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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 Hindu26-06-2025
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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NASA shares thrilling update on the mysterious interstellar object racing through our solar system
NASA shares thrilling update on the mysterious interstellar object racing through our solar system

Time of India

time21 hours ago

  • Time of India

NASA shares thrilling update on the mysterious interstellar object racing through our solar system

NASA has unveiled groundbreaking new details about a mysterious interstellar object , known as 3I/ATLAS , hurtling through our solar system at unprecedented speeds. First spotted on July 1, this visitor from another star system has captivated scientists worldwide with its incredible velocity of 130,000 miles per hour and enigmatic nature. Recent observations by the Hubble Space Telescope have provided the sharpest images yet, revealing critical insights about its size, composition, and trajectory. These revelations mark an important step in understanding the rare visitors that journey across the galaxy into our cosmic neighbourhood. NASA confirms 3I/ATLAS as the fastest interstellar object ever detected NASA's Hubble Space Telescope observations have confirmed that 3I/ATLAS is travelling through our solar system at an extraordinary speed of 130,000 miles per hour (209,000 km/h), making it the fastest interstellar object ever recorded. This speed far exceeds that of previous interstellar visitors such as 'Oumuamua and Borisov. Scientists explain that the object's velocity is the result of billions of years of gravitational interactions, known as the 'gravitational slingshot effect,' where passing stars, planets, and nebulae impart additional momentum to the comet. This extreme speed means the object is only briefly visible as it races through, providing a fleeting window of opportunity for study. NASA's continuous monitoring aims to capture as much data as possible during its swift passage. Image: Daily Mail Size estimates refined: NASA reveals 3I/ATLAS is smaller but still immense Initial observations by the Vera C. Rubin Observatory suggested that 3I/ATLAS's icy core might be around seven miles (11.2 km) wide. However, NASA's Hubble Space Telescope has now refined these estimates, revealing that the core is smaller — at most 3.5 miles (5.6 km) across, and possibly as little as 1,000 feet (320 meters) in diameter. 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A road map to mitigate Delhi's pollution crisis
A road map to mitigate Delhi's pollution crisis

Hindustan Times

time7 days ago

  • Hindustan Times

A road map to mitigate Delhi's pollution crisis

We are months away from Delhi becoming unliveable again. Every breath then will cut years off the lives of its residents. Progress in technology, infrastructure, and economic growth is meaningless if the air we breathe is toxic. Delhi produces about 11,000 tonnes of municipal solid waste daily; yet, over half of it ends up in overloaded landfills, causing land and water pollution. (Hindustan Times) In 2021, the annual average level of particulate matter of a diameter less than 2.5 micron (PM2.5) peaked at 126.5 µg/m3 — more than 25 times the safe limit set by the World Health Organization (WHO). During winter, these levels soar, flooding hospitals with respiratory patients. According to the 2023 Air Quality Life Index, pollution claims up to 25,000 lives annually in Delhi alone, shortening life expectancy by about 6.3 years. The economic toll is also staggering. Estimates peg GDP loss at 3%, roughly $100 billion annually, due to disrupted work, soaring health care costs, and decreased productivity. Low-income families often left unprotected against toxic fumes are the most vulnerable. To breathe safely has become a privilege. Despite this, policymakers have offered only temporary band-aids. Bureaucracy, overlapping authorities, and political apathy have failed the people. It is a failure of governance and of moral responsibility. The time for excuses has run out. The only option left is radical, decisive action. What must be done? Burning of biomass is the single-largest contributor to Delhi's air pollution, responsible for nearly 60% of PM2.5 emissions annually. Burning dung, firewood, and agricultural waste releases vast amounts of particulate matter, especially in winter. Policies promoting clean cooking fuels like LPG — with subsidies of 75% — starting in NCR+ areas need to be enforced and community biomass plants with subsidies for transition provided, even as traditional cooking methods and agricultural waste burning are phased out. Contributing approximately 31% of PM2.5, industrial processes and thermal power plants are the second-largest source of Delhi's pollution. Delhi-NCR hosts 12 thermal power plants with a total capacity of 13.2 GW, but only seven comply with the 2015 emissions standards. The outdated and poorly regulated plants emit pollutants that jeopardise both health and the environment. Accounting for 8% of total emissions, brick kilns are another large factor of Delhi-NCR's air pollution. Currently, around 4,608 kilns are operating primarily in areas such as Baghpat and Bulandshahr, making India's brick production industry the second-largest globally, trailing only China. Present methods employed by these kilns release harmful pollutants into the atmosphere, and also expedite soil degradation and groundwater depletion. Mandatory flue gas desulphurisation in thermal plants must be enforced in accordance with the applicable emission standards, outdated plants older than 35 years must be shut with cleaner technologies replacing these. At the brick kilns, adoption of zigzag technology — arranging bricks in a zigzag pattern to enhance heat transfer and combustion efficiency, leading to reduced fuel consumption and lower emissions — must be accelerated. SMEs must be shifted to electric boilers, supported by rooftop solar. Industrial zones must have efficient waste management, with quarterly emission reporting and public disclosures. Establish efficient waste management in industrial zones. Responsible for roughly 8% of PM2.5 emissions, Delhi's vehicles are a significant but addressable pollution source. The dominance of older, polluting vehicles and slow adoption of electric mobility hinder air quality improvement. India is witnessing rapid growth, where two-wheelers and three-wheelers account for about 95% of total EV sales. Delhi, however, contributes only 5% of this figure. The need is to transition all delivery two-wheelers to electric within two to three years, retrofit or replace two-wheelers older than 10 years within 24 months. All new autorickshaws must be electric, and those older than eight years replaced within the next year (older than five years replaced in the next two years). All 30,000 taxis older than eight years must be replaced with EVs over the next two years. Procure and deploy 5,000 new electric public and school buses within three years. Delhi produces about 11,000 tonnes of municipal solid waste daily; yet, over half of it ends up in overloaded landfills, causing land and water pollution. Its sewage treatment capacity is far below the volume of wastewater generated; untreated sewage flows into the Yamuna, polluting its waters and endangering public health. Despite some efforts, ineffective waste segregation, inadequate treatment infrastructure, and neglect of urban sanitation have only compounded the crisis. Waste segregation at source, modelled after Surat's, must be enforced with digital monitoring and penalties. Modern, decentralised sewage treatment plants must be set up and old infrastructure repaired. Focus on formalising waste picking, expanding recycling, and supporting circular economy practices. The city must prioritise land reclamation and beautification, turning contaminated sites into green spaces. Municipal governance must be strengthened with data-driven management, akin to Bhubaneswar's, and public participation promoted through community cleanup drives and awareness campaigns. There must also be regular public disclosure of pollution data, with community-led monitoring. Regional cooperation is another focus area, with collaboration with neighbouring states key to reducing external pollution; the aim must be to bring PM2.5 levels by 40-50% from the 2023 standards by 2028. By 2036, India's population could reach 1.5 billion, and if growth remains unplanned, our cities will be swallowed by unsustainable expansion. In Delhi-NCR alone, real estate prices have skyrocketed by 57% since 2019, yet infrastructure remains woefully inadequate to support this surge. Residents are caught in a vicious cycle of mismanagement: government agencies, planners, and industries repeatedly neglect their responsibilities, turning urban growth into a ticking environmental time bomb. To remedy this, implement comprehensive master planning — focused on walkability, green spaces, and sustainable growth. Enhance public transport and de-incentivise car dependence while promoting citizen involvement in urban development. Every delay exacerbates the health crisis — especially for Delhi's most vulnerable demographics. Delhi must realise that progress without clean air is hollow. The city's survival hinges on an urgent pursuit of environmental justice, underlined by a policy overhaul, tech innovation, community push, and regional unity. Amitabh Kant was India's G20 Sherpa and is the former CEO of NITI Aayog. The views expressed are personal.

US air quality alerts: New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania among 9 states hit by Canadian wildfire smoke
US air quality alerts: New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania among 9 states hit by Canadian wildfire smoke

Mint

time05-08-2025

  • Mint

US air quality alerts: New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania among 9 states hit by Canadian wildfire smoke

National Weather Service has issued a series of Air Quality Alerts across the northeastern and midwestern United States for August 5 as wildfire smoke from Canada continues to drift southward, blanketing large swaths of the country in hazardous fine particulate matter (PM2.5). NWS said residents in New Jersey, New York, Connecticut, Pennsylvania, Massachusetts, Vermont, Michigan, Wisconsin, and Indiana have been warned to limit outdoor activity due to unhealthy air conditions, especially for sensitive populations. New Jersey, New York, and Connecticut all remain under Air Quality Action Days through midnight tonight. The New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection has flagged Bergen, Passaic, Hudson, Essex, and Union counties, while the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation extended the alert to all five NYC boroughs and counties north of the city including Westchester, Rockland, Orange, and Putnam. The Connecticut Department of Energy and Environmental Protection issued alerts for Fairfield, New Haven, and Middlesex counties until 11 PM. Across all states, officials are advising sensitive individuals — including children, older adults, and those with asthma, lung, or heart disease — to limit strenuous or prolonged outdoor activities. The New York State Department of Health echoed this concern, urging those at risk to consider consulting a physician if symptoms such as shortness of breath, wheezing, or chest discomfort develop. The Air Quality Index (AQI) values in affected areas are expected to exceed 100, placing many regions in the "Unhealthy for Sensitive Groups" category. Fine particulates (PM2.5), the primary pollutant, are microscopic particles that can penetrate deep into the lungs and bloodstream, exacerbating existing health issues and triggering new symptoms in vulnerable populations. States such as Michigan, Wisconsin, and Indiana reported direct impacts from Canadian wildfire smoke, particularly from fires in Manitoba and Ontario. High pressure systems have trapped smoke close to the ground, worsening air quality. In Michigan, counties across the northern and central parts of the state were affected, with concentrations expected to ease by Wednesday. Meanwhile, Wisconsin's Department of Natural Resources expects smoke to persist throughout the day, with heavier conditions in the northeast. Vermont: Counties of Bennington and Windham are under alert through midnight due to smoke-driven PM2.5 levels. Massachusetts: An alert is in effect from 11 AM to 11 PM for Fine Particulates. Pennsylvania: Issued a Code Orange Alert, indicating unhealthy air for sensitive groups, especially in urban centers. Indiana: Declared an Air Quality Action Day for fine particulates and advised reducing outdoor exposure. Officials across all regions recommend the following precautions: Avoid or limit outdoor exertion, especially if you're in a sensitive group. Keep windows closed and use air purifiers or HVAC systems with MERV-13 filters or higher. Avoid activities that worsen air quality, such as burning wood or refueling vehicles during the day. Monitor symptoms such as coughing, difficulty breathing, chest tightness, or eye irritation — and seek medical advice if they worsen. Check your local AQI at for real-time updates.

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