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Arctic warming may fuel ice formation in clouds, observations suggest

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Arctic warming may fuel ice formation in clouds, observations suggest


Arctic warming may fuel ice formation in clouds
As surface air temperatures rise above 0°C, snow and ice cover melts, resulting in the appearance of snow/ice-free barren and vegetated areas. These newly exposed surfaces release increased amounts of dust and biological organic aerosols, which have the potential to promote ice crystal formation in clouds. Credit: Yutaka Tobo / National Institute of Polar Research, Japan

The Arctic frequently experiences temperatures that support the formation of mixed-phase clouds that contain supercooled liquid droplets and ice crystals. The composition of such clouds plays a crucial role in the region’s energy balance and climate system. Clouds with more liquid last longer and reflect more sunlight than those with more ice crystals.

With Arctic warming, meteorologists have been interested in determining the effect of rising temperatures on cloud composition and its broader effect on the region. Climate models generally predict that as the Arctic warms, clouds in the region will contain more liquid water and less ice, since warmer temperatures typically suppress the formation of ice crystals.

However, cloud formation is also influenced by the presence of aerosols which act as seeds, both for the condensation of liquid droplets and the formation of ice crystals.

In a study published in Communications Earth & Environment, on 18 September 2024, researchers led by Associate Professor Yutaka Tobo from the National Institute of Polar Research, Japan, investigated the relationship between rising surface air temperatures and aerosols known as ice-nucleating particles (INPs), which are known to promote ice crystal formation in clouds.

They found that surface warming in the Arctic leads to an increase in snow and ice-free areas, which release higher amounts of active INPs. These INPs can induce ice formation in clouds, reducing the liquid water content in mixed-phase clouds and potentially accelerating further warming.

“We found that the INPs tended to increase exponentially with rising surface air temperatures when the temperatures rose above 0°C and snow/ice-free barren areas and vegetated areas appeared in Svalbard, a region experiencing warming five to seven times faster than the global average,” says Associate Professor Tobo.

The observations are based on year-round measurements of INPs taken during the Multidisciplinary drifting Observatory for the Study of Arctic Climate (MOSAiC) project period from September 2019 to early-October 2020 at the Zeppelin Observatory in Svalbard. To identify the number of INPs, the researchers collected aerosol samples and used an established droplet-freezing method, where the samples were exposed to cold conditions to see if they could form ice.

They observed that the number of INPs increased during the warmer months (mid-April to September), when surface air temperatures were above 0°C. Using scanning electron microscopy with energy-dispersive X-ray analysis, they found that the INPs observed in the warmer months were mainly mineral dust and carbonaceous particles, resembling microorganisms or plant debris.

So, where did these aerosols come from? The Normalized Difference Vegetation Index (NDVI) data, which indicates vegetation density, revealed that in the summer, about 35% of Svalbard had positive NDVI values between 0 and 0.5, indicating snow-free barren areas like glacial outwash plains and vegetated areas with grasses, mosses, and lichens. The findings suggest that the INPs are the dust and biological organic aerosols, such as microorganisms or plant debris, released from these regions.

The findings are concerning because winter warming trends are even more severe than in summer, with temperatures increasing by more than 2°C per decade in Svalbard. As snow and ice-free areas become more common in the Arctic winter in the coming decades, INP emissions will likely increase, changing the composition of mixed-phase clouds.

“Our results suggest the possibility that the supply of highly active INPs from high-latitude terrestrial sources will increase in response to the projected surface warming, and thus, this effect needs to be considered in climate models to improve our understanding of the phase transition scenario of Arctic mixed-phase clouds,” concludes Associate Professor Tobo.

More information:
Tobo, Y., et al. Surface warming in Svalbard may have led to increases in highly active ice nucleating particles, Communications Earth & Environment (2024). DOI: 10.1038/s43247-024-01677-0. www.nature.com/articles/s43247-024-01677-0

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Arctic warming may fuel ice formation in clouds, observations suggest (2024, September 19)
retrieved 19 September 2024
from https://phys.org/news/2024-09-arctic-fuel-ice-formation-clouds.html

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Beetles cooperate on tricky dung moves

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Beetles cooperate on tricky dung moves


Dung beetle
Credit: Pixabay/CC0 Public Domain

Dung beetles are among the strongest animals in the world. They also possess an exceptional ability to cooperate. Research shows that female and male spider dung beetles together are able to move large dung balls across difficult obstacles. However, same-sex attempts to do the same always ended in aggressive fights.

Dung beetles live in and on animal droppings. By breaking down organic substances, the tiny insects play an invisible yet important role in nature. Researchers have now discovered another task at which dung beetles excel.

Female and male spider dung beetles managed, in a kind of synchronized dance, to move balls of droppings, equivalent to 10 times their body weight over vertical obstacles of height up to 20 centimeters. The experiments were carried out in South Africa and Italy under the leadership of biology researcher Claudia Tocco from Lund University.

“We were very surprised to see that they could cooperate and help each other move an object without knowing its final destination. This is an ability that only humans possess. We believe that the dung beetles use tactile communication, but this has not yet been proven,” says Tocco.






Credit: Lund University

Another discovery was that the spider dung beetles roll their dung balls in a straight path even if they encounter obstacles along the way. When a rock or a log appears, they simply climb over the obstacle. The researchers were also able to establish that the advanced cooperation and climbing only applied to pairs of dung beetles of different sexes.

“When spider dung beetles of the same sex would try to cooperate, it always ended in serious fights that resulted in the dung ball breaking, or one of the dung beetles running away with it,” says Tocco.

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Beetles cooperate on tricky dung moves (2024, September 19)
retrieved 19 September 2024
from https://phys.org/news/2024-09-beetles-cooperate-tricky-dung.html

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Meta and Spotify blast EU decisions on AI

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Meta and Spotify blast EU decisions on AI


Meta, which owns Facebook, WhatsApp and Instagram, recently halted plans to harvest data from European users to train its AI models after pressure from privacy regulators
Meta, which owns Facebook, WhatsApp and Instagram, recently halted plans to harvest data from European users to train its AI models after pressure from privacy regulators.

A group of companies including Meta and Spotify blasted the European Union Thursday for its “fragmented and inconsistent” decision-making on data privacy and artificial intelligence (AI).

The firms along with several researchers and industry bodies signed an open letter claiming that Europe was already becoming less competitive and risked falling further behind in the age of AI.

The signatories called for “harmonized, consistent, quick and clear decisions” from data privacy regulators to “enable European data to be used in AI training for the benefit of Europeans”.

The letter takes issue with recent decisions under the 2018 general data protection regulation (GDPR).

Meta, which owns Facebook, WhatsApp and Instagram, recently halted plans to harvest data from European users to train its AI models after pressure from privacy regulators.

“In recent times, regulatory decision making has become fragmented and unpredictable, while interventions by the European Data Protection Authorities have created huge uncertainty about what kinds of data can be used to train AI models,” said the letter.

A European Commission spokesperson said at the time that all companies in the EU were expected to abide by data privacy rules.

Meta has faced record fines for breaching the privacy of users, including a single penalty of more than one billion euros under GDPR.

As well as data privacy rules, Europe became the first regional bloc to frame major legislation aiming to stop abuses of the technology—its AI Act coming into force earlier this year.

Meta and other tech giants have increasingly delayed products for the European market, claiming they were seeking legal clarity.

Meta delayed the EU-wide release of its Twitter alternative Threads by several months last year.

Google has similarly held back the release of AI tools in the EU.

© 2024 AFP

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Meta and Spotify blast EU decisions on AI (2024, September 19)
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from https://techxplore.com/news/2024-09-meta-spotify-blast-eu-decisions.html

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Tropical cyclone intensity exacerbated by increasing depth of ocean mixed layer, finds study

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Tropical cyclone intensity exacerbated by increasing depth of ocean mixed layer, finds study


Tropical cyclone intensity exacerbated by increasing depth of ocean mixed layer
Simulated sea surface temperature changes and upper ocean currents after 72 hours since tropical cyclone initiation according to ocean mixed layer depth: 2 m (a), 5 m (b), 10 m (c), 15 m (d), 20 m (e), 50 m (f) and 100 m (g). Credit: Zhang et al. 2024.

Tropical cyclones can have severe consequences for both the marine and terrestrial environments, as well as the organisms and communities who inhabit them. In the oceans, there can be alterations in sea surface temperature that disrupt biological processes and hospitable conditions for life, the devastation of surface algae and other primary producers, which impacts complex marine food chains, as well as damaging coral reefs. Meanwhile, on land, the heavy rainfall, strong winds and storm surges can lead to significant damage to property and infrastructure, as well as loss of lives.

These natural phenomena are powered by warm surface waters, as the rising water vapor causes condensation of water droplets, and thus cloud formation and rain. This releases heat, warming the atmosphere further and causing the air to continue to rise, bringing in cooler air towards the base, which we experience as strong winds. Consequently, as tropical cyclones move over land they lose this initial energy source and eventually dissipate.

Therefore, the surface layer of the ocean is particularly important. Recent research published in Frontiers in Marine Science has investigated how the depth of the mixed layer (the deepest layer affected by surface turbulence and separating cooler ocean depths from atmospheric interactions) impacts ocean temperatures, and subsequently tropical cyclone formation.

To do so, Yalan Zhang, of China’s National University of Defense Technology, and colleagues used models to simulate different ocean mixed layer depth (2 m, 5 m, 10 m, 15 m, 20 m, 50 m and 100 m) influences on tropical cyclones in the western North Pacific over four days, in both one and three dimensions. The former model type focuses mostly on the influence of depth, while the latter incorporates heat, salinity and water mass movement (for example, upwelling).

Tropical cyclone intensity exacerbated by increasing depth of ocean mixed layer
Tropical cyclone destructive potential (PDS) increase according to seven experimental ocean mixed layer depths. Credit: Zhang et al. 2024.

The researchers found that ocean mixed layer depth only has a small influence on the track the tropical cyclone takes, with slower translation speeds resulting from shallower ocean mixed layer depth moving the center of the tropical storm. However, they discovered a greater impact on the size and intensity of the event, reaching its peak 72 to 84 hours after initiation.

Importantly, this is only the case up to 15 m water depth, after which the ocean mixed layer depth prior to the tropical cyclone has marginal influence on the destructiveness of the event. The destructive potential increased 325.2% when the ocean mixed layer depth reached 5 m, reducing to 50% at 15 m and below 15% at depths thereafter.

This is because surface winds bring cold water from below the ocean mixed layer depth when it is shallower than 15 m, which decreases the temperature of the upper ocean. In fact, the scientists suggest 75% to 90% of sea surface cooling can be attributed to turbulence from wind-induced vertical shear (the change in wind speed and direction with altitude).

However, as the ocean mixed layer depth increases beyond this threshold point of 15 m, the effect of surface winds on sea surface temperature cooling is reduced, leading to increasing surface temperatures below the tropical cyclones, therefore fueling their development.

Furthermore, the passage of multiple tropical cyclones through the same area can cause the ocean mixed layer depth to deepen, which may reduce their future activity in that region, though the timescales between events to allow this are still being studied.

This research is significant, as global warming is likely to exacerbate tropical cyclone occurrences due to rising sea surface temperatures, so the role of ocean mixed layer depth in modulating these is paramount to understanding these phenomena of the marine realm and allowing populations to mitigate against their devastation in vulnerable regions.

More information:
Yalan Zhang et al, Impact of ocean mixed layer depth on tropical cyclone characteristics: a numerical investigation, Frontiers in Marine Science (2024). DOI: 10.3389/fmars.2024.1395492

© 2024 Science X Network

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Tropical cyclone intensity exacerbated by increasing depth of ocean mixed layer, finds study (2024, September 19)
retrieved 19 September 2024
from https://phys.org/news/2024-09-tropical-cyclone-intensity-exacerbated-depth.html

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‘Hunger Games’ studio Lionsgate to partner with AI company

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‘Hunger Games’ studio Lionsgate to partner with AI company


youtube
Credit: Pixabay/CC0 Public Domain

Lionsgate will work with artificial intelligence research company Runway to create and train a new artificial intelligence model customized to the “Hunger Games” and “John Wick” studio’s film and TV content, marking the AI company’s first collaboration with a Hollywood studio.

The model will generate cinematic video that can then be edited with Runway’s suite of tools, the Santa Monica-based studio said Wednesday.

Lionsgate Vice Chair Michael Burns said in a statement that several of the studio’s filmmakers were “already excited” about the potential applications for AI in pre- and postproduction processes.

“We view AI as a great tool for augmenting, enhancing and supplementing our current operations,” he said.

AI has emerged as a thorny issue in Hollywood, as entertainment companies want to harness such powerful tools to reduce costs and streamline their operations, but also don’t want to offend actors, writers and behind-the-scenes workers who fear that the technology will replace them.

Runway is far from the first AI company making inroads into the entertainment business. Already, ChatGPT maker OpenAI has started to meet with entertainment industry players to demonstrate its latest technology.

Also on Wednesday, YouTube said it would make an AI-powered text-to-video tool, Veo, available for creators later this year on YouTube Shorts. Through Veo, creators can type descriptions like “dreamlike secret garden, vivid colors, visible brushstrokes,” and a six-second clip will be created with AI depicting that image. Videos generated with AI will be labeled as such, YouTube said.

YouTube also announced it will add a “brainstorming buddy powered by AI” in its YouTube Studio that will suggest video ideas to creators that could help their projects.

“When we show this to creators, the thing they love most is how it unlocks elements of an idea they hadn’t even thought of yet,” said Sarah Ali, senior director of product, leading YouTube’s creation experiences and YouTube Shorts during a presentation in New York.

“This is not about replacing your ideas. It is about providing you with the tools to help you get there faster, or to uncover new areas you just hadn’t considered before.”

2024 Los Angeles Times. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

Citation:
‘Hunger Games’ studio Lionsgate to partner with AI company (2024, September 19)
retrieved 19 September 2024
from https://techxplore.com/news/2024-09-hunger-games-studio-lionsgate-partner.html

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part may be reproduced without the written permission. The content is provided for information purposes only.





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