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

Study finds lightning impacts edge of space in ways not previously observed

Solar flares jetting out from the sun and thunderstorms generated on Earth impact the planet's ionosphere in different ways, which have implications for the ability to conduct long range communications

2021-06-14
(Press-News.org) Solar flares jetting out from the sun and thunderstorms generated on Earth impact the planet's ionosphere in different ways, which have implications for the ability to conduct long range communications.

A team of researchers working with data collected by the Incoherent Scatter Radar (ISR) at the Arecibo Observatory, satellites, and lightning detectors in Puerto Rico have for the first time examined the simultaneous impacts of thunderstorms and solar flares on the ionospheric D-region (often referred to as the edge of space).

In the first of its kind analysis, the team determined that solar flares and lightning from thunderstorms trigger unique changes to that edge of space, which is used for long-range communications such the GPS found in vehicles and airplanes.

The work, led by New Mexico Tech assistant professor of physics Caitano L. da Silva was published recently in the journal Scientific Reports, a journal of the Nature Publishing Group.

"These are really exciting results," says da Silva. "One of the key things we showed in the paper is that lightning- and solar flare-driven signatures are completely different. The first tends to create electron density depletions, while the second enhancements (or ionization)."

While the AO radar used in the study is no longer available because of the collapse of AO's telescope in December of 2020, scientists believe that the data they collected and other AO historical data will be instrumental in advancing this work.

"This study helps emphasize that, in order to fully understand the coupling of atmospheric regions, energy input from below (from thunderstorms) into the lower ionosphere needs to be properly accounted for," da Silva says. "The wealth of data collected at AO over the years will be a transformative tool to quantify the effects of lightning in the lower ionosphere."

Better understanding the impact on the Earth's ionosphere will help improve communications.

da Silva worked with a team of researchers at the Arecibo Observatory (AO) in Puerto Rico, a National Science Foundation facility managed by the University of Central Florida under a cooperative agreement. The co-authors are AO Senior Scientist Pedrina Terra, Assistant Director of Science Operations Christiano G. M. Brum and Sophia D. Salazar a student at NMT who spent her 2019 summer at the AO as part of the NSF- supported Research Undergraduate Experience. Salazar completed the initial analysis of the data as part of her internship with the senior scientists' supervision.

"The Arecibo Observatory REU is hands down one of the best experiences I've had so far," says the 21-year-old. "The support and encouragement provided by the AO staff and REU students made the research experience everything that it was. There were many opportunities to network with scientists at AO from all over the world, many of which I would likely never have met without the AO REU."

AO's Terra and Brum worked with Salazar taking her initial data analysis, refining it and providing interpretation for the study.

"Sophia's dedication and her ability to solve problems grabbed our attention from the very first day of the REU program," Brum says. "Her efforts in developing this project resulted in publication in one of the most prestigious journals in our field."

"Another remarkable result of this work is that for the first time, a mapping of the spatial and seasonal occurrence of lightning strike over the region of the Puerto Rico archipelago is presented," Brum says. "Intriguing was also the detection of a lighting activity hotspot concentrated in the western part of La Cordillera Central mountain range of Puerto Rico."

INFORMATION:

About the authors: da Silva conducts research in the area of atmospheric sciences, geophysics, and plasma physics. He's intrigued by space electricity; thunderstorms and their effects in the near-Earth space environment; lightning physics; modeling of electrical discharge plasmas; and development of computer-based tools for analysis of atmospheric and geophysical phenomena. He holds multiple degrees including a doctorate in electrical engineering from Penn State University and a master's degree in geophysics and space physics from the National Institute for Space Research (INPE) in Brazil, which is the same alma mater of Brum and Terra. The three INPE alumni had a brief brainstorming session over coffee about this project in the AGU 2018 Fall Meeting, in San Francisco, CA.

Terra who worked at AO since 2006, was a post-doctoral scholar at Cornell University. She has multiple degrees including an electrical engineering degree and both master's and doctorate in space physics from the INPE Research in Brazil. Terra is a UCF's graduate faculty member and is the responsible for the passive optical laboratories at AO, including the remote facility at the island of Culebra.

Brum has been working at AO since 2007 and was a post-doctoral scholar at INPE, Utah State University, and Cornell University. He holds multiple degrees including a master's and a doctorate degree in space geophysics from the INPE. Brum is the head of the AO Space and Atmospheric department, Deputy Director of Science Operations, and a UCF graduate faculty member.



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Using machine learning and radar to better understand storm surge risk

Using machine learning and radar to better understand storm surge risk
2021-06-14
The types of land around us play an important role in how major storms will unfold -- flood waters may travel differently over rural versus urban areas, for example. However, it's challenging to get an accurate picture of land types using only satellite image data because it is so difficult to interpret. Researchers at the Cockrell School of Engineering have, for the first time, applied a machine learning algorithm to measure the surface roughness of different types of land with a high level of detail. The team used a type of satellite imagery that is more dependable and easier to capture than typical optical photographs but also more challenging to analyze. And they are working to integrate this data into storm surge models to give a clearer ...

COVID-19 can cause severe inflammation in the brain

2021-06-14
Both during and after infection with the Coronavirus SARS-CoV-2, patients may suffer from severe neurological symptoms, including "anosmia", the loss of taste and smell typically associated with COVID-19. Along with direct damage caused by the virus, researchers suspect a role for excessive inflammatory responses in the disease. A team of researchers from the Freiburg University Medical Center and the Cluster of Excellence CIBSS has now shown that a severe inflammatory response can develop in the central nervous system of COVID-19 patients involving different immune cells around the vascular ...

An unusual symbiosis of a ciliate, green alga, and purple bacterium

2021-06-14
Dr Sebastian Hess and his team at the University of Cologne's Institute of Zoology have studied a very rare and puzzling tripartite symbiosis. This consortium consists of a ciliate as host and two types of endosymbionts: a green alga and a previously unknown purple bacterium. Through genetic analyses of the pink-green ciliate, the researchers discovered that the endosymbiotic bacterium belongs to the so-called 'purple sulfur bacteria' (family Chromatiaceae), but has lost the ability to oxidize reduced sulfur compounds, a hallmark of the other members of the Chromatiaceae. The genome of the purple bacterium is greatly reduced, suggesting that the bacterium became mainly specialized in carbon fixation through photosynthesis. It is probably no longer able to live outside of the host cell. Thus, ...

Researchers model impact of blood pressure control programs at barbershops nationwide

2021-06-14
Boston - Hypertension, or high blood pressure, kills more Americans than any other health condition. It is especially prevalent in Black Americans and is exacerbated by structural barriers to accessing high quality healthcare. In a 2018 randomized trial called the Los Angeles Barbershop Blood Pressure Study (LABBS), barbers were trained to screen their Black male patrons for hypertension and refer them to a pharmacist who visited the barbershop to counsel and treat individuals with high blood pressure. Participants in the barbershop-based, pharmacist-led program saw a 20-point drop in systolic (top number) blood pressure that they were able to sustain ...

Climate conditions during the migration of Homo sapiens out of Africa reconstructed

2021-06-14
An international research team led by Professor Dr Frank Schäbitz has published a climate reconstruction of the last 200,000 years for Ethiopia. This means that high-resolution data are now available for the period when early Homo sapiens, our ancestors, made their way from Africa to Europe and Asia. Schäbitz and his colleagues determined the dates using a drill core of lake sediments deposited in southern Ethiopia's Chew Bahir Basin, which lies near human fossil sites. Temporal resolution of the samples, reaching nearly 10 years, revealed that from 200,000 to 125,000 years before our ...

The evolution of good taste

2021-06-14
Does evolution explain why we can't resist a salty chip? Researchers at NC State University found that differences between the elemental composition of foods and the elemental needs of animals can explain the development of pleasing tastes like salty, umami and sweet. Taste tells us a lot about foods before they are swallowed and digested, and some tastes correspond with the elemental composition of foods. For example, an aged steak lights up the umami taste receptors, because it has a high concentration of the element nitrogen, which occurs in amino acid molecules. Nitrogen is essential for survival, but often occurs in low concentrations relative ...

Study finds survival is more important than a chronic medical condition in prioritizing medical care

2021-06-14
(Boston)-- The concept of rationing medical resources during the height of COVID-19 pandemic created tremendous anxiety in the patient and healthcare communities. In planning for that possibility Massachusetts created a triage scoring system focusing on an acute survival score that considers chronic life-limiting medical conditions of the patient, but it does not provide specifics about how to value those conditions in the equation. Now a new study supports prioritizing resources to those who are most likely to survive an acute illness as several chronic medical conditions had less of an impact on longer-term survival than previously suspected. "No one ...

Study reveals factors that shape Haitian Creole-speaking women's birth plans after C-sections

2021-06-14
(Boston)--Despite evidence regarding the benefits of vaginal birth after cesarean and recommendations to support shared decision making to reduce cesarean rates, minority women face many impediments that limit their access to appropriate health information and opportunities for such discussions. Haitian women in Massachusetts have the highest rates of cesarean section and low rates of vaginal birth after cesarean, despite evidence suggesting that many are eligible to attempt vaginal birth after a previous cesarean. Now a new study explores how Haitian women's beliefs, values and attitudes influence their decision making about pregnancy and birth after having had a cesarean delivery. In conjunction with the providers' views about Haitian women, the information ...

Breeding foxes for opposite behaviors produces similar brain changes

Breeding foxes for opposite behaviors produces similar brain changes
2021-06-14
Farmed foxes selectively bred for tameness and aggressiveness exhibit similar changes to their brain anatomy, according to research recently published in JNeurosci. Both lineages also have larger brains than conventional farm-bred foxes, complicating leading theories on domestication. Domesticated species provide insight into complex evolutionary processes on a condensed timeframe. When a species splits from its wild counterpart, its brain, body, and behavior undergo rapid changes. Studies with chickens, sheep, cats, dogs, and more indicate domestication shrinks the brain. But the same pattern does not extend to foxes in the expected way. Hecht et al. used MRI to measure the brain size ...

Domesticated foxes display increased size in brain regions

Domesticated foxes display increased size in brain regions
2021-06-14
When Erin Hecht was earning her Ph.D. in neuroscience more than a decade ago, she watched a nature special on the Russian farm-fox experiment, one of the best-known studies on animal domestication. The study, running since 1958, tries to replicate the natural domestication of wolves to dogs by selectively breeding two strains of silver foxes so they exhibit certain behaviors. Scientists breed one to be tame and display dog-like behaviors with people, such as licking and tail wagging. The other is bred to react with defensive aggression when faced with human contact, while a third strain acts as the control and isn't bred for any specific behaviors. Hecht, who's now an assistant professor in the Harvard Department of Human ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Type of surgery and its risk level has significant impact on complications and death in elderly patients

National Center to Reframe Aging teams up with Longevity Ready Maryland Initiative

Study reveals racial disparities in COVID-19 testing delays among healthcare workers

Estimating emissions potential of decommissioned gas wells from shale samples

Nanomaterial that mimics proteins could be basis for new neurodegenerative disease treatments

ASC scientists released long-term data of ground solar-induced fluorescence to improve understanding of canopy-level photosynthesis

Study uncovers drug target in a protein complex required for activation of NF-κB, a transcription factor involved in multiple diseases

The longer spilled oil lingers in freshwater, the more persistent compounds it produces

Keck Medicine of USC opens new Las Vegas transplant care clinic

How immune cells communicate to fight viruses

Unveiling the lionfish invasion in the Mediterranean Sea

Scientists regenerate neural pathways in mice with cells from rats

Publicly funded fertility program linked to a decrease in rate of multifetal pregnancy

Cancer survivors reporting loneliness experience higher mortality risk, new study shows

Psychiatric symptoms, treatment uptake, and barriers to mental health care among US adults with post–COVID-19 condition

Disparities in mortality by sexual orientation in a large, prospective cohort of female nurses

National trial safely scaled back prescribing of a powerful antipsychotic for the elderly

Premature mortality higher among sexual minority women, study finds

Extreme long-term research shows: Herring arrives earlier in the Wadden Sea due to climate change

With hybrid brains, these mice smell like a rat

Philippines' counter-terrorism strategy still stalled after 7 years since the ‘ISIS siege’ on Marawi

BU doc honored by the American College of Surgeons

Airborne single-photon lidar system achieves high-resolution 3D imaging

Stem cell transplants and survival rates on the rise across all racial and ethnic groups

Study reports chlamydia and gonorrhea more likely to be treated per CDC guidelines in males, younger patients and individuals identifying as Black or multiracial

Plastic food packaging contains harmful substances

Spring snow, sparkling in the sun, can reveal more than just good skiing conditions

Using AI to improve diagnosis of rare genetic disorders

Study unveils balance of AI and preserving humanity in health care

Capturing and visualizing the phase transition mediated thermal stress of thermal barrier coating materials via a cross-scale integrated computational approach

[Press-News.org] Study finds lightning impacts edge of space in ways not previously observed
Solar flares jetting out from the sun and thunderstorms generated on Earth impact the planet's ionosphere in different ways, which have implications for the ability to conduct long range communications