Sunday, June 10, 2018
Saturday, June 9, 2018
Hurricanes are slowing down, and that's bad news
June 8, 2018
University of
Wisconsin-Madison
Some hurricanes are moving
more slowly, spending increased time over land and leading to catastrophic
local rainfall and flooding, according to a new study.
Some hurricanes are moving
more slowly, spending increased time over land and leading to catastrophic
local rainfall and flooding, according to a new study published Wednesday (June
6) in the journal Nature.
While hurricanes batter
coastal regions with destructive wind speeds, study author James Kossin says
the speed at which hurricanes track along their paths -- their translational
speed -- can also play a role in the damage and devastation they cause. Their
movement influences how much rain falls in a given area.
This is especially true as
global temperatures increase.
"Just a 10 percent
slowdown in hurricane translational speed can double the increase in rainfall
totals caused by 1 degree Celsius of global warming," says Kossin, a
researcher at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's (NOAA)
Center for Weather and Climate. He is based at the University of
Wisconsin-Madison.
The study compared 68 years
(1949-2016) of worldwide hurricane track and intensity data, known as
best-track data, from NOAA to identify changes in translational speeds. It
found that, worldwide, hurricane translational speeds have averaged a 10
percent slowdown in that time.
One recent storm highlights
the potential consequences of this slowing trend. In 2017, Hurricane Harvey
stalled over eastern Texas rather than dissipating over land, as hurricanes
tend to do. It drenched Houston and nearby areas with as much as 50 inches of
rain over several days, shattering historic records and leaving some areas
under several feet of water.
How much hurricanes have
slowed depends on where they occur, Kossin found. "There is regional
variation in the slowdown rates when looking at the 10 percent global average
across the same time frame," he says.
The most significant slowdown,
20 percent, occurred in the Western North Pacific Region, an area that includes
Southeast Asia. Nearby, in the Australian Region, Kossin identified a reduction
of 15 percent. In the North Atlantic Region, which includes the U.S., Kossin
found a 6 percent slowdown in the speeds at which hurricanes move.
When further isolating the
analysis to hurricane speeds over land, where their impact is greatest, Kossin
found that slowdown rates can be even greater. Hurricanes over land in the
North Atlantic have slowed by as much as 20 percent, and those in the Western
North Pacific as much as 30 percent.
Kossin attributes this, in
part, to the effects of climate change, amplified by human activity. Hurricanes
move from place to place based on the strength of environmental steering winds
that push them along. But as the Earth's atmosphere warms, these winds may
weaken, particularly in places like the tropics, where hurricanes frequently
occur, leading to slower-moving storms.
Additionally, a warmer
atmosphere can hold more water vapor, potentially increasing the amount of rain
a hurricane can deliver to an area.
The study complements others
that demonstrate climate change is affecting hurricane behavior.
For instance, in 2014, Kossin
showed that hurricanes are reaching their maximum intensities further from the
tropics, shifting toward the poles in both the Northern and Southern
Hemispheres. These shifts can deliver hurricanes to areas -- including some
heavily populated coastal regions -- that have not historically dealt with direct
hits from storms and the devastating losses of life and property that can
result.
Another study, published in
April by researchers at the National Center for Atmospheric Research, used a
modeling approach to look at what would happen to hurricanes under future
climate projections. Using real hurricane data from 2000-2013, the researchers
found future hurricanes will experience a 9 percent slowdown, higher wind
speeds, and produce 24 percent more rainfall.
"The rainfalls associated
with the 'stall' of 2017's Hurricane Harvey in the Houston, Texas, area
provided a dramatic example of the relationship between regional rainfall
amounts and hurricane translation speeds," says Kossin. "In addition
to other factors affecting hurricanes, like intensification and poleward
migration, these slowdowns are likely to make future storms more dangerous and
costly."
Researchers Reverse Cognitive Impairments in Mice With Dementia
Fri, 06/08/2018 - 2:52pm
by Temple University Health
System
Reversing memory deficits and
impairments in spatial learning is a major goal in the field of dementia
research. A lack of knowledge about cellular pathways critical to the
development of dementia, however, has stood in the way of significant clinical
advance. But now, researchers at the Lewis Katz School of Medicine at Temple
University (LKSOM) are breaking through that barrier. They show, for the first
time in an animal model, that tau pathology - the second-most important lesion
in the brain in patients with Alzheimer's disease - can be reversed by a drug.
"We show that we can
intervene after disease is established and pharmacologically rescue mice that
have tau-induced memory deficits," explained senior investigator Domenico
Praticò, MD, Scott Richards North Star Foundation Chair for Alzheimer's
Research, Professor in the Departments of Pharmacology and Microbiology, and
Director of the Alzheimer's Center at Temple at LKSOM. The study, published
online in the journal Molecular Neurobiology, raises new hope for human
patients affected by dementia.
The researchers landed on
their breakthrough after discovering that inflammatory molecules known as
leukotrienes are deregulated in Alzheimer's disease and related dementias. In
experiments in animals, they found that the leukotriene pathway plays an
especially important role in the later stages of disease.
"At the onset of
dementia, leukotrienes attempt to protect nerve cells, but over the long term,
they cause damage," Dr. Praticò said. "Having discovered this, we
wanted to know whether blocking leukotrienes could reverse the damage,
whether we could do something to fix memory and learning impairments in mice
having already abundant tau pathology."
To recapitulate the clinical
situation of dementia in humans, in which patients are already symptomatic by
the time they are diagnosed, Dr. Praticò and colleagues used specially
engineered tau transgenic mice, which develop tau pathology - characterized by
neurofibrillary tangles, disrupted synapses (the junctions between neurons that
allow them to communicate with one another), and declines in memory and
learning ability - as they age. When the animals were 12 months old, the
equivalent of age 60 in humans, they were treated with zileuton, a drug that
inhibits leukotriene formation by blocking the 5-lipoxygenase enzyme.
After 16 weeks of treatment,
animals were administered maze tests to assess their working memory and their
spatial learning memory. Compared with untreated animals, tau mice that had
received zileuton performed significantly better on the tests. Their superior
performance suggested a successful reversal of memory deficiency.
To determine why this
happened, the researchers first analyzed leukotriene levels. They found that
treated tau mice experienced a 90-percent reduction in leukotrienes compared
with untreated mice. In addition, levels of phosphorylated and insoluble tau,
the form of the protein that is known to directly damage synapses, were 50
percent lower in treated animals. Microscopic examination revealed vast
differences in synaptic integrity between the groups of mice. Whereas untreated
animals had severe synaptic deterioration, the synapses of treated tau animals
were indistinguishable from those of ordinary mice without the disease.
"Inflammation was
completely gone from tau mice treated with the drug," Dr. Praticò said.
"The therapy shut down inflammatory processes in the brain, allowing the
tau damage to be reversed."
The study is especially
exciting because zileuton is already approved by the Food and Drug
Administration for the treatment of asthma. "Leukotrienes are in the lungs
and the brain, but we now know that in addition to their functional role in
asthma, they also have a functional role in dementia," Dr. Praticò
explained.
"This is an old drug for
a new disease," he added. "The research could soon be translated to
the clinic, to human patients with Alzheimer's disease."
In desert trials, next-generation water harvester delivers fresh water from air
By Robert Sanders, Media relations | JUNE
8, 2018
Last October, a UC Berkeley
team headed down to the Arizona desert, plopped their newest prototype water
harvester into the backyard of a tract home and started sucking water out of
the air without any power other than sunlight.
The successful field test of
their larger, next-generation harvester proved what the team had predicted
earlier in 2017: that the water harvester can extract drinkable water every
day/night cycle at very low humidity and at low cost, making it ideal for
people living in arid, water-starved areas of the world.
“There is nothing like this,”
said Omar Yaghi, who invented the technology underlying the harvester. “It
operates at ambient temperature with ambient sunlight, and with no additional
energy input you can collect water in the desert. This laboratory-to-desert
journey allowed us to really turn water harvesting from an interesting
phenomenon into a science.”
Yaghi, the James and Neeltje
Tretter chair in chemistry at UC Berkeley and a faculty scientist at Lawrence
Berkeley National Laboratory, and his team will report the results of the first
field test of a water-collecting harvester in the June 8 issue of the
journal Science Advances.
The trial in Scottsdale, where
the relative humidity drops from a high of 40 percent at night to as low as 8
percent during the day, demonstrated that the harvester should be easy to scale
up by simply adding more of the water absorber, a highly porous material called
a metal-organic framework, or MOF. The researchers anticipate that with the
current MOF (MOF-801), made from the expensive metal zirconium, they will
ultimately be able to harvest about 200 milliliters (about 7 ounces) of water
per kilogram (2.2 pounds) of MOF, or 3 ounces of water per pound.
But Yaghi also reports that he
has created a new MOF based on aluminum, called MOF-303, that is at least 150
times cheaper and captures twice as much water in lab tests. This will enable a
new generation of harvesters producing more than 400 ml (3 cups) of water per
day from a kilogram of MOF, the equivalent of half a 12-ounce soda can per
pound per day.
“There has been tremendous
interest in commercializing this, and there are several startups already
engaged in developing a commercial water-harvesting device,” Yaghi said. “The
aluminum MOF is making this practical for water production, because it is
cheap.”
Yaghi is also working with
King Abdul Aziz City for Science and Technology in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, and
its president, Prince Dr. Turki Saud Mohammad Al Saud, on the technology as
part of their joint research Center of Excellence for Nanomaterials and Clean
Energy.
Super-absorbent MOFs
Yaghi is a pioneer in
metal-organic frameworks, which are solids with so many internal channels and
holes that a sugar-cube-size MOF might have an internal surface area the size
of six football fields. This surface area easily absorbs gases or liquids but,
just as important, quickly releases them when heated. Various types of MOFs are
already being tested as a way to pack more gas into the tanks of
hydrogen-fueled vehicles, absorb carbon dioxide from smokestacks and store
methane.
Several years ago, Yaghi
created MOF-801, which absorbs and releases water easily, and last year
he tested
small quantities in a simple harvester to see if he could capture
water from ambient air overnight and use the heat of the sun to drive it out
again for use. That harvester, built by a collaborator at MIT using less than 2
grams of MOF, proved that the concept worked: the windows fogged up in the sun,
though the researchers were not able to collect or accurately measure the
water.
That same harvester was
transported to the desert earlier this year and worked similarly,
though again only droplets of water were generated as a proof of concept.
For the new paper, the UC
Berkeley team — graduate student Eugene Kapustin and postdoctoral fellows
Markus Kalmutzki and Farhad Fathieh — collected and measured the water and
tested the latest generation harvester under varying conditions of humidity,
temperature and solar intensity.
The harvester is essentially a
box within a box. The inner box holds a 2-square-foot bed of MOF grains open to
the air to absorb moisture. This is encased in a two-foot plastic cube with transparent
top and sides. The top was left open at night to let air flow in and contact
the MOF, but was replaced during the day so the box could heat up like a
greenhouse to drive water back out of the MOF. The released water condensed on
the inside of the outer box and fell to the bottom, where the researchers
collected it with a pipette.
The extensive field tests lay
out a blueprint allowing engineers to configure the harvester for the differing
conditions in Arizona, the Mediterranean or anywhere else, given a specific
MOF.
“The key development here is
that it operates at low humidity, because that is what it is in arid regions of
the world,” Yaghi said. In these conditions, the harvester collects water even
at sub-zero dew points.
Yaghi is eagerly awaiting the
next field test, which will test the aluminum-based MOF and is planned for
Death Valley in late summer, where temperatures reach 110 degrees Fahrenheit in
the daytime and remain in the 70s at night, with nighttime humidity as low as
25 percent.
Other co-authors of the paper
are graduate students Peter Waller and Jingjing Yang. The work was supported by
the U.S. National Science Foundation, German Research Foundation and KACST.
As Deadline Fast Approaches, House Members Warned to Defend Net Neutrality or "Face Internet's Wrath"
"Any lawmaker of any
party who fails to sign the discharge petition in support of the CRA will
regret it come election time."
With less than a week before
the FCC's "resoundingly unpopular" repeal of net neutrality rules go
into effect on June 11th, defenders of the open internet and online consumers
are warning members of the U.S. House of Representatives to either immediately back
a resolution petition that would nullify the rules or "face the internet's
wrath."
With the Senate passing
a Congressional Review Act (CRA) resolution in May, the broad coalition
trying to thwart the GOP-controlled FCC is pulling out all the stops in order
to win a similar victory in the House. With more than 175 House members already
indicating their support for the CRA, a total of 218 signatures are needed to
force the resolution to the floor, a goal the BattleforNet coalition—which
includes Fight for the Future, Free Press, Demand Progress, and others—says is
increasingly within reach in the wake of the Senate's bipartisan vote.
For those who don't seize this
historic opportunity to preserve the bedrock online principle of net neutrality,
however, advocates say there will be unyielding contempt.
"People are going to be
pissed off. Really pissed off. And rightly so. It's hard to imagine a more clear
example of how our democracy is broken," said Evan Greer, deputy director
of Fight for the Future. "We're going to harness the power of the internet
to ensure that people have a way to channel that anger productively. Any
lawmaker of any party who fails to sign the discharge petition in support of
the CRA will regret it come election time."
According to Candace Clement,
campaign director for the Free Press Action, "This will be one of the
biggest showdowns of the summer in the House. For constituents everywhere Net
Neutrality is non-negotiable. Our elected representatives can either side with
the people and support the CRA or with the cable and phone lobby."
As part of their campaign, the
coalition has organized a day of actions for Thursday, so that citizens
nationwide can visit or contact their House member in order to demand support
for the CRA.
"Activists and advocates
in every district are already turning up the heat on anyone who sells out their
constituents to line the pockets of AT&T, Comcast and Verizon," said
Clement. "Keeping the internet open is critical."
'What Happens When You Put Someone in Charge of Agency They Think Shouldn't Exist,' Says Warren After Mulvaney Guts CFPB Panel
"Mulvaney is only
interested in obtaining views from his inner circle, and has no interest in
hearing the perspectives of those who work with struggling American
families," says the board's ousted chair
Mick Mulvaney, acting director
of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB), disbanded the Consumer
Advisory Board (CAB) on Wednesday in what critics are calling just
his latest in a series of
moves to "quietly
sabotage" the agency.
"Everyone on the board
has been fired," said Judith
Fox, a professor of consumer law at Notre Dame Law School and three-year member
of CAB—a group of 25 economic and financial experts that the watchdog agency is
legally required to meet with at least twice a year.
Several other ousted CAB
members confirmed Fox's statement to the Associated Press, sharing details
from a Wednesday conference call and an email officially dismissing them. While
the board will be reconstituted later this year, Fox said none of the fired
members will be allowed to apply.
"Firing the current CAB
members is another move indicating Acting Director Mick Mulvaney is only
interested in obtaining views from his inner circle, and has no interest in
hearing the perspectives of those who work with struggling American
families," responded ousted
CAB chair Ann Baddour, a project director at the nonprofit Texas Appleseed.
"This is what happens
when you put someone in charge of an agency they think shouldn't exist,"
tweeted Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.), who played a key part in establishing
the CFPB.
Karl Frisch, executive
director of the advocacy group Allied Progress, said the
decision demonstrates "Mick Mulvaney is only looking out for his Wall
Street friends that have showered him with more than a million dollars in
campaign cash over the years."
"When push comes to
shove, Mick Mulvaney will always stand up for the powerful Wall Street special
interests that have had his back. He'll burry his head in the sand so he
doesn't have to hear the voices of consumers, experts, and those who want him
to fulfill the mission of the CFPB," Frisch added. "Consumers deserve
a champion not a corporate shill."
"Apparently Acting
Director Mulvaney is willing to listen to industry lobbyists who make
campaign contributions, but not the statutorily appointed Consumer Advisory
Board members," said National
Consumer Law Center (NCLC) attorney Chi Chi Wu, another fired CAB member.
"Firing current members of the advisory board is a huge red flag in this
administration's ongoing erosion of critical consumer financial protections
that help average families."
The CFPB said in a statement that
it "will continue to fulfill its statutory obligations to convene the
Consumer Advisory Board and will continue to provide forums for the Community
Bank Advisory Council and the Credit Union Advisory Council. The Bureau will
continue these advisory groups and will use the current 2018 application and
selection process to reconstitute the current advisory groups with new, smaller
memberships."
Ousted board member Max
Levchin, founder of financial services company Affirm, rejected the agency's
claims that the decision was motivated by desires to diversify membership and
save money. He also warned that "without this direct line to all stakeholders,
CFPB's job becomes much harder, perhaps nearly impossible."
The announcement on Wednesday
followed a report earlier
this week by David Dayen at The Intercept that during Mulvaney's
tenure as head of the CFPB, the agency has ignored both rules and established
precedent, cancelling two in-person board meetings and several conference calls
with little notice.
"It's disturbing to watch
the current administration of this bureau do so much to undermine the bureau's
core," Lynn Drysdale, then-vice chair of CAB, had told Dayen. "The
present administration is more concerned with restructuring and installing
political staff than protecting consumers."
Summer Lee’s plans to bring Socialism to the Pennsylvania Statehouse
“That we have not just
revolted is crazy to me.”
Summer Lee, an
African-American lawyer, community organizer and member of the Democratic
Socialists of America profiled in our June cover story, recently won the
Democratic primary for Pennsylvania House District 34 on a resolutely
progressive platform. With no Republican likely to file in this deep blue
district, Lee is almost certainly headed to Harrisburg.
What do you say to those who
claim progressive candidates hurt Democrats’ chances?
I don't think it's true. I
think the people who say that don't necessarily believe in progressive politics
and they project that onto other people.
Politics speaks to everybody
if it’s done correctly. My campaign reached people who voted for Bernie
Sanders, for Hillary Clinton, for Donald Trump. They were enthusiastic about
our message. Everywhere we went, people cared about their kid’s education,
their air and their water. They cared about a living wage.
And maybe sometimes words
might be frightening to them, like, “oh, you're a socialist.” But we didn't do
sensationalism. We were patient, we talked to people about what they care
about. We helped them understand that addressing the things they care about
isn’t a scary thing, it’s not unattainable.
If someone who was considered
a radical black woman can win in a district like this, you can absolutely have
progressive politics anywhere in Pennsylvania.
You told CNN recently
“capitalism works on the back of my community and communities of color and poor
communities across the country.”
I think when you look at the
system, at white supremacy, at what we call a meritocracy and at capitalism,
you’re quickly able to see which communities were always destined to fail or to
be disadvantaged.
People tell us that the things
I fought for in my platform are just pie in the sky, being progressive for
progressive’s sake. That’s not true. When we ask for free education, we’re not
saying that because it sounds nice, we’re saying that because as a young black
woman who grew up in a poor black town, my family was not able to amass
generational wealth because of the history of capitalism, the history of
racism. So when it came time for me to go to college, I was a first- generation
college student. I didn't have family members or anyone who could help me
offset the costs.
Black students are more likely
to shoulder loan debt, which means that we’re more likely to go into the next
generation behind. It doesn’t seem like a fair system.
When you look at other
industrialized countries, you don't see residents making the hard decision
between, am I going to go to the doctor and find out if I just had a heart
attack or am I going to pay my bills or am I going to ignore it? That is
absurd, but that's how we're living in the United States of America.
We have turned our backs on so
many people and I think capitalism has run amuck. I mean, that we’re even
talking about capitalism and it's not just like a “Duh.” When we look at just
outrageous income inequality, the fact that we have not just revolted is crazy
to me.
What are your priorities for
your first year?
Now we're looking to other
races, we want to make sure that we're helping other candidates. We've built a
huge organization that we should be able to mobilize, to tap into, to keep this
people-powered movement powered.
people-powered movement powered.
In Harrisburg, if I had to
focus on something I would say mass incarceration, doing something on
legislation with cash bail and decreasing the prison population. Hand in hand
with that is a funding scheme for education, ending the school-to-prison
pipeline. And for my town’s sake, I’ve been an advocate for environmental
justice and obviously I don’t intend to relent.
If you look at these issues as
separate, you’re missing something. Your politics is incomplete.
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