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You may have heard that the Earth’s tectonic plates slide around, but, how do these hard rocks do that?

The SUESI instrument being placed in water. Image obtained with thanks from UCSD.edu.

The SUESI instrument being placed in water.
Image obtained with thanks from UCSD.edu.

Scientists from the Scripps Institution of Oceanography discovered a layer of magma in the Earth’s mantle which may be acting as a lubricant to facilitate the slide of tectonic plates. They imaged a 15.5-mile thick layer of partially melted mantle rock below the edge of the Cocos plate where it moves under Central America.

There are two main layers of the mantle. The upper mantle, and the lower mantle. The upper mantle is mostly solid, and the lower mantle is partially molten (extremely viscous/barely liquid).

IMG_7253

Image obtained with thanks from UCSD.edu.

This lubricant discovery was made at the Middle America trench using electromagnetic imaging technology pioneered at Scripps as part of the SERPENT project.

Source: UCSD.edu

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Some of you may already know that volcanic ash can affect local weather by blocking out sunlight, but did you know that it also causes lightning?

Lightning at the Chaiten volcano in Chile. Image obtained with thanks from fmg2001 on Flickr. http://www.flickr.com/photos/fmg2001/

It is thought that volcanic ash particles sometimes brush past each other, causing the generation of a (probably) high voltage (which is a potential difference in electric charge between pieces of ash in this case).

According to the IEEE and National Geographic (source links), lightning in a volcanic ash cloud actually warns of an imminent volcanic eruption.

High voltages facilitate electric arcs (also known by many people as sparks or gashes). An electric arc is just the display of electric current passing through a gas, such as air, for example.

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In this video, explorers visit a Hawaiian volcanic site to not only see lava up close, but play with it. This appears to be both a fascinating and nerve-racking experience.

Video embedded with thanks from: Jeri Ellsworth on Youtube.

The temperature of lava normally ranges from 700 (1,292 °F)  to 1,600 °C (2,912 °F). It is therefore hot enough to kill you if you get your foot stuck in it, for example. Large scale lava flows can decimate an entire village, not only because it will burn it, but it is also extremely heavy and viscous (dense and syrupy).

When it cools, and hence hardens, whatever was trapped under it is no longer recoverable. The lava exploration in the video above may not look particularly dangerous, but, it has to be done with great caution because you may not see little crevices that hot lava are in, between hardened rock. Your feet may slip into them.

Learn more about volcanoes here.

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Wood fire. Image obtained with thanks from bugeaters on Flickr.

First, you need to understand what starts fires and what environments are ideal for them.

Fires thrive in low humidity environments and are most likely to survive on (burn) dry substances such as dead foliage (after it dries out and turns brown), dead grass, wood and paper.

The cause of fires is equally important. Fires can be caused by ignition or autoignition. Autoignition is when a substance spontaneously “catches fire” (ignites) without a flame or electric spark due to intense heat. In order to understand autoignition, you need to understand what really causes all the fires mentioned above, including the flame and spark ignited ones.

Fires are caused by intense heat. Sparks (electric arcs) start fires because they are at a temperature high enough to cause many substances to ignite. Some substances require higher temperatures than others to ignite.

Each substance has an autoignition temperature and that is the temperature at which it ignites. Don’t confuse autoignition with sparked ignition. Even though the underlying cause of fire is the same, they are used in different contexts. Autoignition is specifically used to refer to ignition without a spark or flame.

A very common example of ignition without a spark is in the diesel engine. It is a compression ignition engine. This means that it compresses air inside it’s cylinders until it exceeds the ignition temperature of diesel fuel, so that when the diesel fuel is injected into the cylinder of hot air, it automatically ignites.

Droughts

Drought helps to cause fires because it is a lack of rain for a prolonged period of time which causes plants to dry out, and as I said above, dry plants are the most likely to ignite. They can be ignited by lightning strikes, arsons, cigarette lighter accidents, and more.

Wildfires

Wildfires are often contributed to by droughts because droughts are geographically large enough to cause foliage over a very widespread area to become dry, so a fire may be started on even one leaf, spread to the rest of the plant, then spread to the other plants until it becomes a large disaster.

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Earth (eastern portion). Obtained with thanks from NASA. This is a public domain image. You may redistribute it.

Astrophysicists have discovered a belt of antiprotons surrounding the earth. They achieved this by launching a spacecraft called PAMELA into low Earth orbit which was specifically intended to discover the antiprotons. Antiprotons are sometimes referred to as negatrons.

An antiproton is the antiparticle of a proton. This means that it has the same exact mass of a proton (which is positively charged), but it is negatively charged.

If you didn’t already guess, because electrons are negatively charged, their antiparticles which are called antielectrons or positrons are positively charged. Positive is the opposite of negative, and vice versa.

When antiprotons collide with protons, they annihlate each other and turn into energy.

The PAMELA team said that they suspected that the collision of cosmic rays from the sun and other sources with the nuclei of particles in the earth’s outer atmosphere would result in the production of antiprotons.

However, there was question which wasn’t answered until now: Where do the antiprotons end up?

They are pulled into the into the Earth’s magnetic field. Although many of them are destroyed because they collided with matching protons.

Source

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Joplin City, Missouri, which is north of Arkansas, has been severely infrastructurally damaged and an estimated 122 people have been killed as of 6 pm today due to an EF5 tornado with a path three quarters of a mile wide. EF means Enhanced Fujita. It is a tornado wind speed scale. A tornado which is rated EF5 has wind speeds in excess of 200 mph or 322 km/h. Source.

Joplin’s devastation was due to two unusual factors, a tornado of an unusually high strength, and also a high population density. Joplin has a very high population density of 1,592 people per square mile or 615 people per square km. This translates to a very high death toll in the case of tornadoes, hurricanes, earthquakes, floods, or any disaster which affects a geographic region of a given size.

For example, if a disaster is a square mile and killed everyone in that square mile, and the population density was 1, 592 per square mile, then twice as many people would be killed if it had twice that population density, but this is not realistic. I used that example because it is easy to understand.

Weather officials said that it was the single deadliest tornado to hit since 1947 and the ninth deadliest of all time.

The building damage was so severe that their remains were almost flat on the ground. They were basically piles of boards. The residents were warned about the tornado a helpful 20 minutes before it hit. 20 minutes may sound short, but it matters because it is long enough for people to grab a few of their most important belongings and run into an underground shelter.

20,000 buildings were left without electricity and there were interruptions of cellphone service, and Verizon Wireless said that they would provide 3 cellular communication towers for emergency service.

There will be more news reports to pertaining to this in the near future about the death toll and number of rescued people.

Missouri Population Density: 81.2 people per square mile.

Joplin City:

Total Population 50,150. Source.

Population Density of Joplin: 1,592 people per square mile, or 615 people per square km.

Source.

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