Minggu, 31 Maret 2024

SpaceX launches 23 satellites, completing 260th reflight of an orbital class rocket - Yahoo News Canada

For the second launch from the Space Coast this evening, a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket launches 23 Starlink satellites on mission 6-45 from Launch Complex 40 at 9:30 PM from the Cape Canaveral Space Force Station, Florida on Saturday March 30, 2024. .Photo by Joe Marino/UPI

For the second launch from the Space Coast this evening, a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket launches 23 Starlink satellites on mission 6-45 from Launch Complex 40 at 9:30 PM from the Cape Canaveral Space Force Station, Florida on Saturday March 30, 2024. .Photo by Joe Marino/UPI

March 31 (UPI) -- Elon Musk's SpaceX launched 23 satellites into low-Earth orbit on Saturday, completing the company's 260th re-flight of an orbital class rocket seven years after first achieving the act.

This means the company has successfully launched and landed a first-stage booster of a rocket like its Falcon 9 at least 260 times. The first stage of a rocket is the largest and most expensive part of it, and SpaceX has designed its Falcon 9 rocket's first stage to perform controlled descents back to landing pads or drone ships to be reused -- significantly reducing the cost of launching payloads into space.

"The design intent is that the rocket can be re-flown with zero hardware changes," Musk said in 2017, referring to the Falcon 9 first stage. The Falcon 9 rocket first launched in June 2010. "In other words, the only thing that changes is, you reload propellant."

At the time, Musk said a single Falcon 9 rocket could be reflown at least 100 times, adding: "Actually, really, we could make 1,000, but it probably isn't quite there. I'm being careful." The most number of times a single first-stage booster has flown stands at 16 times.

Still, the feat was celebrated by SpaceX fans, who joked that the rocket "seems safer than a Boeing."

For the second launch from the Space Coast this evening, a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket launches 23 Starlink satellites on mission 6-45 from Launch Complex 40 at 9:30 PM from the Cape Canaveral Space Force Station, Florida on Saturday March 30, 2024. .Photo by Joe Marino/UPI

For the second launch from the Space Coast this evening, a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket launches 23 Starlink satellites on mission 6-45 from Launch Complex 40 at 9:30 PM from the Cape Canaveral Space Force Station, Florida on Saturday March 30, 2024. .Photo by Joe Marino/UPI

That launch came just three hours after SpaceX launched a Falcon 9 rocket carrying a Eutelsat 36D geostationary telecommunications satellite, which will provide TV broadcasting and government services to customers in Africa, Europe and parts of Asia.

About three minutes into launch, Falcon 9 separated from the payload and touched down aboard the droneship Just Read the Instructions in the Atlantic Ocean at 6:01 p.m., marking the 259th reflight of a Falcon 9 rocket.

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Here's how to protect your eyes during a solar eclipse - CTV News Ottawa

Officials are reminding people of the dangers of looking directly at the sun during a solar eclipse as Ontario ramps up for the once-in-a-lifetime event on April 8.

Looking at the sun during a partial eclipse can have serious and irreversible damage unless you are protected by ISO-certified "solar eclipse glasses" or indirect means of looking at the sun.

"There's always danger to look at the sun. When we look at the sun, the UV from the sun can be damaging to your eyes," said Dr. Carla Yassa with the Barrhaven Optometric Centre.

"Those are super important to wear if you're going to be looking at the solar eclipse just to protect your eyes and protect you from this damage," she said.

Doctors are reminding residents of the potential irreversible effects associated with staring at the sun.

But not all solar eclipse glasses are made the same. Queen’s University is warning that some being sold online are counterfeit and do not stop enough sunlight to be safe.

"They have to be certified and it's really important that they're from a reputable source," said Dr. Yi Ning Strube, a Pediatric Ophthalmologist with the Kingston Health Sciences Centre.

 

WHAT ARE SOLAR ECLIPSE GLASSES?

“These are not regular sunglasses,” said Gary Boyle, an astronomy educator and enthusiast known as 'The Backyard Astronomer.'

"They're only made to look at the sun, do not drive with them. And if you can’t even find the glasses, you can buy a number of 14 welder's glasses, which does the same thing pretty well."

Safe sun glasses must comply with the International Organization for Standardization’s certified glasses, labelled ISO-12312-2. The eclipse can be looked at directly without proper eye protection only when the moon completely obscures the sun’s bright face – during the brief and spectacular period known as totality.

Another way to indirectly look at the sun is to use a kitchen tool, such as a spaghetti colander or vegetable strainer.

"Just like the pinhole camera that you built in in school," he said. "And in this case you'll see 58 little semi circles at the moon."

The Canadian Space Agency also provides instructions on how to create your own solar eclipse viewing device.

Legitimate solar eclipse glasses should be marked with ISO certification. (Bryan Bicknell/CTV News London)

Experts warn not to use a camera lens, telescope, binoculars or any other optical device that does not have a solar filter while wearing eclipse glasses. The concentrated solar rays can burn through the filter and cause serious eye injury.

Experts also recommend wearing sunscreen, a hat and protective clothing to prevent skin damage.

There are several recommendations online on where to find certified and reputable solar eclipse glasses.

 

CAN I GO BLIND IF I STARE DIRECTLY AT A SOLAR ECLIPSE?

Eclipse glasses should fit snugly enough so that wearers can shake their head without them falling off, according to Robert Cockcroft, an assistant professor at the department of physics and astronomy at McMaster University.

People who wear prescription glasses should make sure the solar lenses can fit underneath.

He says people may want to experiment wearing just eclipse glasses, and not their prescription lenses, if that makes them more secure on their face. People can put the filters on first before their glasses if it fully covers their eyes better..

NASA says the only safe time to look at the sun with the naked eye is during the brief phase of totality when the moon completely covers the sun.

"You’ll know it’s safe when you can no longer see any part of the sun through eclipse glasses or a solar viewer," NASA says on its website.

"As soon as you see even a little bit of the bright sun reappear after totality, immediately put your eclipse glasses back on or use a handheld solar viewer to look at the sun."

Experts says people who will only see a partial eclipse since they aren't in the path of totality should not remove their eclipse glasses or proper eye protection.

How to build your own eclipse projector (Canadian Space Agency).

"While it is safe to view the eclipse during totality without eclipse glasses, most viewers in Canada are not located in a city where totality will be visible and should therefore keep their eclipse glasses on for the duration of the event to avoid the risk of solar retinopathy," said Dr. Shaina Nensi, vice-president of the Ontario Association of Optometrists.

Those who are in a city within the path of totality should find out the time it will occur and how long it will last, she added.

If people expose their eyes to the sun without protection they could develop solar retinopathy, a condition in which the retina is damaged from looking directly at the sun or another bright light source.

Since retinas don't have pain receptors, people won't feel pain if they are damaged.

Retinopathy can lead to permanent or temporary blind spots, distortions to vision and the way people see colour, increased light sensitivity, eye pain and grittiness (or feeling like there is sand in your eye), and even complete blindness, Nensi explained.

Nensi recommends people see an optometrist immediately if they experience symptoms, even if they are mild. The symptoms can be irreversible, depending on how long the person stares at the eclipse, she said.

With files from CTVNews.ca

  

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P.E.I. veterans will soon have their own therapeutic gardening program - CBC.ca

It's no secret that being active outdoors can improve your mood and reduce stress. Gardening is no exception, and for veterans who have been through trauma it could offer a lifeline.

That's why the P.E.I. Farm Centre Association is planning a new program for veterans, giving them a chance to help others while getting their hands in the soil.

The association, which runs the Legacy Garden in Charlottetown, has already offered therapeutic horticulture programs in the city for the past four years, specifically for people with autism, addiction, and mental health issues.

Now, the non-profit is looking into expanding its services into eastern P.E.I., with veterans a focus of projects at both planned locations.

Those who have served in the Canadian Armed Forced can experience terrifying or distressing events, and some return from their service with post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) or other mental health conditions, Ferraro said. 

On the Island, the options for rehabilitation are limited, explained Phil Ferraro, the P.E.I. Farm Centre Association's general manager.

"I learned from discussions with veterans that Prince Edward Island is the only region in Canada where there's no retreat centre for veterans," Ferraro told CBC's Island Morning.

He hopes the new program is to provide veterans a place to slow down and spend time with fellow veterans and other service members.

LISTEN | Therapeutic horticulture program to nourish bodies and souls:

Island Morning7:47Therapeutic horticulture program to nourish bodies and souls

The P.E.I. Farm Centre hopes to start a program aimed at helping the Island's veterans while growing food to donate to charity. Phil Ferraro, general manager of the centre, joined us in the studio to tell us more.

According to Veterans Affairs Canada, PTSD can result from "witnessing, experiencing, or learning about someone close to you who experienced traumatic events (such as actual or threatened death, serious injury, or sexual violence)."

The department estimates more than nine per cent of Canadians will experience PTSD, but those at highest risk include service members who have experienced an "operational stress injury" in combat.

For those living with the condition, Ferraro said, growing food can provide benefits, both as a group activity or alone, because it can shift people's focus away from thinking about traumatic events that might have affected their lives.

Through the garden program, the P.E.I. Farm Centre hopes veterans can also experience a sense of accomplishment and hope.

"One of the reasons why I love to garden and farm so much," he said, "is that every day can be so diverse and the seasons are always different."

 Garden plots with green plants on a green meadow with a building in the back.
Gardening can have great physical and mental health benefits. (Phil Ferraro / P.E.I. Farm Centre)

Royal Canadian Air Force veteran Debbie Reid agrees. 

After serving for 23 years, she said she's seen the benefits of gardening first-hand. Watching tomatoes and yellow beans grow, and experiencing fresh air and sunshine, have helped improve her mood, she said.

"I love to garden," Reid told CBC News. "It's so relaxing."

She said a horticulture program for veterans is a great idea that could help many people like her, helping veterans to unwind from stress, find community, or just be by themselves tending to a garden plot.

Garden plot on a green meadow with plants and trees in the back.
Gardening is a mood booster. (Phil Ferraro / P.E.I. Farm Centre)

Reid said she'd consider volunteering for such a project, once the P.E.I. Farm Centre's plans bear fruit. Not only would such a program help veterans like her, but Ferraro's idea could also alleviate local food insecurity and help charities.

"Phil's garden feeds so many people on the Island," she said.

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Sabtu, 30 Maret 2024

Counterfeit eclipse glasses are selling online. How to spot fakes - Global News

As the excitement builds for the upcoming total solar eclipse, warnings about counterfeit and fake eclipse glasses are also popping up.

Looking directly at the sun without proper protection can lead to serious problems, such as partial or complete loss of eyesight, the Canadian Space Agency warns.

That is why it’s important to get internationally certified glasses that can prevent any damage to the eyes when you look up, experts say.

A total solar eclipse occurs when the moon passes between the sun and the Earth, aligning perfectly and completely blocking the sunlight. But any eclipse will start and end as a partial eclipse when the sun is not hidden in totality.

Click to play video: 'Solar eclipse eye protection: What optometrists recommend for viewing'

Solar eclipse eye protection: What optometrists recommend for viewing

“The problem with the eclipse (is that) because of that partial obstruction of the UV lights, we can actually look at the sun thinking, it’s okay because we’re not getting that same glare, discomfort that we usually get from the sun, and that’s when the damage actually occurs,” said Samir Jabbour, an ophthalmologist and cornea specialist in Montreal.

“Damage can be done quite quickly just by looking at the sun for a few seconds and symptoms can start occurring within a couple weeks after the damage has occurred,” he said in an interview with Global News.

In Kingston, which is preparing for a total solar eclipse on April 8, Queen’s University alerted residents about knockoff eclipse glasses.

“We have found that COUNTERFEIT eclipse glasses are being sold online to people in Kingston – faked to look like glasses sold by Solar Eclipse International, Canada (SEIC),” the university said in a post Tuesday on X.

“These glasses do NOT stop enough sunlight to be safe.  You can tell by looking at household lights – if you can see the lights easily, these should be DISCARDED.”

The American Astronomical Society also issued a warning last week about counterfeit and fake eclipse glasses “polluting the marketplace.”

Celestial Optical, a U.S.-based company, says thousands of counterfeit versions of their eclipse glasses have been sold on Amazon.ca.

“Towards the middle of February, we noticed the marketplace was being flooded with counterfeits of our authentic EclipseGuard glasses,” said Adam Levy, president of Celestial Optical, in a statement to Global News.

More on Canada

“Thankfully, the problems on Amazon.ca have been solved, but for a three-week period, unscrupulous overseas seller accounts had hijacked our own product listings with ultra-discount pricing, pushing aside our own authentic and safe products.”

The latest health and medical news emailed to you every Sunday.

The company estimates at least 10,000 packs or roughly 100,000 counterfeit versions of their eclipse glasses were sold online, before Amazon.ca took down those product listings.

“Sadly, we have seen counterfeits of products from other reputable manufacturers as well and it seems all counterfeits are missing the metallic layer on the sun facing side,” Levy said.

An Amazon spokesperson told Global News that it continuously monitor its store and takes action to maintain a safe selection for customers, including removing non-compliant products.

Meanwhile, Health Canada told Global News that it has not received any reports of fake or counterfeit solar eclipse glasses being sold in the country.

Which eclipse glasses are safe?

Many Canadians will get to witness the total solar eclipse, the first to cross the country since 1979.

On April 8, the solar eclipse’s path of totality will pass through parts of Ontario, Quebec, New Brunswick, Prince Edward Island, Nova Scotia, and Newfoundland and Labrador. Cities and towns outside the path of totality will see a partial solar eclipse.

People watching an eclipse should be wearing special glasses that meet the safety requirements of the ISO 12312-2 international standard.

Having the ISO standard means those glasses are inspected for safety and damaging rays won’t go through them, said Mark Eltis, a Toronto-based optometrist, in a previous interview with Global News.

A street vendor sells certificated sun glasses to watch the total solar eclipse in Pucon, Chile on December 12, 2020. Photo by MARTIN BERNETTI/AFP via Getty Images

According to the AAS, this standard is set based on several properties such as transmittance, uniformity of transmittance, material and surface quality, mounting and labeling.

However, even counterfeit or fake eclipse glasses and other solar viewers can be labeled as ISO-compliant without being properly tested for safety, experts say.

“You’re going to find a lot of merchants that might be selling these online, and they might claim that they have this protection, but we’re not really sure if they’re actually well protected,” Jabbour said.

He said the best way find reliable merchants for safe eclipse sunglasses are by checking the list of suppliers vetted by the American Astronomical Society. It includes several authorized dealers in Canada.

Jabbour said you should also make sure that the glasses you get are not scratched because that can allow the ultraviolet (UV) light to enter your retina and cause damage.

How to spot a fake

Without a lab test, it is difficult for the naked eye to tell if a pair of eclipse glasses meet the ISO standard, since any vendor can slap the ISO logo on their product.

That is why getting them from a reliable source is important, Jabbour said.

However, there are some red flags to watch out for.

Joanne Hostetter, an employee with Explore Scientific, works on preparing Sun Catcher solar eclipse glasses to ship out to customers from the Explore Scientific store Tuesday Jan. 30, 2024, in Springdale, Ark. AP Photo/Michael Woods

Levy, of Celestial Optical, said that counterfeits of their eclipse glasses do not show their name and address, which is a requirement of the ISO specification.

The sun-facing side of their glasses also has a metallic coating essential for safe solar viewing, unlike counterfeits, which typically have matte black lenses on both sides, the company noted in a March 19 news release.  

The AAS says on its website that you shouldn’t be able to see anything through proper eclipse glasses, except for very bright lights, which should appear very faint through the glasses.

“If you can see anything else, such as household furnishings or pictures on the wall, your glasses aren’t dark enough for solar viewing.”

You can also test the glasses outside on a sunny day and make sure that the sun’s reflection off the surface appears very faint, AAS says.

And if you briefly look directly at the sun with legitimate eclipse eyewear, you should see a sharp-edged, round disk that’s comfortably bright.

Click to play video: 'Excitement mounting for Montreal’s total solar eclipse'

Excitement mounting for Montreal’s total solar eclipse

How to watch the eclipse safely

Regular sunglasses should not be worn while looking at the eclipse, experts say.

Eltis suggests that when you put your special eclipse glasses on, you should look down at the ground before looking up at the sun, and then look down again after viewing the eclipse.

While it may be tempting to take off your eclipse glasses at the time of totality — which will last between one and four minutes — Eltis cautioned that it could be dangerous if you are not sure when exactly the total solar eclipse is happening. Even a sliver of sunlight can do damage to the eyes.

If you’re worried about directly looking at the eclipse, you can also view it indirectly through a pinhole projector.

Children should be fully supervised during the eclipse, both Eltis and Jabbour stressed.

— With files from Global News’ Katherine Ward and Eric Stober

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Canada’s solar eclipse forecast may hinge on cold air in Asia - The Weather Network

This feature high in the atmosphere over northern Russia will gradually migrate toward lower latitudes in the days ahead, eventually dipping over Alaska before swooping into British Columbia by the middle of the week.

RELATED: How to safely watch the April 8 total solar eclipse

This would put the trough—and its associated cold air—around the western United States by next weekend. Cold air tends to amplify the jet stream, which can lead to more widespread unsettled weather near robust troughs and calmer conditions beneath sprawling ridges.

Eclipse Upper Level Pattern March 29 2024 Next Week

A sharp trough over the western U.S. could allow a broad ridge to build over eastern North America around the time of the eclipse.

Lots of things can and likely will change over the next week, but this kind of setup is the first positive sign you’d want to see if you’re hoping for calmer conditions and a chance for clearer skies along the path of the total eclipse here in Canada.

Potential storms are still a wildcard

It’s becoming increasingly unlikely that we’ll contend with any Alberta clippers or systems affecting the path of totality from the northwest. Forecasters will closely watch the development of Texas or Colorado lows next weekend, as these would be the likely drivers for make-or-break cloudiness during the eclipse.

Eclipse Forecast Evolution 7 to 10 Days Out

MUST SEE: Canada’s next solar eclipse could change the weather

Between this potential pattern and historical cloud data, conditions for southern Ontario may be a coin toss. Different cloud layers and the depth of moisture in the atmosphere would play a role in conditions on April 8.

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Calgary teen seriously injured in hit-and-run collision faces uncertain future - Global News

Stephanie Sackmann says she’ll never forget the the phone call she got on Jan. 28 of this year.

“It’s been hard. To get that phone call at 5:30 in the morning saying that your daughter‘s been involved in a car accident…” Sackmann recalled.

Sackmann’s 16-year-old daughter, Kiera Barriskill, was rushed to the Foothills Medical Centre in critical condition after being stuck by a vehicle. She was in a coma for five days.

“My first question to the doctors was, ‘Is she going to be OK?’ That was my only concern and at that time and they couldn’t even tell us that. It was pretty heart-wrenching at the time and it still is,” said Sackmann from her home on Good Friday.

On Jan. 28 at around 4 a.m., near the intersection of 22nd Avenue Northeast and the 100 block of Pinemill Mews Northeast, police say there was a dispute between the occupants of a vehicle and a 16-year-old female pedestrian.

Police say the driver tried to leave while the pedestrian was holding on to the vehicle and that she fell and was run over.

According to police, the driver and other occupants checked on the pedestrian, but then got back in and left.

The driver, a 16-year-old boy, came forward to talk to police but the investigation is ongoing.

More on Calgary

Barriskill was at a sleepover at a neighbour’s house and has no memory of the what happened that night.

“I have a hard time talking about it,” Sackmann said. “It makes me sick to my stomach to think that this could’ve happened to my daughter. You hear all these stories on the news about these things happening, unfortunately more often than they should.”

Barriskill has come a long way since she was in hospital but is still not able to return to school.

“I get pounding headaches and dizzy, very tired. Everything I see is double,” Barriskill said in a soft voice. “I miss not being able to go to school or see my friends or just go out. And all the appointments get really tiring.”

She suffered serious injuries including a brain injury, multiple fractures, a blood clot, and her vision has been impaired.

Barriskill requires around-the-clock care with frequent appointments at various specialists, so her parents are unable to work. A GoFundMe has been set up to help the family pay the bills.

“She still has a lot of headaches. She’s got a lot of serious eye issues that we’re dealing with. I think we have five doctors for different issues along with all the other things she needs, like physiotherapy,” Sackmann said.

“It’s been really hard every night when we go to sleep — that’s all you think about. It scares you because I’m just concerned, is she going to wake up because she has a blood clot?”

The family is grateful for the kindness showed by the community.

“It’s amazing how people come forward just giving what they can,” said Lynda Bliss, Barriskill’s grandmother “We are so lucky to have that. It takes a lot of stress off of them.”

This isn’t the first time the family has dealt with tragedy.

In 1998, Barriskill’s dad’s 15-year-old brother was killed in a crash caused by a drunk driver.

Her grandmother still aches from that loss and has been in travelling to Calgary from B.C. to help with her son’s family here.

Now they’re focused on the routine of medical appointments, with the goal of finding ways to help Barriskill learn with impaired vision.

“We really wanted to try to make sure she’s able to graduate next year with her friends. I think that’s kind of important for her for her well-being,” Sackmann said.

The case is still under investigation but the family says they’re hopeful for an outcome soon.

&copy 2024 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.

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Jumat, 29 Maret 2024

An Everest-size volcano hiding in plain sight on Mars? New research make waves in the science community - CTV News

Scientists may have pinpointed a massive, oddly shaped volcano taller than Mount Everest on the surface of Mars — and it has been hiding in plain sight for decades, according to new research.

The possible identification of a previously unknown Martian volcano has made waves across the planetary sciences community since Mars Institute Chairman Dr. Pascal Lee, lead author of an abstract about the formation, presented the findings on March 13 at the 55th Lunar and Planetary Science Conference in The Woodlands, Texas.

The research has drummed up excitement — and attracted some skeptics.

Lee said he and Sourabh Shubham, a doctoral student of geology at the University of Maryland, College Park, have identified a volcano within Mars’ Noctis Labyrinthus region — a gnarled patch of terrain near the equator with a web of canyons. The volcano in the “Labyrinth of Night” may have eluded scientists despite years of satellite observation because it does not tower over its surrounding landscape, Lee said.

"It’s also deeply eroded, eaten up and collapsed by erosion to the point that unless you’re really looking for a volcano, you would be really hard-pressed to spot it very quickly," he told CNN.

If the team is correct, the revelation could have broad implications for scientists’ understanding of Martian geology. And, Lee said, he hopes the discovery could help lure future exploratory missions to the area to search for water ice or even signs of life.

The smoking gun

Initially, the research team’s efforts led to a study presented in March 2023 that suggested the Noctis Labyrinthus region may be home to a massive glacier covered in salt deposits.

Since then, Lee and Shubham have pored through data collected by NASA’s Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter, trying to determine whether water might still be frozen beneath the salt.

The hunt for water ice is key — it’s a resource that could be used to sustain human exploration on Mars or even converted into rocket fuel. While scouring the landscape, however, Lee said he was struck by “this little lava flow next to the glacier.”

The lava hadn’t yet been fully oxidized, a process that would turn it the same muddy orange hue as the surrounding surface, Lee said.

That indicated the lava might be relatively fresh — the first hint that an undetected volcano might be lurking nearby.

“We started looking at the landscape carefully,” Lee said. “And sure enough, when we examined the high points of this region, we noticed that they formed an arc.”

That arc is reminiscent of a shield volcano, Lee added, a type of volcano that also exists on Earth. Shield volcanoes are characterized by their broad, gently sloping sides — appearing wider than they are tall.

That finding led Lee and Shubham to gather more evidence, eventually determining that a 29,600-foot (9,022-metre) peak was actually the tip of a Martian volcano.

Olympus Mons, standing at at 25 kilometres (16 miles) tall, is the largest known volcano in the solar system. (NASA SVS via CNN Newsource)

That’s a few hundred feet taller than Mount Everest, which rises 29,029 feet (8,848 metres) above sea level.

Mapping Mars

Scientists have already cataloged and named more than a dozen volcanoes on Mars, including Olympus Mons, the tallest known volcano in our solar system.

Lee said he and Shubham are working to spell out the findings in a peer-reviewed paper, a more detailed work that could lend more credence to the idea across the scientific community.

But the hypothesis of the volcano’s existence is already attracting attention.

“It’s a big thing,” said Dr. Adrien Broquet, a Humboldt Research Fellow at the German Aerospace Center who has studied Martian volcanoes. “It’s as tall as the tallest mountain we have on the Earth. So, it’s not a small feature on Mars for which we’ve had a question mark. And we have plenty of question marks (about the surface of Mars.)”

A search for life in the Labyrinth of Night

The journey to identifying this volcano — which the team has provisionally named “Noctis volcano” — began in 2015, Lee said, when NASA asked the planetary science community to propose intriguing locations on Mars where the US space agency might land future human exploration missions.

Lee proposed a site just east of Noctis Labyrinthus, which was dubbed “Noctis landing.”

The location could be an ideal place to search for alien life on Mars, said Lee, who is also a planetary scientist at the SETI Institute, a nonprofit dedicated to searching for evidence of extraterrestrial life.

“Of course, we’re not looking for a little green man with antennae,” Lee said. “But we’re looking for microbes that would not fit into the tree of life on Earth.”

Noctis Labyrinthus could be ideally situated for this hunt, according to Lee.

“If you want to look for ancient life, you drive east (from Noctis Labyrinthus) into the canyons,” Lee said, referring to Valles Marineris, the largest canyon in our solar system.

There, explorers could “sift through the rock layers” to scour for fossils, he said.

Or, Lee suggested, a mission could venture west to a volcanic region called the Tharsis plateau, where warm caves may harbor living microbes.

With such tantalizing potential, Lee has committed to studying Noctis Labyrinthus to build a case for sending exploratory missions there.

A volcano, a glacier and the history of Mars

The existence of a volcano in Noctis Labyrinthus could also help explain the creation of this bizarre landscape.

Scientists suspect magma bubbling up from Mars’ interior formed the labyrinthian valleys, but the details are up for debate.

One theory is that when the magma pushed up on the Martian crust, it cracked and splintered, leaving behind a maze of branching canyons.

Lee favours an alternative theory: This model suggests that the Martian crust in Noctis Labyrinthus is full of ice. And when magma seeped in, it melted or vaporized ice and rock beneath the surface, causing swaths of the terrain to cave in.

The existence of a volcano in the region, Lee said, might offer more support for the latter theory.

The science of certainty

Three scientists who were not involved in the research told CNN that they would not be surprised if a volcano were hidden near Noctis Labyrinthus.

Volcanoes of all shapes and sizes riddle the surface of the broader region, including the Tharsis plateau to the west of Noctis Labyrinthus.

However, Dr. Ernst Hauber, a staff scientist at the German Aerospace Center’s Institute of Planetary Research, is one geologist in the community who would like to see a peer-reviewed paper before he accepts Lee and Shubham’s version of events.

“They are very vague about chronology, about the timing of events,” Hauber told CNN, referring to the brief abstract Lee and Shubham published.

Among Hauber’s questions: If the volcano could still be active, as Lee suggests, why hasn’t it poured lava into the surrounding canyons? Why aren’t there more visible signs of lava near the peak? Could this actually be an impact crater Lee is looking at?

“I’m a bit skeptical for several reasons,” Hauber said.

Broquet of the German Aerospace Center and Dr. David Horvath — a research scientist at the nonprofit Planetary Science Institute in Tucson, Arizona — both said in separate interviews they would like to see additional data supporting the ideas Lee and Shubham presented.

But Broquet and Horvath said they find the abstract intriguing.

“This does look like a really good candidate (for a volcano),” Horvath said.

Lee said he is welcoming input from other scientists, anxious for additional evidence to support his research. But he also expresses confidence.

“In this case, my sense is that there’s really no room for plausible alternate hypotheses,” Lee said, adding that he’s 85% to 90% certain he has located a new Martian volcano.

“But extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence,” Lee added, quoting the late astronomer Carl Sagan, for whom he once worked as a teaching assistant.

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Kamis, 28 Maret 2024

How to safely watch the total solar eclipse on April 8 - Ottawa Citizen

Why is it dangerous to look at an eclipse? How can you tell if your eclipse-viewing glasses are safe? We've got the answers.

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Joshua Smith is hoping for clear skies on April 8th so he can view the rare total solar eclipse with his young son, who will be home from daycare that day.

What he’s not hoping for are new patients at his Cornwall, Ont. optometry clinic.

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“There’s this big concern that after Monday, April 8th, we’re going to spend the rest of the week seeing people in with solar retinopathy,” Smith said. “That’s not just something we can just prescribe medication for and correct. The effects are long-lasting.”

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Why is it dangerous to look at an eclipse?

Solar retinopathy, sometimes called eclipse retinopathy, is the permanent eye damage that can occur by gazing directly at the sun. Normally, the sun is so bright we flinch and look away. During an eclipse, however, the brightness is so diminished that that natural instinct won’t kick in.

Even with the sun 98 per cent obscured, as it will be in Ottawa, the damage can be irreversible.

“Practically, it’s never safe to look at the sun without protection. Even the little bit of sunlight that’s coming through can burn, literally burn, your retina,” Smith said.

“There are no pain sensors in the retina. That burn won’t cause any pain that would make you look away. You won’t even know that you have it until your vision becomes blurry, perhaps hours or days afterward, or until an eye exam shows retinal damage,” he said.

How badly can looking at an eclipse damage your eyes?

“If you think of the retina as a dartboard, the fovea is the bullseye,” Smith says. “it’s the centre of our vision.” If the damage affects the fovea, the vision loss can be in orders of magnitude, or even complete blindness.

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“If the burn is bad enough, it will leave a blind spot and, unfortunately, because you’re looking directly at the sun, it will be right in the centre of your field of vision. It can be extremely debilitating. Anything that turns into a scar is going to stay a scar.”

Smith has seen several cases of solar retinopathy in his career, some in people who mistakenly believe staring directly at the sun provides health benefits — it doesn’t.

How can you look at an eclipse safely?

One of the best sources of information on viewing the eclipse safely is the Ontario Association of Optometrists, which provides extensive information on its website: opton.on.ca.

Eclipse safety starts with using eclipse glasses that meet the international standard of ISO 12312-2, which is sometimes appended with :2015 (the year it was adopted). While that is the standard, the glasses must also be marked as certified — CE — by a second authority.

Regular sunglasses, even polarized ones, aren’t safe for eclipse viewing.

Wear special viewing glasses when looking at a a solar eclipse
Jessica Keating uses special viewing glasses as the partial solar eclipse is observed at an event held by the Royal Astronomical Society at the Canadian Aviation and Space Museum in Ottawa. Photo by Wayne Cuddington /POSTMEDIA

How can you tell if your eclipse-viewing glasses are safe?

The incredible interest in the April eclipse has led to bogus glasses being sold online, some printed with counterfeit ISO certification. Smith recommends buying from a reputable company.

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The Ontario Association of Optometrists’ website includes a list of manufacturers recommended by the American Astronomical Society.

“If you can see ordinary lights through the glasses, they’re not safe for viewing the eclipse,” he said.

Those lucky enough to be within the path of totality, a roughly 184-kilometre-wide swath that stretches across North America, from Mexico and Texas in the southwest to Newfoundland in the northeast, will see the sun completely obscured by the moon. For the few short minutes of totality, it is safe to look with the naked eye. But it’s vital to have your eyes protected again before the sun emerges.

Map: Path of the 2024 Solar eclipse on April 8

Is it safe to drive during an eclipse?

“The sun is no more dangerous during an eclipse than it is any other day,” Canada Aviation and Space Museum Ingenium science advisor Cassandra Marion said. “But now that there’s something to see, we’re forcing our body to ignore that reflex (to look away) and watch the show. If you don’t have a pair of eclipse glasses, you can still go outside. You can still drive to work. Just don’t look directly at the sun.”

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Cassandra Marion is science advisor to the Canada Aviation and Space Museum in Ottawa.
Cassandra Marion is science advisor to the Canada Aviation and Space Museum in Ottawa. Photo by Tony Caldwell /POSTMEDIA

How can you safely take pictures of an eclipse?

It’s not just your eyes that need protection. Cameras and smartphones can be permanently damaged if used without protection. Camera companies sell specially made solar filters for lenses, although they are in short supply as eclipse day nears. To use your smartphone for a picture, it’s possible to simply hold your eclipse glasses in front of the lens.

But one of the easiest ways to view the eclipse is also the simplest: a pinhole camera can be used to safely project an image of the sun onto a sheet of paper. Easier still, stand under a tree and watch as the leaves filter a projection of hundreds of tiny shimmering crescents on the ground as the sun is eclipsed.

How to tell if you’ve damaged your eyes looking at an eclipse

Viewing the eclipse without proper eye protection can lead to permanent eye damage. Be alert for these symptoms in the hours and days after the April 8th eclipse:

  • Blurry vision
  • Eye pain or a feeling of grittiness in your eyes
  • Distorted straight lines that look bent, such as a curvy door frame
  • A blind spot in the central vision of one or both eyes
  • Increased light sensitivity
  • Dychromatopsia, that is, a change in the way you see colour

(Source: Ontario Association of Optometrists optom.on.ca)

We want to hear from you: How are you prepping for the total solar eclipse, Ottawa?

Our website is your destination for up-to-the-minute news, so make sure to bookmark our homepage and sign up for our newsletters so we can keep you informed.

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    Woman shot by police in Westboro, facing 13 charges, makes court appearance from hospital bed

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April 8 solar eclipse may reveal spectacular solar phenomena - The Times of India

The upcoming total solar eclipse on April 8 promises not just a momentary plunge into darkness for those in the path of totality but also a rare opportunity to witness the sun's grandeur, including potential enormous explosions. This celestial event, taking viewers through seconds to minutes of totality, is the only occasion when gazing directly at the sun without protective eyewear is safe.
Witnessing the Sun's fury
According to a report in Live Science, during this eclipse, spectators may be treated to the sight of dark-pink prominences—towering loops of plasma extending far into space, beyond many times the Earth's diameter."These prominences will almost certainly be on show during totality in North America on April 8, because the sun is likely at the peak of its 11-year solar cycle," said Alyssa Pagan, a science visuals developer at the Space Telescope Science Institute.
A celestial showcase
Observers might also spot coronal mass ejections (CMEs) and solar flares—explosive manifestations of the sun's magnetic energy. "If we get lucky, a CME will present itself as a twisted, spiral-like structure, high in the atmosphere in the sun," noted solar physicist Ryan French. While solar flares, often following CMEs, unleash vast amounts of energy, their sighting during totality is considered less likely.
The promise of prominences
The eclipse offers a unique viewing platform for "giant eruptive" prominences, particularly spectacular if detached and floating within the corona. "There have been a few examples of such prominence eruptions over the past few months, each of which would have given a great show if occurring during a total solar eclipse," French explained.
Extending eclipse observations
To capture these transient solar events, efforts like the Citizen Continental-America Telescopic Eclipse (CATE 2024) project aim to create a prolonged observation period. By coordinating a continent-wide observation effort, scientists hope to capture the beginning or end of these solar phenomena, extending the window of totality beyond its brief natural duration.
As anticipation builds for the April 8 solar eclipse, both casual observers and scientific communities are poised to witness potentially one of the most dynamic displays of solar activity coinciding with this rare astronomical event.

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Royal Sask. Museum research finds insect changes may have set stage for dinosaurs' extinction - CTV News Regina

Research by the Royal Saskatchewan Museum (RSM) shows that ecological changes were occurring in insects at least a million years before dinosaur extinction.

Papers published in the scientific journal, Current Biology, describe the first insect fossils found in amber from Saskatchewan and the unearthing of three new ant species from an amber deposit in North Carolina, according to a release from the province.

The amber deposit from in the Big Muddy Badlands of Saskatchewan, which was formed about 67 million years ago, preserved insects that lived in a swampy redwood forest about one million years before the extinction of dinosaurs.

"Fossils in the amber deposit seem to show that common Cretaceous insects may have been replaced on the landscape by their more modern relatives, particularly in groups such as ants, before the extinction event," Elyssa Loewen, curatorial assistant, said.

The research team was led by Loewen and Dr. Ryan McKellar, the RSM’s curator of paleontology.

"These new fossil records are closer than anyone has gotten to sampling a diverse set of insects near the extinction event, and they help researchers fill in a 17-million-year gap in the fossil record of insects around that time," Dr. McKellar said.

The three ant species discovered in North Carolina also belonged to extinct groups that didn’t survive past the Cretaceous period.

"When combined with the work in Saskatchewan, the two recent papers show that there was a dramatic change in ant diversity sometime between 77 and 67 million years ago," Dr. McKellar said in the release.

"Our analyses of body shapes in the fossils suggests that the turnover was not related to major differences in ecology, but it may have been related to something like the size and complexity of ant colonies. More work is needed to confirm this."

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