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In Chile's Atacama, world's driest desert, growing lettuces with fog

In Chile's Atacama, world's driest desert, growing lettuces with fog

Reuters9 hours ago

CHANARAL, Chile, June 24 (Reuters) - In Chile's arid Atacama, the driest desert in the world, growers and researchers are looking to harness water from the very air itself to grow lettuces and lemons, using a net to catch drops of moisture from fog.
"We are growing hydroponic lettuce entirely with fog water in the driest desert on the planet," Orlando Rojas, president of the Atacama Fog Catchers Association, told Reuters near Chanaral in the Atacama, where some areas do not see rainfall for years.
"We have had other crops that have not yielded results, which is why we have tended towards doing lettuce."
Researchers at the UC Atacama Desert Center are launching an open-access web mapping platform to show the location of the areas with potential for fog-water harvesting in the country, trying to open up these arid areas for cultivation.
"We know its potential and we know it can be an option and a solution for different scales of water needs in different territories where there is significant water scarcity," said Camilo Del Rio, director of the UC Atacama Desert Center.
Amid barren rocky hills and dry, white sand, the system works by using a mesh suspended between two poles that intercepts the small amount of moisture in the air, turning it into droplets that are collected and stored in water tanks.
"We are able to collect 1,000 to 1,400 liters of water in these inhospitable places, where we are clearly not favored by nature in other ways," said Rojas in a region where lemon trees were also growing from the collected water.
"We have the potential for life, which is this water resource. Once we learned about this project, we haven't stopped because it is vital for human subsistence."
Mario Segovia, also from the fog-catching group, said that the water collected from moisture in the air was pure.
"The harvest doesn't look bad, it's a super healthy food, pure nutrients that are organic," he said. "They're in a state of water with nutrients, because this fog-catcher water is completely neutral, it has no minerals, no chlorine, nothing."

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In Chile's Atacama, world's driest desert, growing lettuces with fog
In Chile's Atacama, world's driest desert, growing lettuces with fog

Reuters

time9 hours ago

  • Reuters

In Chile's Atacama, world's driest desert, growing lettuces with fog

CHANARAL, Chile, June 24 (Reuters) - In Chile's arid Atacama, the driest desert in the world, growers and researchers are looking to harness water from the very air itself to grow lettuces and lemons, using a net to catch drops of moisture from fog. "We are growing hydroponic lettuce entirely with fog water in the driest desert on the planet," Orlando Rojas, president of the Atacama Fog Catchers Association, told Reuters near Chanaral in the Atacama, where some areas do not see rainfall for years. "We have had other crops that have not yielded results, which is why we have tended towards doing lettuce." Researchers at the UC Atacama Desert Center are launching an open-access web mapping platform to show the location of the areas with potential for fog-water harvesting in the country, trying to open up these arid areas for cultivation. "We know its potential and we know it can be an option and a solution for different scales of water needs in different territories where there is significant water scarcity," said Camilo Del Rio, director of the UC Atacama Desert Center. Amid barren rocky hills and dry, white sand, the system works by using a mesh suspended between two poles that intercepts the small amount of moisture in the air, turning it into droplets that are collected and stored in water tanks. "We are able to collect 1,000 to 1,400 liters of water in these inhospitable places, where we are clearly not favored by nature in other ways," said Rojas in a region where lemon trees were also growing from the collected water. "We have the potential for life, which is this water resource. Once we learned about this project, we haven't stopped because it is vital for human subsistence." Mario Segovia, also from the fog-catching group, said that the water collected from moisture in the air was pure. "The harvest doesn't look bad, it's a super healthy food, pure nutrients that are organic," he said. "They're in a state of water with nutrients, because this fog-catcher water is completely neutral, it has no minerals, no chlorine, nothing."

World's biggest telescope finds 2,000 asteroids in a week
World's biggest telescope finds 2,000 asteroids in a week

Telegraph

timea day ago

  • Telegraph

World's biggest telescope finds 2,000 asteroids in a week

The world's largest digital camera telescope has discovered 2,000 new asteroids, including seven potentially hazardous space rocks that will pass close to Earth. The Vera C Rubin Observatory in Chile released the first images from its 3,200 megapixel camera, which produces images so large they are impossible to see in detail with the human eye. In the first few days of sky scanning, the telescope spotted 2,104 unknown asteroids, including a handful of 'near-earth objects' (NEOs) which will pass within 30 million miles of Earth's orbit. Scientists currently know of around one million asteroids, but the observatory expects to find another five million in the next few years, including tens of thousands of NEOs. 'Seven near-earth objects' Zeljko Ivezic, the deputy director of the observatory, said: 'There are so many of them, just in a few nights of data, and in just one tiny region. 'We have 2,000 in this few nights of data, and there are seven near-earth objects that have orbits that cross Earth's orbit. None of them is in a position to strike Earth, don't worry. 'We'll get tens of thousands more near-earth objects and will discover about five million new asteroids during the next few years. This is five times more than all the astronomers in the world discovered in the last 200 years, since the discovery of the first asteroid. 'So because of this rapid development of technology today, we can outdo all these two centuries of effort in just a couple of years.' NEOs are closely monitored to make sure they do not change course and come perilously close to Earth. In January the European Space Agency Planetary Defence Office announced that asteroid 2024 YR4 had a small chance of impacting Earth in 2032. The estimate has since been downgraded, but it may still hit the Moon. The observatory is expected to detect 90 per cent of all potentially hazardous asteroids over 460 feet wide, and is likely to solve the mystery of Planet Nine, which astronomers believe may be lurking in the depths of our solar system. The Rubin Observatory also released a striking mosaic of the glowing pink Trifid and Lagoon nebulae in the Sagittarius constellation where new stars are forming in huge clouds of gas and dust. An image of the giant elliptical galaxy Messier 49, usually seen as a bright spot on a dark background, revealed a sky teeming with brightly coloured stars and galaxies. Demystify dark matter The new images show how galaxies cluster together, and experts are hoping the unprecedented detail will help uncover the secrets of dark matter and dark energy – the two most mysterious forces in the universe. The observatory is named after Vera Rubin, the American astrophysicist who calculated that galaxies must contain about ten times as much 'dark' mass, otherwise they would fly apart. She proposed that at least ninety percent of the mass in the universe is invisible and unidentified. The observatory, which has been described as the 'greatest astronomical discovery machine ever built' is located in the Andes on the top of Cerro Pachón in Chile and has taken two decades to build. Its main goal is to produce a huge, ultra-high-definition movie of the universe by scanning the whole sky over 10 years, called the Legacy Survey of Space and Time (LSST). The digital camera in the telescope is so big that it would need 400 high-definition television screens to display a single image. When complete, the full survey is expected to rack up 500 petabytes of data – the same storage as half-a-million 4K Hollywood films. Britain to process 1.5m images Prof Hiranya Peiris from Cambridge's Institute of Astronomy, part of the LSST Dark Energy Science Collaboration, said: 'We will be looking at the universe in a way that we have never done before, and this exploration is bound to throw up surprises that we never imagined.' Britain will also host one of three international data facilities which will process around 1.5 million images, capturing around 10 billion stars and galaxies. Prof Bob Mann, the LSST:UK Project Leader from the University of Edinburgh, said: 'UK researchers have been contributing to the scientific and technical preparation for the Rubin LSST for more than ten years. 'These exciting First Look images show that everything is working well and reassure us that we have a decade's worth of wonderful data coming our way, with which UK astronomers will do great science.' Prof Vasily Belokurov from Cambridge's Institute of Astronomy added: 'A new era of galactic archaeology is beginning.'

Largest digital camera ever snaps amazing photos of the universe
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The Independent

timea day ago

  • The Independent

Largest digital camera ever snaps amazing photos of the universe

The Vera C. Rubin Observatory, the largest digital camera ever built, released its first images of the universe, showcasing colorful nebulas, stars, and galaxies. Located on a mountaintop in Chile, the observatory was funded by the U.S. National Science Foundation and U.S. Department of Energy. Its initial glamour shots include the vibrant Trifid and Lagoon nebulas, located thousands of light-years from Earth, and a group of galaxies known as the Virgo Cluster. The observatory plans to survey the southern sky for the next 10 years, aiming to image 20 billion galaxies and discover new asteroids and other celestial objects. Named after astronomer Vera Rubin, the project hopes its discerning camera will yield clues about elusive entities like dark matter and dark energy.

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