Las Vegas Review-Journal

To reach Steve’s place, turn south at the northern lights

News and notes about science

- New York Times News Service

For years, sky gazers in Canada have been training their camera lenses on a wispy strand of purple light running across the country from east to west, sometimes flanked by neon green fingers that appear to wave.

It looks like a piece of the aurora borealis, or the northern lights: blushes of pink or green that illuminate the night sky at high latitudes, caused by solar particles interactin­g with the Earth’s magnetic field.

But this strip of light is different. It has always appeared farther south, beyond the bounds of normal aurora sightings.

Amateur aurora watchers have taken hundreds of photograph­s of this adjacent phenomenon, often drawing out its fluorescen­t colors with long exposures or photo editing. They called it Steve, as a sort of placeholde­r until a more formal name could be found.

Now a research paper has shed light on what Steve actually is, and scientists have proposed a moniker: Strong Thermal Emission Velocity Enhancemen­t.

So, it’s still Steve. But as a “bacronym” — a retroactiv­e acronym.

The paper was published March 14 in Science Advances, a peer-reviewed journal from the American Associatio­n for the Advancemen­t of Science. It suggests that Steve has a lot in common with a phenomenon called a “sub-auroral ion drift,” or SAID, in which ions flow very quickly from east to west, closer to the equator than the aurora borealis.

Like the northern lights, SAID results from interactio­ns between charged solar particles and the Earth’s magnetosph­ere.

“It’s something that we know that’s actually been studied for 40 years,” said Elizabeth A. Macdonald, a space physicist at NASA’S Goddard Space Flight Center who led the paper’s research team. “But they have never been seen to have this optical component.”

In other words, SAID usually looks nothing like Steve, with its long purplish streak and green fingers. That leaves many questions unanswered, and scientists are still working on those.

Macdonald and others worked with data from Swarm, a constellat­ion of satellites run by the European Space Agency, and learned that Steve is a strip of ionized gas as hot as the Earth’s core and moving through the air at about 4 miles per second.

Further research revealed that Steve was similar to a sub-auroral ion drift.

— Jacey Fortin

High-flying physics for a wild petunia

When it’s time for the hairyflowe­r wild petunia to pass its genes to the next generation, it does it with a bang.

To reproduce, the plants flings tiny seeds from a small torpedo-shape fruit more than 20 feet through the air. That’s not an easy task.

The seeds are discs about a tenth of an inch in diameter — smaller than the circles that fall out of a hole punch — and 1/50th of an inch thick, the equivalent of three sheets of paper.

“It’s like throwing confetti,” said Dwight Whitaker, a professor of physics at Pomona College in Claremont, California.

But somehow these seeds slice smoothly through the air.

In an article published recently in the Journal of the Royal Society Interface, Whitaker and a trio of undergradu­ate physics majors worked out what happens in that moment of explosion that launches the seeds so far.

The seeds sit within a small fruit that is a bit over 1 inch long. A spine along each half of the fruit is made of three layers, which shrink at different rates as they dry. That creates a strain that bends them outward. The two halves remain held together by glue.

Drip some water onto it, the glue dissolves and the fruit violently splits in half.

With ultrahigh speed video — up to 20,000 frames a second — Whitaker and his students slowed down the action, watching as hooks in the fruit accelerate­d the seeds to speeds of more than 30 mph, similar to how the curved scoops used in the sport of jai alai can accelerate a ball to more than 100 mph.

“It just looks like this gentle, beautiful motion,” Whitaker said.

When they did the calculatio­ns, they were stunned to find that some of the seeds were spinning at a rate of more than 1,600 revolution­s a second. Those at the top of the fruit tended to fly the farthest, while those at the bottom of the fruit tended to wobble and land closer to where they started.

— Kenneth Chang

Rome’s subway project digging up marvels

For archaeolog­ists, the excavation of Rome’s newest subway line has been the gift that keeps on giving.

Two years after a second-century military barracks was found during the excavation of the Amba Aradam station, archaeolog­ists recently presented the remains of a richly decorated domus, or house, that they believe belonged to the commander of the military post.

Even after the discovery of the military complex, “we didn’t imagine that we’d find a house with a central courtyard,” a fountain and at least 14 rooms, said Simona Morretta, the state archaeolog­ist responsibl­e for the site. One of the rooms appears to have been heated.

The foundation of another structure was also excavated at the same level, some 40 feet below the surface. Archaeolog­ists believe it was probably used as a warehouse.

Morretta said the domus was remarkably well-preserved. “The decoration­s were mainly intact, both the patterned mosaic floors and the frescoed walls,” she said.

The walls of the domus had been leveled at a height of 5 feet and the rooms filled in with dirt, suggesting that it had been intentiona­lly buried during the third century, just before the Roman Emperor Aurelian began building the protective walls that would encircle the city, in 271 A.D.

The excavation also unearthed rare wooden artifacts, such as wood forms used to build foundation­s. “You normally don’t find wood remains in Rome,” Morretta noted, but with the subway lines traveling at nearly 100 feet below ground, archaeolog­ists have been able to excavate deeper than usual.

As of now, 21 of 24 stations of the new route, Line C, which links the city center to an area east of Rome, are operationa­l. The San Giovanni station, which will showcase some of the artifacts found during its constructi­on, is expected to open soon.

The domus and the warehouse will be removed from the site and temporaril­y preserved in special containers while constructi­on on the Amba Aradam station continues. The ruins will eventually be returned to the site to form the centerpiec­e — visible to passengers — of the modern station, which is scheduled to open in 2022.

— Elisabetta Povoledo

A newly discovered difference between alligators and crocodiles

How do you tell an alligator from a crocodile?

The most obvious way to discern the two reptiles is to stare down their sinister snouts. Alligators have U-shaped faces that are wide and short, while crocodiles have slender, almost V-shaped muzzles. And if you’re daring enough, take a gander at their chompers. When an alligator closes its mouth, you tend to see only its upper teeth. Crocodiles on the other hand flash a toothy grin with their top and bottom teeth interlacin­g.

Many of the difference­s between the two center on their heads and mouths. Now, researcher­s from Japan have identified what they believe to be another feature that sets the reptiles apart: Alligators tend to have shorter humerus bones in their forelimbs and shorter femurs in their hind limbs than crocodiles, the team reported recently.

“This informatio­n could help explain difference­s in their ecology and locomotion, including the strange fact that, while small crocodiles have been observed to bound and gallop, alligators have not,” Julia Molnar an evolutiona­ry biologist from the New York Institute of Technology College of Osteopathi­c Medicine who was not involved in the study.

The difference­s are small, but the finding may provide insights into the ways in which the two reptiles move.

Masaya Iijima, a vertebrate paleontolo­gist from Hokkaido University in Japan and lead author on the study, measured more than 120 alligator and crocodile skeletons from nearly a dozen museums across the world. Then he analyzed the results using a statistica­l model. The specimens mostly belonged to extinct crocodilia­ns, which is the supergroup that encompasse­s both alligators and crocodiles, as well as caimans and gharials.

Alligators and crocodiles diverged evolutiona­rily during the Late Cretaceous period some 80 million years ago.

 ?? KRISTA TRINDER VIA THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? An aurora borealis-like phenomenon appears in Canada over Childs Lake, Manitoba. It has been given the name Steve, for Strong Thermal Emission Velocity Enhancemen­t, and a research paper suggests it has a lot in common with a phenomenon called a...
KRISTA TRINDER VIA THE NEW YORK TIMES An aurora borealis-like phenomenon appears in Canada over Childs Lake, Manitoba. It has been given the name Steve, for Strong Thermal Emission Velocity Enhancemen­t, and a research paper suggests it has a lot in common with a phenomenon called a...
 ?? ERIN TRIPP / UNIVERSITY OF COLORADO VIA THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? The hairyflowe­r wild petunia shoots tiny seeds more than 20 feet through the air to reproduce, according to three undergradu­ate physics majors and their professor at the University of Colorado.
ERIN TRIPP / UNIVERSITY OF COLORADO VIA THE NEW YORK TIMES The hairyflowe­r wild petunia shoots tiny seeds more than 20 feet through the air to reproduce, according to three undergradu­ate physics majors and their professor at the University of Colorado.

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