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Trump cuts satellite data on Antarctic sea ice just as it's needed most

Trump cuts satellite data on Antarctic sea ice just as it's needed most

The US decision is part of what has been widely described as an assault on climate science by the Trump administration. It also affects other work by NASA and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Association, including hurricane forecasting, as reported by The Guardian US. This masthead sent questions to the US embassy in Australia and the Pentagon, but did not receive a response by deadline.
One important dataset under threat is the Sea Ice Index, which has continuous readings back to the late 1970s. It shows that until about 2015, sea ice was around average, or even a bit above average, but since 2016 it has been consistently low.
Doddridge said the satellites were past their mission life but remained operational, suggesting the data would still exist but not be shared for scientific work, forcing scientists to use sources with less reliability and continuity such as Japanese or Chinese satellites.
'We won't lose complete access to sea ice data,' Doddridge said. 'What we will lose is a long-term record of well-calibrated, interoperable satellite sensors. What that means is that we won't be able to compare future extremes with past extremes anywhere near as accurately.'
The impacts of extremely low sea ice in Antarctica
The PNAS Nexus paper canvasses a wide range of impacts from extremely low sea ice, from ecological harm to feedback loops for global warming.
Emperor penguins needed landfast sea ice for breeding platforms, Doddridge said, while Adelie penguins relied on sea ice to stay dry while they underwent a 'catastrophic moult', in which they replace all their feathers over a few weeks and temporarily lose their waterproofing.
Crabeater seals give birth to their pups on large ice floes and need to stay with them for the two to three weeks between birth and weaning, but are vulnerable to predators such as leopard seals if the ice floes become smaller or harder to find.
The paper also raises the spectre that low sea ice could affect the population of Antarctic krill, small crustaceans that are a main food source for a number of whale species, and which need sea ice in the larval stage.
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Perhaps the biggest impact of low sea ice is the feedback effect it could have on the destruction of the ice shelf – the part of the ice sheet of compacted snow that sits on the ocean rather than over rock – through iceberg formation or melting, and the corresponding effect on sea level rises.
Dr Sue Cook, a glaciologist and co-author on the PNAS Nexus paper, said sea ice suppressed ocean swells and waves close to the ice shelf. If the ice shelf was directly exposed to swell, it would start to bend and crack and might disintegrate into icebergs that then disperse out into the open ocean, Cook said.
'In the 15-year record that we looked at, the years with the least summer sea ice produced more than twice as many icebergs as the years with the most summer sea ice,' Cook said.
'This link between iceberg production and sea ice presence isn't something that we include in any of our ice sheet models at the moment, and that means that we might be underpredicting how quickly the Antarctic margin will retreat as sea ice dwindles around the continent.'
She added that most models were based on 15 to 20 years of data, which included long periods of good sea ice coverage.
'If we shift to this state where summer sea ice is very low, but we continue using models based on the previous period, then we will definitely underestimate how quickly Antarctica will contribute to sea level rise,' she said.
Dr Will Hobbs, a sea ice scientist with AAPP and co-author of the paper, said one of the most important roles of sea ice was the albedo effect, in which it essentially acts as a sunshade in summer. This works because snow-covered ice reflects about 90 per cent of the sunlight back into space, whereas the darker water of the open ocean absorbs 90 per cent of the sunlight, and warms accordingly.
Hobbs said that historically in the Southern Ocean, the system always resets in the midwinter, but the researchers found that in a year of extremely low ice, such as 2016, it would affect the next summer and take about three years to fully recover.
Hobbs said statistical analysis using reconstructions of the last century suggested there was a 0.1 per cent chance that the low sea ice trend was part of natural variability.
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New comet is third interstellar object in solar system
New comet is third interstellar object in solar system

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New comet is third interstellar object in solar system

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According to US space agency NASA, the interloper - named 3I/ATLAS - was first spotted on Tuesday by an Asteroid Terrestrial-impact Last Alert System, or ATLAS, telescope located in Rio Hurtado, Chile. Astronomers said its unusual trajectory indicated it had ventured from beyond our solar system. Journeying at a speed of around 60km per second from the direction of the centre of the Milky Way galaxy, 3I/ATLAS is presently located about 670 million km from Earth. "Beyond that we do not know very much, and there are many efforts underway to observe this object with larger telescopes to determine composition," University of Hawaii astronomer Larry Denneau, co-principal investigator for ATLAS, said on Thursday. The only other such interstellar visitors previously observed by astronomers were objects called 1I/'Oumuamua (pronounced oh-MOO-uh-MOO-uh), detected in 2017, and 2I/Borisov, discovered in 2019. "The comet has some similarities to 2I/Borisov in that it appears to be an icy comet, but it is much larger, possibly 10km in diameter," Denneau said. "It currently has a faint coma," Denneau added, referring to the cloud of gas and dust surrounding a comet's nucleus, "but the coma and tail may increase dramatically as the object comes closer to the sun. Its closest approach to the sun will be later this year, when it will come inside the orbit of Mars. We don't know what will happen, so that's exciting." Astronomers said the comet poses no threat to Earth and will never come closer than 240 million km away, equivalent to more than one-and-a-half times the distance between Earth and the sun. It is currently located about 670 million km from the sun and will reach its closest approach to the sun around October 30, when it will be about 210 million km away from our star. The ATLAS network is a NASA-funded telescope survey built and operated by the University of Hawaii, with five telescopes around the world that scan the night sky continuously to look for objects that could threaten Earth. Astronomers are tracking a newly spotted comet hailing from parts unknown, only the third time such an interstellar object has been observed visiting our solar system. According to US space agency NASA, the interloper - named 3I/ATLAS - was first spotted on Tuesday by an Asteroid Terrestrial-impact Last Alert System, or ATLAS, telescope located in Rio Hurtado, Chile. Astronomers said its unusual trajectory indicated it had ventured from beyond our solar system. Journeying at a speed of around 60km per second from the direction of the centre of the Milky Way galaxy, 3I/ATLAS is presently located about 670 million km from Earth. 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Astronomers said the comet poses no threat to Earth and will never come closer than 240 million km away, equivalent to more than one-and-a-half times the distance between Earth and the sun. It is currently located about 670 million km from the sun and will reach its closest approach to the sun around October 30, when it will be about 210 million km away from our star. The ATLAS network is a NASA-funded telescope survey built and operated by the University of Hawaii, with five telescopes around the world that scan the night sky continuously to look for objects that could threaten Earth.

New comet is third interstellar object in solar system
New comet is third interstellar object in solar system

Perth Now

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New comet is third interstellar object in solar system

Astronomers are tracking a newly spotted comet hailing from parts unknown, only the third time such an interstellar object has been observed visiting our solar system. According to US space agency NASA, the interloper - named 3I/ATLAS - was first spotted on Tuesday by an Asteroid Terrestrial-impact Last Alert System, or ATLAS, telescope located in Rio Hurtado, Chile. Astronomers said its unusual trajectory indicated it had ventured from beyond our solar system. Journeying at a speed of around 60km per second from the direction of the centre of the Milky Way galaxy, 3I/ATLAS is presently located about 670 million km from Earth. "Beyond that we do not know very much, and there are many efforts underway to observe this object with larger telescopes to determine composition," University of Hawaii astronomer Larry Denneau, co-principal investigator for ATLAS, said on Thursday. The only other such interstellar visitors previously observed by astronomers were objects called 1I/'Oumuamua (pronounced oh-MOO-uh-MOO-uh), detected in 2017, and 2I/Borisov, discovered in 2019. "The comet has some similarities to 2I/Borisov in that it appears to be an icy comet, but it is much larger, possibly 10km in diameter," Denneau said. "It currently has a faint coma," Denneau added, referring to the cloud of gas and dust surrounding a comet's nucleus, "but the coma and tail may increase dramatically as the object comes closer to the sun. Its closest approach to the sun will be later this year, when it will come inside the orbit of Mars. We don't know what will happen, so that's exciting." Astronomers said the comet poses no threat to Earth and will never come closer than 240 million km away, equivalent to more than one-and-a-half times the distance between Earth and the sun. It is currently located about 670 million km from the sun and will reach its closest approach to the sun around October 30, when it will be about 210 million km away from our star. The ATLAS network is a NASA-funded telescope survey built and operated by the University of Hawaii, with five telescopes around the world that scan the night sky continuously to look for objects that could threaten Earth.

Astronomers track object from outside the solar system
Astronomers track object from outside the solar system

The Advertiser

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  • The Advertiser

Astronomers track object from outside the solar system

Scientists have discovered what might be only the third known interstellar object to pass through our solar system, the European Space Agency says. The harmless object is currently near Jupiter hundreds of millions of kilometres away and moving toward Mars but it should get no closer to the sun than that, according to scientists. It is too soon to know whether the object, designated for now as A11pl3Z, is a rocky asteroid or a icy comet or how big and what shape it is. More observations are needed to confirm its origins. NASA said it is monitoring the situation. Astrophysicist Josep Trigo-Rodriguez of the Institute of Space Sciences near Barcelona, Spain, believes it is an interstellar object based on its odd path and extreme speed cutting through the solar system. He estimates its size at about 40km across. The first confirmed interstellar visitor was in 2017. It was dubbed Oumuamua, Hawaiian for scout, in honour of the observatory in Hawaii that discovered it. Classified at first as an asteroid, the elongated Oumuamua has since showed signs of being a comet. The second object confirmed to have strayed from another star system into our own is 21/Borisov, discovered in 2019 and believed to be a comet. Scientists have discovered what might be only the third known interstellar object to pass through our solar system, the European Space Agency says. The harmless object is currently near Jupiter hundreds of millions of kilometres away and moving toward Mars but it should get no closer to the sun than that, according to scientists. It is too soon to know whether the object, designated for now as A11pl3Z, is a rocky asteroid or a icy comet or how big and what shape it is. More observations are needed to confirm its origins. NASA said it is monitoring the situation. Astrophysicist Josep Trigo-Rodriguez of the Institute of Space Sciences near Barcelona, Spain, believes it is an interstellar object based on its odd path and extreme speed cutting through the solar system. He estimates its size at about 40km across. The first confirmed interstellar visitor was in 2017. It was dubbed Oumuamua, Hawaiian for scout, in honour of the observatory in Hawaii that discovered it. Classified at first as an asteroid, the elongated Oumuamua has since showed signs of being a comet. The second object confirmed to have strayed from another star system into our own is 21/Borisov, discovered in 2019 and believed to be a comet. Scientists have discovered what might be only the third known interstellar object to pass through our solar system, the European Space Agency says. The harmless object is currently near Jupiter hundreds of millions of kilometres away and moving toward Mars but it should get no closer to the sun than that, according to scientists. It is too soon to know whether the object, designated for now as A11pl3Z, is a rocky asteroid or a icy comet or how big and what shape it is. More observations are needed to confirm its origins. NASA said it is monitoring the situation. Astrophysicist Josep Trigo-Rodriguez of the Institute of Space Sciences near Barcelona, Spain, believes it is an interstellar object based on its odd path and extreme speed cutting through the solar system. He estimates its size at about 40km across. The first confirmed interstellar visitor was in 2017. It was dubbed Oumuamua, Hawaiian for scout, in honour of the observatory in Hawaii that discovered it. Classified at first as an asteroid, the elongated Oumuamua has since showed signs of being a comet. The second object confirmed to have strayed from another star system into our own is 21/Borisov, discovered in 2019 and believed to be a comet. Scientists have discovered what might be only the third known interstellar object to pass through our solar system, the European Space Agency says. The harmless object is currently near Jupiter hundreds of millions of kilometres away and moving toward Mars but it should get no closer to the sun than that, according to scientists. It is too soon to know whether the object, designated for now as A11pl3Z, is a rocky asteroid or a icy comet or how big and what shape it is. More observations are needed to confirm its origins. NASA said it is monitoring the situation. Astrophysicist Josep Trigo-Rodriguez of the Institute of Space Sciences near Barcelona, Spain, believes it is an interstellar object based on its odd path and extreme speed cutting through the solar system. He estimates its size at about 40km across. The first confirmed interstellar visitor was in 2017. It was dubbed Oumuamua, Hawaiian for scout, in honour of the observatory in Hawaii that discovered it. Classified at first as an asteroid, the elongated Oumuamua has since showed signs of being a comet. The second object confirmed to have strayed from another star system into our own is 21/Borisov, discovered in 2019 and believed to be a comet.

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