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

NASA sees Tropical Cyclone 15S meandering in Mozambique Channel

NASA sees Tropical Cyclone 15S meandering in Mozambique Channel
2015-03-06
(Press-News.org) Tropical Cyclone 15S continued to meander in the Mozambique Channel of the Indian Ocean when NASA's Aqua satellite passed overhead and captured a picture of it. The storm's lack of direction is short-lived, however, as forecasters at the Joint Typhoon Warning Center or JTWC expect that the storm will move in a southwesterly direction and landfall in west central Madagascar by March 9.

The Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer or MODIS instrument that flies aboard NASA's Aqua satellite captured a visible image of Tropical Cyclone 15S on March 5 at 11:25 UTC (6:25 a.m. EST) when it was hugging the coast of eastern Mozambique. The MODIS image showed that the bulk of clouds and rain were north and west of the center of circulation, extending over the Mozambique coastline, while the center of Tropical Cyclone 15S remained over the open waters of the Mozambique Channel.

On March 6 at 1500 UTC (10 a.m. EST), Tropical Cyclone 15S was centered near 16.5 south latitude and 41.3 east longitude, about 349 nautical miles (401 miles/464 km) north-northeast of Europa Island. Maximum sustained winds were still near 35 knots (40 mph/62 kph), but are expected to increase over the next two days as it moves away from Mozambique and into the open waters of the Mozambique Channel, toward Madagascar. At 1500 UTC, however, it was moving slowly at 2 knots (2.3 mph/3.7 kph) to the west-northwest.

Tropical Cyclone 15S is expected to make landfall in west central Madagascar's Tsingy de Bemaraha Strict Nature Reserve and move across the island nation in a southeasterly direction, with its center expected to pass just south of the capital city of Antananarivo before exiting the east coast early next week.

INFORMATION:


[Attachments] See images for this press release:
NASA sees Tropical Cyclone 15S meandering in Mozambique Channel NASA sees Tropical Cyclone 15S meandering in Mozambique Channel 2

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Pharmacist survey shows huge growth in compounded menopausal hormone therapy

2015-03-06
San Diego, CA--Among prescriptions filled for menopausal hormone therapy (HT) in the U.S., almost half now are custom-compounded "bioidentical" hormones, according to analysis of a recent survey of nearly 500 pharmacists. The study results will be presented Friday March 6th at the Endocrine Society's 97th annual meeting in San Diego. Custom-compounded prescriptions, which are mixed for an individual according to a doctor's prescription, are not well-regulated or monitored by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA). "Despite the increased quality risks and the lack ...

Most men with borderline testosterone levels may have depression

2015-03-06
San Diego, CA--Men with borderline testosterone levels have higher rates of depression and depressive symptoms than the general population, new research finds. The results will be presented Saturday, March 7, at ENDO 2015, the annual meeting of the Endocrine Society in San Diego. "Over half of men referred for borderline testosterone levels have depression. This study found that men seeking management for borderline testosterone have a very high rate of depression, depressive symptoms, obesity and physical inactivity," said principal study author Michael S. Irwig, MD, ...

Menopausal hormone therapy does not affect the risk of dying, study shows

2015-03-06
San Diego, CA--Menopausal hormone therapy (HT) does not have a significant effect on death, according to a new review of the medical literature published over the past three decades. The results, which included studies with follow-up as long as 18 years, will be presented Friday at the Endocrine Society's 97th annual meeting in San Diego. "At present, we do not have evidence that hormone therapy in postmenopausal women increases mortality or protects from death compared with women who never used hormones," said lead investigator Khalid Benkhadra, MD, a research fellow ...

Multitasking hunger neurons also control compulsive behaviors

2015-03-06
In the absence of food, neurons that normally control appetite initiate complex, repetitive behaviors seen in obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD), and anorexia nervosa, according to a new study by Yale School of Medicine researchers. The findings are published in the March 5 online issue of the journal Cell. Neural circuits are responsible for flexible goal-oriented behaviors. The Yale team investigated how a population of neurons in the hypothalamus that control food intake are also involved in other behaviors. Known as Agrp neurons, these cells also control repetitive, ...

Infant growth affected by exposure to environmental pollutants

2015-03-06
Even though the levels of two environmental pollutants have declined over the last 20 years, they may still have adverse effects on children's development, according to a new study by the Norwegian Institute of Public Health. This is the largest study of environmental pollutants and infant growth to date. Researchers investigated whether exposure to two persistent organic pollutants before and after birth was associated with rapid growth in infancy, a known risk factor for obesity in later life: polychlorinated biphenyl 153 (PCB153), a chemical used extensively in ...

The brain treats real and imaginary objects in the same way

2015-03-06
The human brain can select relevant objects from a flood of information and edit out what is irrelevant. It also knows which parts belong to a whole. If, for example, we direct our attention to the doors of a house, the brain will preferentially process its windows, but not the neighboring houses. Psychologists from Goethe University Frankfurt have now discovered that this also happens when parts of the objects are merely maintained in our memory. "Perception and memory have mainly been investigated separately until now", explains Benjamin Peters, doctoral researcher ...

New findings on 'key players' in brain inflammation

2015-03-06
Inflammatory processes occur in the brain in conjunction with stroke and neurological diseases such as Alzheimer's and Parkinson's disease. Researchers from Lund University and Karolinska Institutet in Sweden, in close cooperation with a group led by Professor José L. Venero at the University of Seville, have presented new findings about some of the 'key players' in inflammation. In the long term, these findings could lead to new treatments. One of these key players is a receptor called TLR4. The receptor plays such an important role in the body's innate immune system ...

Parasite infection poses a greater risk for African under-fives

2015-03-06
Children under five living in sub-Saharan Africa are at greater risk than older children of developing a long-term parasitic disease, research suggests. Infants experience significantly greater exposure to the parasitic worms that cause the chronic disease schistosomiasis, a study shows. Under-fives are vulnerable because they spend time near rivers and lakes in which parasites that cause the disease live. Previous studies missed pre-schoolers significant exposure to infected water in rivers close to family homes. Researchers found that preschool-age children ...

UK must invest in science for a successful nation

2015-03-06
The UK needs to increase its investment in science and engineering research if it is to continue to be a successful nation. This is the overriding message coming from a major conference hosted this week by the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC). The conference, 'Science for a Successful Nation', drew high profile academics, industry and business representatives, and researchers together to examine how science and engineering can make the UK a healthy, prosperous, resilient and connected nation. Professor Philip Nelson FREng, EPSRC's Chief Executive ...

The green lungs of our planet are changing

2015-03-06
This news release is available in German. Are leaves and buds developing earlier in the spring? And do leaves stay on the trees longer in autumn? Do steppe ecosystems remaining green longer and are the savannas becoming drier and drier? In fact, over recent decades, the growing seasons have changed everywhere around the world. This was determined by a doctoral candidate at the Goethe University as part of an international collaboration based on satellite data. The results are expected to have consequences for agriculture, interactions between species, the functioning ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

What’s behind canned wine’s rotten egg smell? Cornell team IDs the culprit

Using generative AI, Insilico Medicine discovers new class of Polθ Inhibitors for BRCA-deficient cancers

New A.I. project will allow industrial robots to be more freethinking

Computer scientist William Wang receives prestigious early career technical achievement award

UC Irvine researchers shine light on rapid changes in Arctic and boreal ecosystems

Trash to treasure – researchers turn metal waste into catalyst for hydrogen

Microplastics, algal blooms, seafood safety are public health concerns addressed by new Oceans and Human Health Centers

Alba Yerro-Colom to use National Science Foundation CAREER award to better predict and prevent landslides

Researchers discover urine-based test to detect head and neck cancer

Moffitt treats first clinical trial patient with gamma delta CAR T for bone metastatic prostate cancer

Wiley's latest natural products database release empowers drug discovery and research

Reproductive success improves after a single generation in the wild for descendants of some hatchery-origin Chinook salmon

New treatment method using plasma irradiation promotes faster bone healing

CNIC scientists identify therapeutic targets for the prevention of heart injury linked to cancer treatment

Older males out-compete young males when it comes to extra-marital breeding

Using machine learning to identify patients with cancer that would benefit from immunotherapy

NASA’s Fermi mission sees no gamma rays from nearby supernova

Neutrons rule the roost for cage-free lithium ions

Common HIV treatments may aid Alzheimer’s disease patients

Turner to receive funding for Israel Institute Postdoctoral Fellowship

How AI improves physician and nurse collaboration

Diverse native wildflower plantings for pollinators in farmlands

Study suggests adolescent stress may raise risk of postpartum depression in adults

New book gathers insights, methods from rising generation of Indigenous archaeologists

Scientists identify cell vulnerability ‘fingerprint’ related to Parkinson’s, Lewy body dementia

Cooler transformers could help electric grid

Oregon State researchers advance pigment chemistry with moon-inspired reddish magentas

Conformity to masculine gender norms is linked to muscle dysmorphia among young people

EuBiologics’ simplified OCV achieves WHO PQ

GPT-4 matches radiologists in detecting errors in radiology reports

[Press-News.org] NASA sees Tropical Cyclone 15S meandering in Mozambique Channel