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Air, Ash, and Astronomy: How Tiny Pollutants and Giant Telescopes Define the Future

Air, Ash, and Astronomy: How Tiny Pollutants and Giant Telescopes Define the Future

The Hindu4 days ago

The team concluded that the absence of ALDH1A1 left the cells at a higher risk of serious respiratory infection when exposed to air pollutants. It was also found that drug-enhanced ALDH1A1 levels improved the mice's mucociliary function in response to pollutants. The finding thus implied a potential therapeutic target, namely the enzyme ALDH1A1.
'Aldehyde dehydrogenase (ALDH1A1) is an enzyme that plays an important role in protection against aldehydes. We used experimental mice that lacked ALDH1A1 to investigate the impact of air pollutants without the gene,' explained Yasutaka Okabe, senior author. 'As expected, the mice had impaired cilia formation and function and high levels of aldehydes.'
The team also explored how to restore normal cellular function and reverse damage. The researchers investigated the expression of one gene from the ALDH family known to protect the body against harmful aldehydes, to see whether it countered the effect of airway pollutants.
The researchers found that oxidative injury in the airways caused by the pollutants facilitated the formation of lipid peroxide–derived aldehydes, which damaged the protective cells in the airway, including airway cilia. With the damaged airway cells and cilia no longer able to move debris and pollutants out of the airways, the risk of infection is enhanced.
'We found that PM2.5 air pollutants negatively affect mucociliary clearance, a major protective mechanism in the respiratory tract,' said the lead author, Noriko Shinjyo. Mucociliary clearance basically involves trapping pollutants in a sticky mucus and then sweeping the pollutants out of the airways with hair-like projections called cilia.
Most air pollutants—for example, dust, vehicle exhaust, and wildfire smoke—belong to the PM2.5 category and, when inhaled, cause severe airway damage resulting in respiratory distress. To understand how exactly air pollutant particles affect the respiratory system, the researchers performed a series of experiments on mice. After exposing mice to environmental pollutants, their respiratory tracts were examined for changes in structure and function.
In a study recently published in The Journal of Clinical Investigation , a multi-institutional research team led by the University of Osaka, Japan, has unravelled the mechanism by which exposure to air pollutants of particle size ≤ 2.5 micrometres (PM2.5) cause airway dysfunction.
With most of the world population subject to harmful levels of air pollutants, air pollution is stated to be the second leading risk factor that could lead to death globally. However, how air pollution affects human health and mortality remains poorly understood, rendering treatment strategies largely symptomatic.
Also Read | Rural India is choking
Vera C. Rubin Observatory will start showing spectacular images of the sky from June
Astronomers around the world are eagerly waiting for the clock to strike 11 am EDT (8:30 pm IST) on June 23 when the Vera C. Rubin Observatory, located atop the El Peñón peak of the 2,682-metre-high mountain Cerro Pachón in northern Chile, will showcase online its first spectacular images of the sky.
The observatory is named after the American astronomer Vera Florence Cooper Rubin (1928–2016), who pioneered work on galaxy rotation rates. This study led her to discover the discrepancy between the predicted and observed angular motion of galaxies, which has been cited by astronomers as evidence for the existence of dark matter.
The chief objective of the observatory's telescope, called the Simonyi Survey Telescope (or SST, named after the private donor-couple Charles and Lisa Simonyi), is to carry out a synoptic astronomical survey, the Legacy Survey of Space and Time (LSST), using its camera, which is the largest digital camera ever built. The LSST camera was built as a multi-institutional project at the SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory, Stanford, California, over a seven-year period. It was shipped to the observatory site in Chile exactly a year ago and was installed in March 2025.
The SST is a wide-field reflecting telescope with an 8.4 m primary mirror. The optics uses a novel three-mirror design that allows the telescope to deliver sharp images over a very wide 3.5o-diameter field of view. The images will be recorded by the mind-boggling 3.2 gigapixel charge-coupled device (CCD) imaging LSST camera—roughly the same number of pixels as 260 modern cell phone sensors—which itself is of the size of a small car and weighs about 3 tonnes.
The observatory is jointly funded by the National Science Foundation and the Department of Energy of the US government.
To produce an image of the night sky, the Rubin Observatory's large mirrors first collect the light arriving from the cosmos. After bouncing through the mirrors, the light gets focussed by the camera's three lenses onto the image sensors. When taking an image of the sky, the camera uses one of six different coloured filters, u, g, r, i, z, and y, ranging from ultraviolet (u), which is outside the human range of vision, through visible colours (g, r, i), and outside the human range of vision in the other direction into the infrared (i, z, y).
The filters are housed in a carousel so that they can be easily switched during observations. However, the geometry of the carousel only allows it to hold five filters at once. The sixth filter is housed in a special storage stand separate from the camera, and a device called the filter loader is used to exchange a particular filter when needed with one in the carousel.
Compared with filters in normal cameras, these filters are big, each is 75 cm across. A sophisticated machine called the auto-changer is capable of changing the filters in under two minutes.
One would need hundreds of ultra-high-definition TV screens to display a single image taken by this camera. Its sensor needs to be kept extremely cold (about −100°C) to limit the number of defective (bright) pixels in images.
These images and videos will be the first of many that Rubin will release over the course of the next decade as the camera and telescope conduct a sweep of the entire visible southern sky every three to four nights. In doing so, the Rubin Observatory's telescope will produce the most detailed time-lapse view of the cosmos ever.

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Delhi's clear air project aimed at providing safe zone: Govt
Delhi's clear air project aimed at providing safe zone: Govt

Hindustan Times

time15 hours ago

  • Hindustan Times

Delhi's clear air project aimed at providing safe zone: Govt

The Delhi government aims to create a safe outdoor space for citizens to go on morning walks during the peak pollution season, Delhi environment minister Manjinder Sirsa said on Sunday, during an inspection of Nehru Park, where the government is planning to install 150 outdoor air purifiers in a pilot project. Delhi ministers Manjinder Singh Sirsa and Pavesh Kumar inspect Nehru Park on Sunday. (Arvind Yadav/HT) The project is directed at determining if the air quality index of a particular location can be lowered, officials said. If the study confirms both impact and practicality, similar 'Clean Air Zones' could be considered at Connaught Place, Khan Market and other high-footfall locations, they said. 'AQI (air quality index) is a big challenge in Delhi. We are conducting a study in Nehru Park…We are trying to determine if we can lower the AQI in a particular location. If this project is successful, this area will have nearly 50% lesser AQI than the rest of Delhi. When pollution is bad, doctors ask everyone to not go outside, in such a situation there should be an area where people can come for a walk or jog,' Sirsa said. Sirsa said the devices—which can be up to nine feet tall—that primarily filter out particulate matter having a diameter of 2.5 microns or less (PM2.5), will be spread across the 85-acre park and maintain 'good' air quality even during peak pollution periods. Each purifier will cover approximately 600 square metres and requires approval from the New Delhi Municipal Council before installation can begin, Sirsa had said on Friday. Delhi grapples with hazardous air pollution levels that peak in the transition to winter. The move to install air purifiers follows the closure of two expensive smog towers that authorities deemed ineffective, after the then Aam Aadmi Party government touted them as a first-of-its-kind solution to the city's air crisis. The new project will be carried out through a corporate social responsibility (CSR) partnership with private firm Umeandus, which has tested the technology at four locations, including Anand Vihar, at a petrol pump in Jangpura, New Moti Bagh and outside the Taj Ambassador hotel. Officials said each machine costs around ₹ 5 lakh and the project will be funded through CSR initiatives. The initiative forms part of the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) government's broader air quality strategy, including its manifesto promise to halve Delhi's pollution levels by 2030. Sirsa said, 'We are doing a lot of things to lower the AQI in Delhi. Very soon, Delhi will also see artificial rain, the efforts of which have been ongoing for nearly 10 years. Our government will achieve that in about four months.' Earlier this month, the government also released a 'Mitigation Action Plan', featuring over 1,000 water sprinklers, 140 anti-smog guns, cloud seeding experiments, audits of pollution under control centres every six months, installation of automatic number plate recognition cameras at Delhi's border points for end-of-life vehicles, and inducting 5,000 additional electric buses. A release from Sirsa's office said: 'This proposed initiative is part of Delhi's broader Environmental Action Plan 2025 which includes reviving long-pending artificial rain projects, daily mechanical sweeping, mist spraying, and enforcement of construction norms. Anti-smog guns have been made mandatory for large construction sites, and real-time compliance monitoring is underway. Legacy landfill bio-mining is actively progressing at Ghazipur, Bhalswa, and Okhla, aiming for permanent removal of hazardous waste.' The field inspection at Nehru Park was conducted by Sirsa and Public Works Department (PWD) minister Pravesh Verma along with officials from the New Delhi Municipal Council (NDMC) and PWD. 'Since we have formed the government, our cabinet minister Manjinder Singh Sirsa and his department have taken many steps in lowering pollution and AQI in Delhi. Road infrastructure is also important for air quality. We have also requested a funding of ₹ 1,000 crore from the central government for this. We hope this fund will soon be released for new roads and flyover projects,' Verma said on Sunday.

Stubble burning behind nearly one-third of Delhi's post-monsoon pollution deaths: Study
Stubble burning behind nearly one-third of Delhi's post-monsoon pollution deaths: Study

Indian Express

timea day ago

  • Indian Express

Stubble burning behind nearly one-third of Delhi's post-monsoon pollution deaths: Study

Smoke from crop residue burning in Punjab and Haryana is responsible for nearly one-third of all PM2.5-related deaths in Delhi during the post-monsoon season, according to a new international study. The research found that this smoke—transported over hundreds of kilometres—became the dominant share of organic aerosols, accounting for almost half of it during the worst post-monsoon haze episodes, even surpassing traffic or industrial pollution. PM2.5 refers to particulate matter that has a diameter of 2.5 micrometres or smaller. These tiny particles are a major component of air pollution and can pose significant health risks because they can penetrate deep into the lungs and even enter the bloodstream. The study, published earlier this month in the journal Environment International, is the first to use year-long, near-molecular-level data to identify specific sources of organic aerosols in Delhi and Kanpur. Scientists from the Paul Scherrer Institute in Switzerland, IIT Delhi, and IIT Kanpur monitored pollution levels over 12 months in both cities and concluded that smoke from agricultural fires, primarily rice stubble, has a significant health impact. In Delhi, they found that during October and November, smoke from crop fires contributed to 32 per cent of premature deaths caused by PM2.5 exposure. Overall, short-term exposure to PM2.5—tiny particles that can enter the lungs and bloodstream—was linked to about 6 per cent of all deaths annually in both cities. In Delhi, nearly half of this health burden came from organic aerosols. The study estimates that more than 1,000 premature deaths in Delhi during the post-monsoon period were tied to this transported smoke, referred to as AgrOA. 'Transported rural fire smokes remain a major detrimental factor threatening public health, despite intensive urban emissions,' the researchers noted. The data also revealed that AgrOA was the largest single component of particulate matter during peak smog events, contributing up to 70 per cent of the organic aerosol load in Kanpur and nearly 50 per cent in Delhi. While urban sources like traffic emissions, industrial waste, and biomass burning remain major contributors throughout the year, these were surpassed by crop-burning smoke during November's haze. Interestingly, the study found that Kanpur—despite being located over 600 kilometres from the fire zones—experienced an even higher impact. Researchers said the smoke had more time to age chemically as it travelled east, making it even more toxic by the time it reached Kanpur. There, AgrOA was linked to 53 per cent of PM2.5-related deaths during the post-monsoon season. The researchers also highlighted the increased health risks for vulnerable groups. Based on global data, the study estimates that women and the elderly face disproportionately higher mortality risks from exposure to crop-burning smoke. For women, AgrOA was estimated to be responsible for up to 67 per cent of pollution-related deaths in Kanpur and 46 per cent in Delhi during the post-monsoon period. In addition to AgrOA, the researchers identified other key sources of pollution. In Delhi, a winter-specific industrial pollution signature was observed, linked to chemicals like melamine used in plastics and e-waste recycling. These emissions spike in colder months when pollutants remain trapped close to the ground. Traffic and cooking-related emissions also made up a significant share of organic aerosols in both cities. However, the researchers emphasised that city-level pollution control will not be enough. 'Mitigation measures should extend beyond cities to regional scales, targeting regions particularly affected by stubble fires like Punjab and Haryana,' they wrote. The study recommends strengthening bans on open burning, promoting machines like the Happy Seeder for in-situ straw management, offering incentives for using straw as fertiliser or fuel and encouraging farmers to adopt low-residue or alternative crops. The findings underline the urgent need for coordinated action across states and sectors. For Delhi, which has struggled for years with severe winter smog, the study confirms that efforts to clean the city's air must also include stopping crop fires outside its borders. 'These findings illustrate the urgent and critical need for regional cooperative air pollution mitigation strategies, accounting not only for urban emissions but also for stubble residue burning emissions,' the study noted.

Chile Observatory Captures Universe With 3,200-Megapixel Camera
Chile Observatory Captures Universe With 3,200-Megapixel Camera

NDTV

time3 days ago

  • NDTV

Chile Observatory Captures Universe With 3,200-Megapixel Camera

Santiago: Chile's Vera C. Rubin Observatory, which boasts the world's largest digital camera, has begun displaying its first images of the cosmos, allowing astronomers to figure out how the solar system formed and even whether an asteroid poses a threat to Earth. Located on Pachon Hill in the northern region of Coquimbo, the 8.4-meter (27-1/2-foot) telescope has a 3,200-megapixel camera feeding a powerful data processing system. "It's really going to change and challenge the way people work with their data," said William O'Mullane, a project manager focused on data at Vera Rubin. The observatory detected over 2,100 previously unseen asteroids in 10 hours of observations, focusing on a small area of the visible sky. Its ground-based and space-based peers discover in total some 20,000 asteroids a year. O'Mullane said the observatory would allow astronomers to collect huge amounts of data quickly and make unexpected finds. "Rather than the usual couple of observations and writing an (academic) paper. No, I'll give you a million galaxies. I'll give you a million stars or a billion even, because we have them: 20 billion galaxy measurements," he said. The center is named after American astronomer Vera C. Rubin, a pioneer in finding conclusive evidence of the existence of large amounts of invisible material known as dark matter. Each night, Rubin will take some 1,000 images of the southern hemisphere sky, letting it cover the entire southern sky every three or four nights. The darkest skies above the arid Atacama Desert make Chile one of the best places worldwide for astronomical observation. "The number of alerts the telescope will send every night is equivalent to the inboxes of 83,000 people. It's impossible for someone to look at that one by one," said astrophysicist Francisco Foster. "We're going to have to use artificial intelligence tools."

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