PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

NASA sees warmer cloud tops as Tropical Storm Hernan degenerates

NASA sees warmer cloud tops as Tropical Storm Hernan degenerates
2014-07-29
(Press-News.org) Tropical Storm Hernan degenerated into a remnant low pressure area on July 29. Infrared imagery from NASA's Aqua satellite revealed cloud tops were warming as the storm weakened.

The Atmospheric Infrared Sounder or AIRS instrument aboard Aqua gathered infrared data on a quickly weakening Hernan on July 29 at 5:11 a.m. EDT. The data was then made into a false-colored image at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California. The AIRS image showed small, fragmented areas of a few powerful thunderstorms with high, cold cloud tops in Tropical Storm Hernan as it continued weakening. For the most part, however, the cloud top temperatures warmed through the system which indicated the uplift was weaker.

By 11 a.m. EDT (1500 UTC) Hernan was no longer a tropical cyclone and had become a remnant low pressure area. The center of post-tropical cyclone Hernan was located near latitude 23.5 north and longitude 121.1 west, about 710 miles (1,145 km) west of the southern tip of Baja California, Mexico. The post-tropical cyclone is moving toward the west-northwest near 15 mph (24 kph) and this general heading with a decrease in forward speed is expected through Wednesday night, July 30. Maximum sustained winds are near 35 mph (55 kph).

The National Hurricane Center expects that remnant low to dissipate during the next couple of days.

INFORMATION:

[Attachments] See images for this press release:
NASA sees warmer cloud tops as Tropical Storm Hernan degenerates

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Superconductivity could form at high temperatures in layered 2-D crystals

2014-07-29
An elusive state of matter called superconductivity could be realized in stacks of sheetlike crystals just a few atoms thick, a trio of physicists has determined. Superconductivity, the flow of electrical current without resistance, is usually found in materials chilled to the most frigid temperatures, which is impractical for most applications. It's been observed at higher temperatures–higher being about 100 kelvin or minus 280 degrees below zero Fahrenheit–in copper oxide materials called cuprate superconductors. But those materials are brittle and unsuitable for fabricating ...

Autistic brain less flexible at taking on tasks, Stanford study shows

2014-07-29
The brains of children with autism are relatively inflexible at switching from rest to task performance, according to a new brain-imaging study from the Stanford University School of Medicine. Instead of changing to accommodate a job, connectivity in key brain networks of autistic children looks similar to connectivity in the resting brain. And the greater this inflexibility, the more severe the child's manifestations of repetitive and restrictive behaviors that characterize autism, the study found. The study, which will be published online July 29 in Cerebral Cortex, ...

Diet affects men's and women's gut microbes differently

2014-07-29
The microbes living in the guts of males and females react differently to diet, even when the diets are identical, according to a study by scientists from The University of Texas at Austin and six other institutions published this week in the journal Nature Communications. These results suggest that therapies designed to improve human health and treat diseases through nutrition might need to be tailored for each sex. The researchers studied the gut microbes in two species of fish and in mice, and also conducted an in-depth analysis of data that other researchers collected ...

Scientists separate a particle from its properties

Scientists separate a particle from its properties
2014-07-29
Researchers from the Vienna University of Technology have performed the first separation of a particle from one of its properties. The study, carried out at the Institute Laue-Langevin (ILL) and published in Nature Communications, showed that in an interferometer a neutron's magnetic moment could be measured independently of the neutron itself, thereby marking the first experimental observation of a new quantum paradox known as the 'Cheshire Cat'. The new technique, which can be applied to any property of any quantum object, could be used to remove disturbance and improve ...

The quantum Cheshire cat: Scientists separate a particle from its properties

The quantum Cheshire cat: Scientists separate a particle from its properties
2014-07-29
The Quantum Cheshire Cat: Can a particle be separated from its properties? On July 29, the prestigious journal, Nature Communications, published the results of the first Cheshire Cat experiment, separating a neutron from its magnetic field, conducted by Chapman University in Orange, CA, and Vienna University of Technology. Chesire Cat"Well! I've often seen a cat without a grin," thought Alice in Wonderland, "but a grin without a cat! It's the most curious thing I ever saw in my life!" Alice's surprise stems from her experience that an object and its property cannot exist ...

The quantum Cheshire cat

The quantum Cheshire cat
2014-07-29
The Cheshire Cat featured in Lewis Caroll's novel "Alice in Wonderland" is a remarkable creature: it disappears, leaving its grin behind. Can an object be separated from its properties? It is possible in the quantum world. In an experiment, neutrons travel along a different path than one of their properties – their magnetic moment. This "Quantum Cheshire Cat" could be used to make high precision measurements less sensitive to external perturbations. At Different Places at Once According to the law of quantum physics, particles can be in different physical states at ...

Major turtle nesting beaches protected in 1 of the UK's far flung overseas territories

Major turtle nesting beaches protected in 1 of the UKs far flung overseas territories
2014-07-29
But on the remote UK overseas territory of Ascension Island, one of the world's largest green turtle populations is undergoing something of a renaissance. Writing in the journal Biodiversity and Conservation, scientists from the University of Exeter and Ascension Island Government Conservation Department report that the number of green turtles nesting at the remote South Atlantic outpost has increased by more than 500 per cent since records began in the 1970s. As many as 24,000 nests are now estimated to be laid on the Island's main beaches every year, making it the second ...

Could summer camp be the key to world peace?

2014-07-29
According to findings from a new study by University of Chicago Booth School of Business Professor Jane Risen, and Chicago Booth doctoral student Juliana Schroeder, it may at least be a start. Risen and Schroeder conducted research on Seeds of Peace, one of the largest peacebuilding programs that brings together teenagers from conflict regions, including Israelis and Palestinians, every year for three weeks in rural Maine. They tracked participants' feelings and attitudes toward the other national group for three years with three separate cohorts of campers. They found ...

Tough foam from tiny sheets

Tough foam from tiny sheets
2014-07-29
HOUSTON – (July 29, 2014) – Tough, ultralight foam of atom-thick sheets can be made to any size and shape through a chemical process invented at Rice University. In microscopic images, the foam dubbed "GO-0.5BN" looks like a nanoscale building, with floors and walls that reinforce each other. The structure consists of a pair of two-dimensional materials: floors and walls of graphene oxide that self-assemble with the assistance of hexagonal boron nitride platelets. The researchers say the foam could find use in structural components, as supercapacitor and battery electrodes ...

Research may explain how foremost anticancer 'guardian' protein learned to switch sides

Research may explain how foremost anticancer guardian protein learned to switch sides
2014-07-29
Cold Spring Harbor, NY -- Researchers at Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory (CSHL) have discovered a new function of the body's most important tumor-suppressing protein. Called p53, this protein has been called "the guardian of the genome." It normally comes to the fore when healthy cells sense damage to their DNA caused by stress, such as exposure to toxic chemicals or intense exposure to the sun's UV rays. If the damage is severe, p53 can cause a cell to commit preprogrammed cell-death, or apoptosis. Mutant versions of p53 that no longer perform this vital function, on the ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Eco-friendly glue designed by Cal Poly, Geisys Ventures team earns industry 'Innovation Award'

From dreams to reality: unveiling the ideal in situ construction method for lunar habitats and paving the way to Moon colonization

From theory to practice: Study demonstrates high CO2 storage efficiency in shale reservoirs using fracturing technology

What women want: Female experiences to manage pelvic pain

Study finds ChatGPT shows promise as medication management tool, could help improve geriatric health care

Heart failure, not stroke is the most common complication of atrial fibrillation

Antipsychotics for dementia linked to more harms than previously acknowledged

Health improvements occurred worldwide since 2010 despite COVID-19 pandemic, but progress was uneven

Mind the gender gap – Met police least trusted by women

Surrey engineers help Mauritius spot illegal fishing from space

Opioid dependence remains high but stable in Scotland, new surveillance report finds

Protecting brain cells with cannabinol

Calorie restriction study reveals complexities in how diet impacts aging

Atom-by-atom: Imaging structural transformations in 2D materials

How 3D printers can give robots a soft touch

Rice alumna wins prestigious merit-based fellowship for new Americans

International group runs simulations capable of describing South America's climate with unprecedented accuracy

Researchers find that accelerated aging biology in the placenta contributes to a rare form of pregnancy-related heart failure

Vibrations of granular materials: an everyday scientific mystery

UW–Madison biochemist wins prestigious forestry prize for discoveries that support sustainable energy and product innovations

New SPECT/CT technique shows impressive biomarker identification, offers increased access for prostate cancer patients

Study identifies new metric for diagnosing autism

Researchers create new AI pipeline for identifying molecular interactions

Clearing the air: Wind farms more land efficient than previously thought

Fracking the future: how Congolese oil extraction has shaped its history and its fate

Paper: To understand cognition—and its dysfunction—neuroscientists must learn its rhythms

First evidence of human occupation in lava tube cave in Saudi Arabia

New data identifies trends in accidental opioid overdoses in children

An international sample of adolescents shows almost 17% experience weight-related bullying online, especially for social media users—with almost 70 percent of Twitter users reporting being bullied

Humans occupied a lava tube in Saudi Arabia for thousands of years

[Press-News.org] NASA sees warmer cloud tops as Tropical Storm Hernan degenerates