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Submission + - Evidence of elusive 'triangle singularity' showing particles swapping identities (livescience.com)

fahrbot-bot writes: Physicists sifting through old particle accelerator data have found evidence of a highly-elusive, never-before-seen process: a so-called triangle singularity.

First envisioned by Russian physicist Lev Landau in the 1950s, a triangle singularity refers to a rare subatomic process where particles exchange identities before flying away from each other. In this scenario, two particles — called kaons — form two corners of the triangle, while the particles they swap form the third point on the triangle.

"The particles involved exchanged quarks and changed their identities in the process," study co-author Bernhard Ketzer, of the Helmholtz Institute for Radiation and Nuclear Physics at the University of Bonn, said in a statement.

It's called a singularity because the mathematical methods for describing subatomic particle interactions break down.

If this singularly weird particle identity-swap really happened, it could help physicists understand the strong force, which binds the nucleus together.

Submission + - SPAM: World's Largest Direct Air Carbon Capture System Goes Online

An anonymous reader writes: The largest carbon capture facility in the world is slated to come online Wednesday in Iceland, amid growing skepticism over the technology’s role in addressing the climate crisis. The Orca, a direct air capture plant constructed by Swiss carbon capture company Climeworks AG, with support from Microsoft, started running Wednesday around 20 miles southeast of Reykjavík.

The facility is made up of eight air collection containers, each holding several dozen cylindrical fans, which pull in ambient air and filter carbon dioxide from it using a filter, according to the Climeworks’ press materials. What’s trapped is heated, mixed with water, and pumped deep underground. The plant would pull 4,000 metric tons of carbon dioxide from the air per year in total, which the company anticipates would be stored for “thousands of years.” Their process is proprietary, but it’s part of a broader form of carbon capture called direct air capture (DAC), a method of geoengineering that’s become controversial in recent years for its dubious efficacy and practicality. DAC proposes to slow climate change by sucking greenhouse gasses like CO2 directly from the atmosphere, DAC has splintered environmentalists, some of whom laud it as a potential savior, while others call it as a costly, risky distraction from meaningful emissions distractions.

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Submission + - SPAM: Facebook Users Liable For All Comments Under Their Posts: Australia High Court 1

An anonymous reader writes: Australia’s High Court, roughly the equivalent of the U.S. Supreme Court, has ruled that Facebook users are responsible for the content of complete strangers who post defamatory comments on their posts. The ruling upholds a June 2019 ruling by the Supreme Court of New South Wales, home to Australia’s largest city of Sydney. And it runs counter to how virtually everyone thinks about liability on the internet.

The High Court’s ruling on Wednesday is just a small part of a larger case brought against Australian news outlets, including the Sydney Morning Herald, The Age, and The Australian, among others, by a man who said he was defamed in the Facebook comments of the newspapers’ stories in 2016. The question before the High Court was the definition of “publisher,” something that isn’t easily defined in Australian law. From Australia’s ABC News: "The court found that, by creating a public Facebook page and posting content, the outlets had facilitated, encouraged and thereby assisted the publication of comments from third-party Facebook users, and they were, therefore, publishers of those comments."

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Submission + - SPAM: Get in touch with dazzling Delhi Escorts

Submission + - SPAM: Search continues for Planet Nine

RockDoctor writes: Ever since the demotion of Jupiter, any mention of "Planet Nine" invariably attracts a swarm of comments that, for some people, "Planet Nine" will always be 134340 Pluto. Well, that battle has been fought and lost, and @plutokiller (Professor Mike Brown of Caltech, USA) himself has moved on to trying to find a new Planet Nine. In 2016 an analysis of the orbits of the largest, most distant "minor bodies" of the Solar system suggested that there may be a large planet "out there", controlling the distribution of these other bodies orbits, and from that inferring where they think their suggested planet would be seen on the sky.

Such efforts have a patchy history. Certainly LeVerrier is famous for predicting the position of Neptune from irregularities in the orbit of Uranus (cue whooping from the peanut gallery), but equally certainly he was working with an inaccurate data for the masses of solar system bodies (Uranus, particularly), and his result was correct by luck, not judgement. Similarly, the calculations which led to the discovery of 134340 Pluto were also based on inaccurate mass data, leaving the mass of 134340 Pluto uncertain between more than the mass of Earth and "very small". The fly-by of a spacecraft — Voyager 2 — greatly improved the measurement of Uranus's mass, which is crucial to understanding the motions of the rest of the Solar system.

Since Brown (and others) started discovering multiple bodies of mass comparable to that of 134340 Pluto, orbiting in the same region of space, the identity of 134340 Pluto as a planet has been challenged, resulting in it's demotion to a "dwarf planet" in 2006 (11 bodies are considered, as of 20 Aug 2021). But since then, the discovery of more, and more-distant, dwarf planets (including by Brown) has led to suggestions that they may hint at the presence of something big, "out there". Which Brown and colleagues have been looking for for several years, securing observing time on very large telescopes to carry out this work.

Their current best estimate of properties for Planet Nine is mass 6.2 (average: spread 8.4 — 4.9) Earth masses ; semi-major axis 380 (520- 300) AU ; inclination 16 (21 — 11) degrees and an argument of perihelion of 300 (440 — 240) degrees (centred on Capricorn, but with a wide spread).

Hopefully they'll find it soon, because not finding it would only prove that they were looking in the wrong place at the wrong times, not that it doesn't exist.

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Submission + - in California, College Students Are Now Officially Considered an Enviro Menace (slate.com)

schwit1 writes: “That’s the conclusion of California Superior Court Judge Brad Seligman, who on Aug. 23 ordered the University of California–Berkeley to temporarily freeze the number of students it admits every year under the California Environmental Quality Act, putting crowded classrooms in the same category as heavy infrastructure like highways and airports. ‘Further increases in student enrollment above the current enrollment level at UC–Berkeley could result in an adverse change or alteration of the physical environment,’ the judge wrote.”

Submission + - Apple's New Child Safety Technology Might Harm More Kids Than It Helps (scientificamerican.com) 1

An anonymous reader writes: "It is not clear how well this algorithm will work nor what precisely it will detect. Some sexually-explicit-content detection algorithms flag content based on the percentage of skin showing. For example, the algorithm may flag a photo of a mother and daughter at the beach in bathing suits. If two young people send a picture of a scantily clad celebrity to each other, their parents might be notified.

Computer vision is a notoriously difficult problem, and existing algorithms—for example, those used for face detection—have known biases ...The risk of inaccuracies in Apple’s system is especially high because most academically-published nudity-detection algorithms are trained on images of adults. Apple has provided no transparency about the algorithm they’re using, so we have no idea how well it will work, especially for detecting images young people take of themselves—presumably the most concerning."

Submission + - SPAM: AI outperforms traditional models in forecasting seasonal Arctic sea ice

An anonymous reader writes: While physics-based dynamical models can successfully forecast sea ice concentration several weeks ahead, they struggle to outperform simple statistical models at longer lead times. An international team of researchers, led by British Antarctic Survey and The Alan Turing Institute in the UK present a probabilistic, deep learning sea ice forecasting system, IceNet. The system has been trained on climate simulations and observational data to forecast the next 6 months of monthly-averaged sea ice concentration maps. The team show that IceNet advances the range of accurate sea ice forecasts, outperforming a state-of-the-art dynamical model in seasonal forecasts of summer sea ice, particularly for extreme sea ice events.
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Submission + - NIF Laser Approaches Fusion Milestone (sciencemag.org)

An anonymous reader writes: Scientists at Lawrence Livermore National Lab make a major advance on the path to fusion ignition and energy breakeven.

Submission + - Over 1,000 subreddits call on the site to stop COVID misinformation (reddit.com) 1

koavf writes: Starting with subreddit /r/vaxxhappened—a message board that “collect[s] the outrageous and dangerous tales told by antivaxxers on all forms of media”—has “called upon Reddit to take action against the rampant Coronavirus misinformation on their website”, listing multiple examples of posts that spread dangerous medical untruths. The post has been shared across over 1,000 other communities on Reddit, representing over 100million subscribers to the site.

This development comes days after site administration quarantined a subreddit dedicated to anti-mask and anti-vaccine discussion, causing it to be hidden from view of casual visitors and search engine indexes.

Submission + - Clandestine Bitcoing Miner Taps Gas from Dormant Well (www.cbc.ca)

An anonymous reader writes: Link Global set up shop on a rural Alberta property, complete with four gas fed 1.5 MW generators. The whole thing is powered by the on site dormant gas well. Only problem is they didn't bother dealing with pesky issues like zoning, neighbour notification, and government environmental approvals. CBC reports the details here.

Link Global and others are pushing bitcoin mining as a revenue and employment generating solution to deal with Alberta's 200,000 abandoned wells.

Submission + - COVID-19 vaccines may trigger superimmunity in people who had SARS long ago (sciencemag.org) 1

sciencehabit writes: Almost 20 years before SARS-CoV-2, a related and even more lethal coronavirus sowed panic, killing nearly 10% of the 8000 people who became infected. But the 2003 outbreak of severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) may have left some survivors with a gift. Former SARS patients who have been vaccinated against COVID-19 appear able to fend off all variants of SARS-CoV-2 in circulation, as well as ones that may soon emerge, a new study suggests. Their formidable antibodies may even protect against coronaviruses in other species that have yet to make the jump into humans—and may hold clues to how to make a so-called pancoronavirus vaccine that could forestall future outbreaks.

Submission + - Biggest ever rocket is assembled briefly in Texas (bbc.com)

Thelasko writes: The American SpaceX company has stacked the biggest rocket ever constructed.

The vehicle's two segments — an upper-stage called Starship and a booster called Super Heavy — were connected together at the firm's Starbase R&D facility in Boca Chica, Texas.

Standing roughly 120m (400ft) in height, it dwarfs any previous rocket system.

When it eventually lifts off, it will produce about twice the thrust of the vehicles that sent men to the Moon.

Submission + - Motherboard vendor GIGABYTE hit by RansomExx ransomware gang (therecord.media)

An anonymous reader writes: Taiwanese computer hardware vendor GIGABYTE has suffered a ransomware attack, and hackers are currently threatening to release more than 112 GB of business data on the dark web unless the company agrees to their ransom demands. The Taiwanese company, primarily known for its high-performance motherboards, confirmed the attack in a phone call and in a message on its (now-down) Taiwanese website. A spokesperson said the incident did not impact production systems. Only a few internal servers at its Taiwanese headquarters have been affected and have now been taken down and isolated.

Submission + - SPAM: 15,000-Year-Old Viruses Discovered In Tibetan Glacier Ice

An anonymous reader writes: Scientists who study glacier ice have found viruses nearly 15,000 years old in two ice samples taken from the Tibetan Plateau in China. Most of those viruses, which survived because they had remained frozen, are unlike any viruses that have been cataloged to date. The findings, published today in the journal Microbiome, could help scientists understand how viruses have evolved over centuries. For this study, the scientists also created a new, ultra-clean method of analyzing microbes and viruses in ice without contaminating it.

The researchers analyzed ice cores taken in 2015 from the Guliya ice cap in western China. The cores are collected at high altitudes – the summit of Guliya, where this ice originated, is 22,000 feet above sea level. The ice cores contain layers of ice that accumulate year after year, trapping whatever was in the atmosphere around them at the time each layer froze. Those layers create a timeline of sorts, which scientists have used to understand more about climate change, microbes, viruses and gases throughout history. Researchers determined that the ice was nearly 15,000 years old using a combination of traditional and new, novel techniques to date this ice core. When they analyzed the ice, they found genetic codes for 33 viruses. Four of those viruses have already been identified by the scientific community. But at least 28 of them are novel. About half of them seemed to have survived at the time they were frozen not in spite of the ice, but because of it.

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