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Rare video from Webb telescope shows Aurora lights on Jupiter

Rare video from Webb telescope shows Aurora lights on Jupiter

Yahoo14-05-2025

Space telescopes don't take holidays off, which is why Nasa's James Webb Space Telescope's powerful instruments were trained on Jupiter on Christmas Day 2023, capturing some of the most detailed images yet of the dancing aurora lights on the gas giant, a new study revealed this week.
Aurora lights are created from space weather as high-energy particles enter a planet's atmosphere. On Earth, we have auroras known as the Northern and Southern Lights at the poles. However, Jupiter – being a giant planet 11 times wider than Earth – has massive auroras, hundreds of times more energetic than those we see on our planet. Jupiter also has an additional source for auroras besides solar wind, as charged particles from its moon Io are constantly crashing into its parent planet.
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On Dec. 25, 2023, a team of scientists led by Jonathan Nichols from the University of Leicester in the United Kingdom used Webb's Near-Infrared Camera (NIRCam) to photograph Jupiter's fast-moving auroras in an attempt to see how quickly they evolve. Their findings were published this week in the journal Nature Communications.
"What a Christmas present it was – it just blew me away!" Nichols said in a NASA release. "We wanted to see how quickly the auroras change, expecting them to fade in and out ponderously, perhaps over a quarter of an hour or so. Instead, we observed the whole auroral region fizzing and popping with light, sometimes varying by the second."
The team found emissions of trihydrogen cation (H3+) more variable than previously estimated and discovered something new and mysterious about Jupiter's auroras.
The brightest areas seen by Webb's NIRCam were invisible to NASA's Hubble Space Telescope. The two images below show the side-by-side observations from Webb (left) and Hubble's ultraviolet light on the right.
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Nichols said this discrepancy left the team scratching their heads."In order to cause the combination of brightness seen by both Webb and Hubble, we need to have a combination of high quantities of very low-energy particles hitting the atmosphere, which was previously thought to be impossible," he said.
More research is needed to understand the implications of Jupiter's space environment, including using data from NASA's Juno spacecraft, which is currently orbiting the Jovian system.Original article source: Rare video from Webb telescope shows Aurora lights on Jupiter

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Antarctica's brief gain in ice mass fuels climate denial
Antarctica's brief gain in ice mass fuels climate denial

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Antarctica's brief gain in ice mass fuels climate denial

"In a development that's leaving climate alarmists scrambling, new data shows that Antarctic ice has increased in size for the first time in decades -- reversing the long-touted trend of mass loss and environmental collapse," reads a May 28, 2025 Facebook post from The Hodgetwins, US conservative commentators whom AFP has previously fact-checked. Similar narratives dismissing the impact of climate change popped up on social media after traditional media reported in early May on a study's findings about Antarctic ice sheet (archived here). The study, from March, found that between 2021 and 2023, Antarctica's ice sheet expanded and therefore did not add to global mean sea level rise. The gain did not, however, counter the overall rise observed over those years because of ice loss and warming elsewhere (archived here and here). And weather conditions -- specifically unusual precipitations, including snow and some rain in east Antarctica and the Antarctic Peninsula -- were the primary reason the ice sheet gained mass, the study's corresponding author and other scientists told AFP. This short-lived, partial gain does not disprove the impact of climate change on the continent, they said. Yunzhong Shen, the study's corresponding author, told AFP May 19 that the increase observed between 2021 and 2023 occurred on a "too short timescale" to be treated as a trend reversal -- or to deny the impacts of climate change in the region (archived here). The gain witnessed in Antarctica's ice sheets also seems "to stop after 2024, which needs to be determined by further study," he said. James Kirkham, a scientist with the International Cryosphere Climate Initiative scientist, concurred (archived here): "The most recent levels reported by NASA thus far in 2025 look similar to what they were back in 2020, just before the abrupt gain." When looking at Antarctic total mass balance, NASA's dataset shows a net loss in mass since 2002. In fact, that "Antarctica would experience increased snowfall in a warmer climate is entirely expected as in a warmer climate the atmosphere can hold more moisture," Kirkham said in a May 27 email. "This means that the likelihood of extreme weather (such as the heavy snowfall which caused the recent mass gain in east Antarctica) increases." Brandon Daly, who studies glaciers and ice sheets, agreed (archived here). "When climate change deniers talk about the glaciers in Antarctica, they will usually only focus on the surface of the ice sheet," he said May 28, explaining that they ignore other ice loss. "Ice in contact with the ocean is what is melting, and it will continue to melt even if precipitation over the ice sheet increases," he said. "And it is the ocean-forced melting that is currently risking ice sheet instability and sea level rise." University of Minnesota climate scientist Peter Neff said May 27 that human climate change impacts in Antarctica are already widely seen around the Antarctic Peninsula and coastal Antarctica, but have been slower to penetrate inland (archived here). The continent is "like a giant pancake with very steep edges that slow the north to south penetration of warmer air over the southern ocean," he said. Almost all of Antarctica's ice losses come from glaciers, largely in west Antarctica and the peninsula (archived here and here). Robert McKay, director of Victoria University of Wellington's Antarctic Research Centre, told AFP May 15 that scientists are mostly concerned with these sectors because they may be "near a tipping point" that could lead to greatly accelerated sea level rise (archived here). Environmental change thus takes different forms in different regions. Brief temporary offsets of overall losses through recent regional snowfalls, such as the one observed between 2021 and 2023, are unlikely to change the long-term trajectory of continent-wide ice losses, with continued warming. Additionally, weather stations -- whose data network remains scarce in the continent -- have observed long-term warming and impacts on sea level rise, albeit with very large year-to-year variability given that Antarctica holds the most variable climate in the world (archived here and here). Satellite data has recently revealed that ice sheets with enough frozen water to lift oceans some 65 metres are far more sensitive to climate change than previously suspected (archived here). The amount of ice melting or breaking off into the ocean from Greenland and west Antarctica, now averaging about 400 billion tonnes a year, has quadrupled over the last three decades, eclipsing runoff from mountain glaciers. Both polar oceans are warming, with the "Southern Ocean being disproportionately and increasingly important in global ocean heat increase," according to the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, the leading international consortium of climate scientists (archived here). AFP has debunked other claims about the Poles, including here.

The 2025 Atlantic Hurricane Season Starts Now
The 2025 Atlantic Hurricane Season Starts Now

Forbes

time33 minutes ago

  • Forbes

The 2025 Atlantic Hurricane Season Starts Now

Hurricane Milton, a Category 5 storm at the time of this NASA photograph, is pictured in the Gulf of ... More Mexico off the coast of Yucatan Peninsula. This week marks the official start of the Atlantic hurricane season, a date that should resonate not only with meteorologists and emergency managers, but also with every business, homeowner and community leader along the Atlantic and Gulf coasts. While the historical peak of hurricane activity arrives later in the summer, in some years, we've seen storms form well before the official start. That is why June should be considered more than a ceremonial marker, but a call to pay attention, to stay informed, and to act early. Between 2015 and 2021, the Atlantic hurricane season delivered an unprecedented string of early season named storms, each forming before the traditional June 1 start date. This stretch began with Tropical Storm Ana in May 2015 and included the extraordinary formation of Hurricane Alex in January 2016, an event that hadn't been seen since 1938. From 2015 through 2021, every season had at least one named storm form in May or even earlier, a testament to how warm waters and neutral to La Niña conditions had created a fertile environment for early development. The development of the first tropical storm of the season has transitioned back to a June or later ... More over the past three seasons. The 2025 season is also expected to have a slow start. Yet, 2022 to the present season, have signaled a break from this pattern. In 2022, Tropical Storm Alex arrived on June 5, and in 2023, Tropical Storm Arlene formed just one day into the official season on June 2. Last year took an even more notable turn, with Tropical Storm Alberto not forming until June 19, the slowest start since 2014. With 2025 continuing this trend, these later starts mark a significant shift from the previous pattern of early storms and suggest that the conditions favoring May development may be giving way to new climate signals. Strong upper-level winds, known as wind shear, have been more active in recent springs, disrupting the delicate balance that typically allows tropical systems to organize. In addition, 2023 and 2024 featured a powerful El Niño, which tends to strengthen westerly winds in the Atlantic, making early development less likely. Another very important factor in early season storm suppression are huge dust clouds from the Sahara Desert, carried across the Atlantic all the way to the United States. The latest dust storm is expected to reach the Gulf states this week. All these factors combine to illustrate that while early storm formation can offer a clue about springtime atmospheric patterns, it does not tell the whole story of a season's eventual activity. The recent shift to the first storm forming after the start of the season, compared to just a few years ago when storms regularly formed before June 1, highlights how dynamic and unpredictable hurricane forecasting can be. While the timing of the first named storm each year provides valuable insight into springtime atmospheric patterns, it does not offer a complete forecast of what the rest of the season will bring. After all, 2023 had a slow start yet ended as one of the most active seasons in memory. The real drivers of a season's intensity are the interplay of warm sea-surface temperatures, mid-summer wind shear, the Saharan dust layer reach, and the broader state of the El Niño–Southern Oscillation (ENSO). Some of the necessary conditions for storm development are already in place. By spring, we were already seeing record warm ocean temperatures as evidenced by the earliest 90-degree water temperature reading in history at Virginia Key, Florida, just off the coast from Miami. New approaches to forecasting tropical storms are reshaping how we understand and respond to these formidable systems. The emergence of artificial intelligence models, such as Microsoft's Aurora AI project, are providing powerful tools for sifting through massive datasets and delivering more precise storm projections. This cutting-edge technology uses machine learning algorithms to find subtle patterns in atmospheric and oceanic data, offering earlier and more accurate predictions of storm development and intensification. Meanwhile, DTN, the company I work for, recently launched the Hurricane Threat Index to look beyond just wind speeds and surge at landfall. This index incorporates impacts well inland, recognizing that the heaviest rainfall and strongest winds often extend far from the coastline, as recent storms like Harvey and Florence have demonstrated. The model also elevates the importance of multiple risks associated with a hurricane. For example, Hurricane Helene made landfall as a Category 4 hurricane in Florida's Big Bend region, but the most catastrophic impact occurred in western North Carolina after Helene weakened to a tropical storm. Within the threat index both the hurricane and subsequent flooding would rate a high severity risk and communicated as such to those potentially impacted. These advances in technology and methodology ensure that forecasts are more holistic and more relevant to the evolving risk landscape, helping decision-makers better prepare for the full range of storm threats. As the 2025 Atlantic hurricane season begins, we're reminded that storms don't always follow the patterns of the past. The seven-year stretch of early-season storms, followed by recent seasons with later starts, clearly illustrates how climate variability and long-term changes continue to reshape our understanding of risk. As we stand on the brink of this new season, let's treat June 1 not simply as a date on the calendar, but as a call to action: to plan, and to stay vigilant. In the face of nature's power, preparation remains our most effective and enduring defense.

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