Solar wind speeds rose for most of the morning yesterday, topping out around 380 KPS at 1400 UTC, then ranging 360-390 KPS for most if the evening before dropping around midnight UTC, building back up two hours later, and then building further starting around 0700 UTC with a peak of 430 KPS at 0900 UTC. Particle Density also took a slow rise that crested around 1600 UTC, with a slow and steady decline after that point. Temperature readings generally followed the wind speed path, and have been oscillating between 5000°K and 5400°K since midnight UTC. Phi Angle readings started to destabilize around 0800 UTC yesterday, and it just got worse throughout the period. There were a LOT of polarity collisions on the Bt/Bz chart which appear to have been the cause. The KP-Index did climb up to two KP-3 readings at midnight and 0300 UTC, but the last two readings have fallen back to KP-2. The Magnetometer had the expected high/low sine wave after a couple days of flattening out, but still well within nominal range. The Proton Flux Chart was also nominal, but the Electron Flux chart did flirt with the Alert Threshold for a few hours yesterday afternoon before calming back into a more normal range. The X-Ray Flux is more of a bumpy ride than yesterday, but it never got out of Class B flare range so we're good in that respect. Video loops are showing a new coronal hole system developing in front of the Northeast sunspot group at 193Ã…, but I'm seeing a bodacious filament crossing much of the Northwest quadrant at 304Ã…. If that sucker releases, it'll be nasty, depending on what direction it blows. Both 304Ã… and 131Ã… are showing some minor sparking from the various sunspots, which is what was driving the X-Ray instability. The LASCO C3 is showing the beginnings of a CME starting around 0530 UTC, from the Southwest quadrant. Can't see the old sunspot on the Solar Visible Light loop, and I still fail to see any dark cores for the new ones. However, you can see their magnetic signatures quite clearly on the Magnetogram, and it appears there is a second sunspot group just turning in from the Southeast lim, but it is almost completely positive with a couple small leading/trailing negative spots hugging it.
 
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Thursday, June 24, 2021

Earth-like biospheres on other planets may be rare

JUNE 23, 2021, by Royal Astronomical Society
https://phys.org/news/2021-06-earth-like-biospheres-planets-rare.html

Credit: Pixabay/CC0 Public Domain

A new analysis of known exoplanets has revealed that Earth-like conditions on potentially habitable planets may be much rarer than previously thought. The work focuses on the conditions required for oxygen-based photosynthesis to develop on a planet, which would enable complex biospheres of the type found on Earth. The study is published today in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society.

The number of confirmed planets in our own Milky Way galaxy now numbers into the thousands. However planets that are both Earth-like and in the habitable zone—the region around a star where the temperature is just right for liquid water to exist on the surface—are much less common.

At the moment, only a handful of such rocky and potentially habitable exoplanets are known. However the new research indicates that none of these has the theoretical conditions to sustain an Earth-like biosphere by means of 'oxygenic' photosynthesis—the mechanism plants on Earth use to convert light and carbon dioxide into oxygen and nutrients.

Only one of those planets comes close to receiving the stellar radiation necessary to sustain a large biosphere: Kepler−442b, a rocky planet about twice the mass of the Earth, orbiting a moderately hot star around 1,200 light years away.

The study looked in detail at how much energy is received by a planet from its host star, and whether living organisms would be able to efficiently produce nutrients and molecular oxygen, both essential elements for complex life as we know it, via normal oxygenic photosynthesis.

By calculating the amount of photosynthetically active radiation (PAR) that a planet receives from its star, the team discovered that stars around half the temperature of our Sun cannot sustain Earth-like biospheres because they do not provide enough energy in the correct wavelength range. Oxygenic photosynthesis would still be possible, but such planets could not sustain a rich biosphere.

Planets around even cooler stars known as red dwarfs, which smolder at roughly a third of our Sun's temperature, could not receive enough energy to even activate photosynthesis. Stars that are hotter than our Sun are much brighter, and emit up to ten times more radiation in the necessary range for effective photosynthesis than red dwarfs, however generally do not live long enough for complex life to evolve.

"Since red dwarfs are by far the most common type of star in our galaxy, this result indicates that Earth-like conditions on other planets may be much less common than we might hope," comments Prof. Giovanni Covone of the University of Naples, lead author of the study.

He adds: "This study puts strong constraints on the parameter space for complex life, so unfortunately it appears that the "sweet spot" for hosting a rich Earth-like biosphere is not so wide."

Future missions such as the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST), due for launch later this year, will have the sensitivity to look to distant worlds around other stars and shed new light on what it really takes for a planet to host life as we know it.



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SPACE - S0 - 20210624 - Solar Filament Destabilizing, Magneto-Sense, Cosmos

SPACE - S0 - 20210624 - Solar Filament Destabilizing, Magneto-Sense, Cosmos 

Good Morning, 0bservers!

    
     
Solar winds were more variable than usual yesterday, while remaining in the lower range. They peaked at 375 KPS just after 0800, dropped to 330 KPS two hours later, then took three up/down transits between 310-350 KPS over a three hour period, and is now in the 325-345 KPS range. That same up/down pattern repeated on the Temperature and Particle Density charts. Phi Angle patterns finally stabilized around 1300, and the Bt/Bz panel is starting to show some potentials for polarity collision, so Eyes 0pen for that today. The KP-Index was mostly calm yesterday, primarily KP-1s, but we did have a couple KP-0s before and after midnight UTC, and the 0900 UTC readings is up slightly to KP-2. Magnetometer is nominal, but the sine wave pattern is flattening out, so expect that to do a high/low jump in the next day or so. Proton Flux and Electron Flux are both nominal. After yesterday's rather impressive "big boom" into mid-Class C, the X-Ray Flux calmed back to the bottom of Class B, with only a small mid-B spike around 2100 UTC. You can see the large expulsion on the ENLIL Spiral, with the CME moving well behind Earth's orbit. The new sunspot group at the Southeast lim has finally crossed into view, and it's impressive. The Northeast sunspot is also displaying magnetic activity, a bit more so than the latter. The Northwest sunspot group is moving mostly out of range for planetary effects, and I'm not seeing much in the way of coronal hole activity except at the North pole. We'll need another day or so to see the Southeast sunspot more clearly, but there's at least Beta complexity apparent at the moment. The Northeast one is looking like it's almost two separate sunspot groups, one above the other, with matching polarities (negative in front, positive in back, with an extra negative trailing the lower one). However, they're not really showing up as "dark" on the Solar Visible Light loop on NOAA, more like lighter scattered patches.
 
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