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Severe Storms, Flooding Targeting Miss., Ala., La.

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Thunderstorms with flash flooding, damaging wind gusts and hail are targeting the South Friday.

A couple of the strongest storms can produce a short-lived tornado.

Cities most at risk for severe weather and flash flooding into the midday hours will include San Antonio and Houston, Texas, New Orleans, La. and Mobile, Ala.

Showers and thunderstorms will reach from parts of New Mexico and Texas to portions of Oklahoma, Arkansas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama, Florida, Tennessee and the Florida Panhandle.

As the day progresses, warm and humid air coming up from the Gulf of Mexico will interact with a slow-moving cold front dropped southward. New thunderstorms will develop throughout the day and evening as a result. The bulk of the thunderstorms will form across Texas and Louisiana.

Some clusters of thunderstorms will move over the same area, dumping heavy amounts of rain in a short period of time. This may lead to flash flooding in some areas.

Parts of Texas and Louisiana have already seen heavy rainfall in the past day or two. Lake Charles, La., picked up more than 3 inches of rain in just two hours early Friday morning.

Just like the past couple of days, large hail and damaging winds will accompany the strongest storms. An isolated tornado cannot be ruled out, but atmospheric conditions remain unfavorable for a widespread tornado outbreak.

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Severe Weather Center


The slow-moving nature of the front will keep some showers and heavier thunderstorms around into Friday night and Saturday across South Texas and along the immediate Gulf Coast, but it should push far enough south to prevent additional flooding across much of Texas and Louisiana.

The rain will be welcome news in South Texas, where extreme drought conditions persist. McAllen and Brownsville, Texas, have not seen measurable rain in nearly two weeks.

The front will move offshore by Sunday, allowing for drier, less humid air to move in with the return of some sunshine.

RELATED ON SKYE: Epic Storm Photos from the Twittersphere

 

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Alaska Endures Record Cold While Still Buried Under Snow

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The central and eastern United States are not the only areas experiencing a colder-than-average spring. Alaska is also hanging on to winter's chill and snow.

The five-week period from April 3 to May 7 was the coldest in 109 years of record keeping at Fairbanks, Alaska, according to the National Weather Service (NWS).

Temperatures during this period averaged only 19.9 degrees and broke the old record for the same stretch of days set in 1924.

According to expert senior meteorologist Joe Lundberg, "Fairbanks has not had a day above 50 degrees since Oct. 4, 2012."


While winter is finally breaking over much of Alaska this week, it has be a slow start to spring in much of the Last Frontier. (Photos.com image)

The chilly streak was the fourth longest on record.

The normal high for May 8 is 58 degrees at Fairbanks.

To go along with the cold, the city still had 10 inches of snow on the ground as of the midday hours on May 8, this was despite having a near-average amount of snow for the winter season at 68.5 inches. The average amount for Fairbanks is 64.5 inches.

Snow has been consistently covering the ground since Oct. 15 in Fairbanks.

As of May 8, there is about 18 hours of daylight.

In Nome, Alaska, temperatures have averaged close to 10 degrees below normal for the first week of May and 5 degrees below normal since April 1.

Farther south in Alaska, Anchorage only recently lost its snow cover.

"May 3 was the last day with 0.50 of an inch or greater of snow on the ground, and there has been snow consistently on the ground since Nov. 13," Lundberg said.

The record for the greatest number of days with 0.50 of an inch or more of snow on the ground for Anchorage is 193 days set during the winter of 1971-72, when snow was on the ground from Oct. 23 to May 3.

Anchorage has received about 92 inches of snow so far this winter season, compared to a normal of about 75 inches.

During the prior winter, Anchorage set a seasonal snowfall record with 134.5 inches. The old record was 132.6 inches during the winter of 1954-55, according to the NWS.

Interestingly, all 133 inches of snow from the winter of 2011-12 had melted by April 25.

"This just goes to show how consistently cold this spring has been over a large part of Alaska," Lundberg added.

Temperatures are forecast to reach the 50s to near 60 degrees over a large part of central and southern Alaska for multiple days over the next week, bringing closure to the winter for many folks over the Last Frontier.



RELATED ON SKYE: The 10 Snowiest Places on Earth

 

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10 Stunning Photos of the 'Ring of Fire' Solar Eclipse

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Today's 10 Must-See Photos: 5-10-2013

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NASA: Spacewalk Planned to Fix Space Station Leak

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Updated Friday, May 10, 2013, 5:30 p.m. ET



WASHINGTON (AP) - Two astronauts will make a precedent-setting spacewalk Saturday to try to fix an ammonia leak in the power system of the International Space Station.

Spacewalks are rarely done on such short notice, but the space agency says the six-member crew is not in danger.

The ammonia leak was discovered Thursday and forced the shutdown of one of eight solar panels that power the station, but the outpost can operate fine with only seven, spokesman Kelly Humphries said.

One of the spacewalk veterans slated for the job is due to return to Earth on Monday, one of the reasons NASA wants to tackle the problem this weekend, he said.

Station Commander Chris Hadfield of Canada told NASA flight controllers Friday that the six-member crew is completely ready for the spacewalk.

"I think it's really smart the way we're all proceeding here," Hadfield radioed down to Earth. "It's the right thing to do."

Hadfield tweeted that the crew was working "like clockwork" and said the two astronauts were already getting their spacesuits ready, adding "Cool!"

The leak is in one of the radiator lines that chill the power systems. NASA spokesman Rob Navias said the line was expected to run out of ammonia coolant Friday. Power has been rerouted and is operating normally, he said.

NASA suspects the leak might be on the far left truss of the station from a pump box, which will be swapped out with a nearby spare during the spacewalk.

"What's causing the leak is unknown because there's a lot of plumbing underneath the box itself," he said. "We've had lots of experience in installing and replacing coolant loop hardware."

U.S. astronauts Chris Cassidy and Tom Marshburn will do the six-hour spacewalk. The repair is what NASA calls one of the "Big 12" types of emergency repair work that all spacewalking astronauts train for in advance, Navias said.

In 2009, Cassidy and Marshburn flew to the space station on the shuttle Endeavour and walked in space together to swap out a battery in the same location, so "they know this work site inside and out," Navias said.

Marshburn, Hadfield and Russia's Roman Romanenko are set to return to Earth on Monday. NASA Administrator Charles Bolden told reporters in Virginia on Friday that their return will go ahead as planned, leaving three astronauts remaining.

Another reason to do the repair quickly: There may be some ammonia left which will help the spacewalkers find the leak, which is generating visible white flakes, Humphries said.

Last fall, station instruments revealed a radiator leak that was so small that it wasn't visible. It was in the same general area, but NASA isn't sure if it is the same leak or not, he said.

In November, two other spacewalking astronauts tried to reroute coolant lines to bypass the tiny leak but it wasn't successful, he said.





WASHINGTON (AP) - Two astronauts are preparing for a possible impromptu spacewalk Saturday to work on a coolant leak in the power system at the International Space Station.

NASA says the six-member crew at the station is not in danger. The ammonia leak forced the shutdown of one of eight solar panels that power the station, but the outpost can operate fine with only seven, spokesman Kelly Humphries said.

NASA will decide Friday evening whether the spacewalk is needed Saturday. One of the spacewalk veterans slated for the job is due to return to Earth on Monday, one of the reasons NASA wants to do it this weekend, he said.

Station Commander Chris Hadfield of Canada told NASA flight controllers Friday that the six-member crew is completely ready for the spacewalk.

"I think it's really smart the way we're all proceeding here," Hadfield radioed down to Earth. "It's the right thing to do."

Hadfield tweeted that the crew was working "like clockwork" and said the two astronauts were already getting their spacesuits ready, adding "Cool!"

The leak is in one of the radiator lines that chill the power systems. NASA spokesman Rob Navias said the line was expected to run out of ammonia coolant Friday. Power has been rerouted and is operating normally, he said.

NASA suspects the leak might be on the far left truss of the station from a certain box, but isn't certain. There's a spare box right near it and spacewalking astronauts can swap it out if that's the source, Navias said.

"What's causing the leak is unknown because there's a lot of plumbing underneath the box itself," he said. "We've had lots of experience in installing and replacing coolant loop hardware."

If needed, U.S. astronauts Chris Cassidy and Tom Marshburn would make about a six-hour spacewalk. They have trained for this type of repair. It is what NASA calls one of the "Big 12" types of emergency repair work that all spacewalking astronauts prepare for in advance, Navias said.

In 2009, Cassidy and Marshburn flew to the space station on the shuttle Endeavour and walked in space together to swap out a battery in the same location, so "they know this work site inside and out," Navias said.

Marshburn, Hadfield and Russia's Roman Romanenko are set to return to Earth on Monday. Humphries said if a spacewalk is needed, NASA would like the experienced duo of Cassidy-Marshburn to do it. NASA Administrator Charles Bolden told reporters in Virginia on Friday that the return of the three astronauts will go ahead as planned Monday.

Another reason to do it quickly: There may be some residual ammonia left which will help the spacewalkers find the leak, which is generating visible white flakes. If they wait longer, it will be harder to find the leak if there is no more ammonia left to come out in white flakes, Humphries said.

Last fall, station instruments revealed a radiator leak that was so small that it wasn't visible. It was in the same general area, but NASA isn't sure if it is the same leak or not, he said.

In November, two other spacewalking astronauts tried to reroute coolant lines to bypass the tiny leak but it wasn't successful, he said.

RELATED ON SKYE: 25 Amazing Photos of the International Space Station
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Meteorite Crashes into Connecticut Home

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Meteorite Crashes Into Connecticut Home
A meteorite crashed into a Connecticut home this week. Amazingly, it was the second meteorite to hit a home in the area in less than a month.

 

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Greenhouse Gas Milestone; CO2 Levels Set Record

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May 10, 2013

In this Sunday, Dec. 2, 2012 photo, a flock of Geese fly past the smokestacks at the Jeffrey Energy Center coal power plant as the suns sets near Emmett, Kan. (AP)

WASHINGTON (AP) - Worldwide levels of the chief greenhouse gas that causes global warming have hit a milestone, reaching an amount never before encountered by humans, federal scientists said Friday.


Carbon dioxide was measured at 400 parts per million at the oldest monitoring station in Hawaii which sets the global benchmark. The last time the worldwide carbon level was probably that high was about 2 million years ago, said Pieter Tans of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.

That was during the Pleistocene Era. "It was much warmer than it is today," Tans said. "There were forests in Greenland. Sea level was higher, between 10 and 20 meters (33 to 66 feet)."

Other scientists say it may have been 10 million years ago that Earth last encountered this level of carbon dioxide.

The measurement was recorded Thursday. The number 400 has been anticipated by climate scientists and environmental activists for years as a notable indicator, in part because it's a round number - not because any changes in man-made global warming happen by reaching it.

When measurements of this chief greenhouse gas were first taken in 1958, carbon dioxide was measured at 315. Levels are now growing about 2 parts per million per year. That's 100 times faster than at the end of the Ice Age.

Before the Industrial Revolution, carbon dioxide levels were around 280 ppm, and they were closer to 200 during the Ice Age. There are natural ups and downs of this greenhouse gas, which comes from volcanoes and decomposing plants and animals. But that's not what has driven current levels so high, Tans said. He said the amount should be even higher, but the world's oceans are absorbing quite a bit, keeping it out of the air.

"What we see today is 100 percent due to human activity," said Tans, a NOAA senior scientist. The burning of fossil fuels, such as coal for electricity and oil for gasoline, has caused the overwhelming bulk of the man-made increase in carbon in the air, scientists say.

At the end of the Ice Age it took 7,000 years for carbon dioxide levels to rise by 80 parts per million, Tans said. Because of burning of fossil fuels, such as oil and coal, carbon dioxide levels have gone up by the same amount in just 55 years.

Carbon dioxide traps heat just like in a greenhouse and most of it stays in the air for a century, some lasts for thousands of years scientists say.

The speed of the change is the big worry, said Pennsylvania State University climate scientist Michael Mann. If carbon dioxide levels go up 100 parts per million over thousands or millions of years, plants and animals can adapt. But that can't be done at the speed it is now happening.

Last year, regional monitors briefly hit 400 ppm in the Arctic. But those monitoring stations aren't seen as a world mark like the one at Mauna Loa, Hawaii.

Generally carbon levels peak in May then fall slightly, so the yearly average is usually a few parts per million lower than May levels.

 

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This Week's Must-See Photos: 5-10-2013

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Gusty Storms, Downpours in New York, Philadelphia

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Breaking Weather: New York City Weather DelaysAs a cold front drifts eastward on Saturday, it will spark showers and a few gusty thunderstorms across the Northeast and mid-Atlantic.

These storms will have the potential to produce gusty winds, blinding downpours and perhaps even some hail. Urban and small stream flooding is possible in areas that have received heavy rainfall recently.

Major cities that could be impacted by strong thunderstorms on Saturday include New York City, Philadelphia, Pa., Wilmington and Dover, Del., Richmond and Norfolk, Va.

Travelers along Interstates 95 and 64 in the mid-Atlantic should be alert for rapidly changing weather conditions, poor visibility and sudden gusts of wind in heavier thunderstorms.

An initial batch of showers and thunderstorms moved through much of the mid-Atlantic on Friday night well ahead of the cold front. Showers will continue into Saturday morning, but there will be a few breaks of sun as well.

As temperatures climb into the 70s and the cold front draws closer, more numerous showers and thunderstorms will develop during the afternoon.

The best opportunity for damaging wind gusts on Saturday afternoon and evening will be from southern New Jersey southward along the coast into northeastern North Carolina. While thunderstorms may produce gusty winds farther north from Philadelphia into the New York City area, any wind damage is expected to be minor.

People with outdoor plans across the Northeast and mid-Atlantic should keep a watchful eye to the sky and move inside if and when thunder is heard.

The latest severe weather watches and warnings can always be found at the AccuWeather.com Severe Weather Center.

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The risk for strong thunderstorms will be farther south and east than it was on Friday, when thunderstorms associated with the front knocked down trees and power lines near Pittsburgh and Altoona, Pa. Golf ball-sized hail was also reported northeast of Cleveland, Ohio.

The cold front will move offshore tonight, allowing drier air to filter down from the northwest just in time for Mother's Day on Sunday.

A second cold front will move through on Sunday, but should go through without any rain in most locations. The wind will pick up as much cooler air slides down from the northwest. This cooler air mass will lead to some chilly mornings early next week.

RELATED ON SKYE: Epic Storm Photos from the Twittersphere

 

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Spacewalking Astronauts Hope New Pump Stops Leak

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An astronaut inspects a panel during Saturday's spacewalk in this screengrab from NASA TV.
Updated 3:58 p.m. EDT, Saturday, May 11, 2013

CAPE CANAVERAL, Florida (AP) - Astronauts making a rare, hastily planned spacewalk replaced a pump outside the International Space Station on Saturday in hopes of plugging a serious ammonia leak.

The prospects of success grew as the minutes passed and no frozen flecks of ammonia appeared. Mission Control said it appeared as though the leak may have been plugged, although although additional monitoring over the coming days, if not weeks, will be needed before declaring a victory.

"No evidence of any ammonia leakage whatsoever. We have an airtight system - at the moment," Mission Control reported.

Christopher Cassidy and Thomas Marshburn installed the new pump after removing the old one suspected of spewing flakes of frozen ammonia coolant two days earlier. They uncovered "no smoking guns" responsible for the leak and consequently kept a sharp lookout for any icy flecks that might appear from the massive frame that holds the solar panels on the left side.

"Let us know if you see anything," Mission Control urged as the system was cranked up. Thirty minutes later, all was still well. "No snow," the astronauts radioed.

"We have our eyes on it and haven't seen a thing," Marshburn said.

NASA said the leak, while significant, never jeopardized crew safety. But managers wanted to deal with the trouble now, while it's fresh and before Marshburn returns to Earth in just a few days.

The space agency never before staged such a fast, impromptu spacewalk for a station crew. Even during the shuttle days, unplanned spacewalks were uncommon.

The ammonia pump was the chief suspect going into Saturday's spacewalk.

It was disheartening for NASA, at first, as Cassidy and Marshburn reported seeing nothing amiss on or around the old pump.

"All the pipes look shiny clean, no crud," Cassidy said as he used a long, dentist-like mirror to peer into tight, deep openings.

"I can't give you any good data other than nominal, unfortunately. No smoking guns."

Engineers determined there was nothing to lose by installing a new pump, despite the lack of visible damage to the old one. The entire team - weary and stressed by the frantic pace of the past two days - gained more and more confidence as the 5 ½ hour spacewalk drew to a close and still no flecks of ammonia popping up.

"Gloved fingers crossed," space station commander Chris Hadfield said in a tweet from inside. "No leaks!" he wrote a half-hour later.

Flight controllers in Houston worked furiously to get ready for Saturday's operation, completing all the required preparation in under 48 hours. The astronauts trained for just such an emergency scenario before they rocketed into orbit; the repair job is among NASA's so-called Big 12.

This area on the space station is prone to leaks. The ammonia coursing through the plumbing is used to cool the space station's electronic equipment. There are eight of these power channels, and all seven others were operating normally. As a result, life for the six space station residents was pretty much unaffected, aside from the drama unfolding Saturday 255 miles above the planet.

The loss of another power channel, however, could threaten science experiments and backup equipment.

NASA's space station program manager Mike Suffredini said it's a mystery as to why the leak erupted. Possibilities include a micrometeorite strike or a leaky seal. Ammonia already had been seeping ever so slightly from the location, but it increased dramatically Thursday.

Marshburn has been on the space station since December and is set to return to Earth late Monday. Cassidy is a new arrival, on board for just 1½ months.

By coincidence, the two performed a spacewalk at this troublesome spot before, during a shuttle visit in 2009.

"This type of event is what the years of training were for," Hadfield said in a tweet Friday. "A happy, busy crew, working hard, loving life in space."

RELATED ON SKYE: 25 Amazing Photos of the International Space Station
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Missing Superstorm Sandy Cat Finds Way Home 6 Months Later

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Missing Superstorm Sandy Cat Finds Way Home After 6 Months
If only this black cat could talk - the tales he would tell. Porsche was evacuated by boat in early November from Chadwick Island in Tom's River, N.J., after riding out Superstorm Sandy with his owners. But he escaped from the unfamiliar environment eight miles away and disappeared. Owners Uranie Roberts, 86, and her daughter Carol Baumann, 62, followed up every sighting for six months, they told Philly.com. But April 29 they returned home without ever finding Porsche - only to hear a noise on the deck two days later. When they opened the blinds, "I saw the green eyes and I said, 'My God in heaven, it's Porsche!'" Baumann told NBC10.

RELATED ON SKYE: 25 Indelible Images from Superstorm Sandy

 

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Spooky Huge Sheets of Ice Invade Resort

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Note: Strong language at the 5:30 mark.
It's a video that looks like something out of a horror movie: Huge sheets of ice invading a Minnesota resort and damaging homes. Wind blew the frozen ice from Millie Lacs Lake up onto the shore. The video was taken on Saturday at Izaty's Resort by Darla Johnson.

Here, she documents the aftermath:



A similar phenomenon damaged or destroyed 27 homes by Dauphin Lake in central Manitoba, Canada, on Friday night, the Winnipeg Free Press reported.

PHOTOS ON SKYE: Breathtaking Images of Islands, Rivers and Seas from Space

 

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Today's 10 Must-See Photos: 5-12-2013

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Watch: Astronaut Chris Hadfield Sings 'Space Oddity' in the ISS

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Sunday, May 12, 2013

We've been saying for months that Chris Hadfield is the world's first rock-star astronaut. While living in the International Space Station, he's recorded a song with Barenaked Ladies. He's had conversations with the likes of Peter Gabriel and Neil Young. And he has a bazillion Twitter followers who hang on his every utterance and photograph of Earth.

But this -- this -- is something else. This video, posted on YouTube today, features Hadfield singing David Bowie's 1969 hit "Space Oddity." Only it's not just Hadfield singing. It's an MTV-style music video, recorded in the ISS, complete with shots of a floating guitar and Hadfield flying through the station in zero G.

Hadfield is scheduled to return to Earth tomorrow in the Soyuz capsule with two other astronauts. What an exit.

When Bowie wrote "Space Oddity" more than 40 years ago, could he ever have imagined this?

It really feels like some sort of through-the-looking-glass moment.

RELATED ON SKYE: 25 Amazing Photos of the International Space Station
International Space Station, Shuttle

 

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Project Aims to Track Big City Carbon Footprints

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This April 15, 2013, photo shows the hazy skyline of Los Angeles seen from Mount Wilson, Calif., Monday, April 15, 2013. (AP Photo/Jae C. Hong)

LOS ANGELES (AP) - Every time Los Angeles exhales, odd-looking gadgets anchored in the mountains above the city trace the invisible puffs of carbon dioxide, methane and other greenhouse gases that waft skyward.

Halfway around the globe, similar contraptions atop the Eiffel Tower and elsewhere around Paris keep a pulse on emissions from smokestacks and automobile tailpipes. And there is talk of outfitting São Paulo, Brazil, with sensors that sniff the byproducts of burning fossil fuels.

It's part of a budding effort to track the carbon footprints of megacities, urban hubs with over 10 million people that are increasingly responsible for human-caused global warming.

For years, carbon dioxide and other greenhouse pollutants have been closely monitored around the planet by stations on the ground and in space. Last week, worldwide levels of carbon dioxide reached 400 parts per million at a Hawaii station that sets the global benchmark - a concentration not seen in millions of years.

Now, some scientists are eyeing large cities - with LA and Paris as guinea pigs - and aiming to observe emissions in the atmosphere as a first step toward independently verifying whether local - and often lofty - climate goals are being met.

For the past year, a high-tech sensor poking out from a converted shipping container has stared at the Los Angeles basin from its mile-high perch on Mount Wilson, a peak in the San Gabriel Mountains that's home to a famous observatory and communication towers.

Like a satellite gazing down on Earth, it scans more than two dozen points from the inland desert to the coast. Every few minutes, it rumbles to life as it automatically sweeps the horizon, measuring sunlight bouncing off the surface for the unique fingerprint of carbon dioxide and other heat-trapping gases.

In a storage room next door, commercially available instruments that typically monitor air quality double as climate sniffers. And in nearby Pasadena, a refurbished vintage solar telescope on the roof of a laboratory on the California Institute of Technology campus captures sunlight and sends it down a shaft 60 feet below where a prism-like instrument separates out carbon dioxide molecules.

On a recent April afternoon atop Mount Wilson, a brown haze hung over the city, the accumulation of dust and smoke particles in the atmosphere.

"There are some days where we can see 150 miles way out to the Channel Islands and there are some days where we have trouble even seeing what's down here in the foreground," said Stanley Sander, a senior research scientist at the NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory.

What Sander and others are after are the mostly invisible greenhouse gases spewing from factories and freeways below.

There are plans to expand the network. This summer, technicians will install commercial gas analyzers at a dozen more rooftops around the greater LA region. Scientists also plan to drive around the city in a Prius outfitted with a portable emission-measuring device and fly a research aircraft to pinpoint methane hotspots from the sky. (A well-known natural source is the La Brea Tar Pits in the heart of LA where underground bacteria burp bubbles of methane gas to the surface.)

Six years ago, elected officials vowed to reduce emissions to 35 percent below 1990 levels by 2030 by shifting to renewable energy and weaning the city's dependence on out-of-state coal-fired plants, greening the twin port complex and airports and retrofitting city buildings.

It's impractical to blanket the city with instruments so scientists rely on a handful of sensors and use computer models to work backward to determine the sources of the emissions and whether they're increasing. They won't be able to zero in on an offending street or a landfill, but they hope to be able to tell whether switching buses from diesel to alternative fuel has made a dent.

Project manager Riley Duren of JPL said it'll take several years of monitoring to know whether LA is on track to reach its goal.

Scientists not involved with the project say it makes sense to dissect emissions on a city level to confirm whether certain strategies to curb greenhouse gases are working. But they're divided about the focus.

Allen Robinson, an air quality expert at Carnegie Mellon University, said he prefers more attention paid to measuring a city's methane emissions since scientists know less about them than carbon dioxide release.

Nearly 58 percent of California's carbon dioxide emissions in 2010 came from gasoline-powered vehicles, according to the U.S. Energy Department's latest figures.

In much of the country, coal - usually as fuel for electric power - is a major source of carbon dioxide pollution. But in California, it's responsible for a tad more than 1 percent of the state's carbon dioxide emissions. Natural gas, considered a cleaner fuel, spews one third of the state's carbon dioxide.

Overall, California in 2010 released about 408 million tons of carbon dioxide into the air. The state's carbon dioxide pollution is greater than all but 20 countries and is just ahead of Spain's emissions. In 2010, California put nearly 11 tons of carbon dioxide into the air for every person, which is lower than the national average of 20 tons per person.

Gregg Marland, an Appalachian State University professor who has tracked worldwide emissions for the Energy Department, said there's value in learning about a city's emissions and testing techniques.

"I don't think we need to try this in many places, but we have to try some to see what works and what we can do," he said.

Launching the monitoring project came with the usual growing pains. In Paris, a carbon sniffer originally tucked away in the Eiffel Tower's observation deck had to be moved to a higher floor that's off-limits to the public after tourists' exhaling interfered with the data.

So far, $3 million have been spent on the U.S. effort with funding from federal, state and private groups. The French, backed by different sponsors, have spent roughly the same.

Scientists hope to strengthen their ground measurements with upcoming launches of Earth satellites designed to track carbon dioxide from orbit. The field experiment does not yet extend to China, by far the world's biggest carbon dioxide polluter. But it's a start, experts say.

With the focus on megacities, others have worked to decipher the carbon footprint of smaller places like Indianapolis, Boston and Oakland, where University of California, Berkeley researchers have taken a different tack and blanketed school rooftops with relatively inexpensive sensors.

"We are at a very early stage of knowing the best strategy, and need to learn the pros and cons of different approaches," said Inez Fung, a professor of atmospheric science at Berkeley who has no role in the various projects.

RELATED ON SKYE: Off-the-Charts Hottest and Coldest Places on Earth

 

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Insects: They're What's for Dinner?

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Deep Fried Insects For Sale A Street Market Stall In Phnom Penh, Cambodia. (Getty Images)

ROME (AP) - The U.N. has new weapons to fight hunger, boost nutrition and reduce pollution, and they might be crawling or flying near you right now: edible insects.

The Food and Agriculture Organization on Monday hailed the likes of grasshoppers, ants and other members of the insect world as an underutilized food for people, livestock and pets.

A 200-page report, released at a news conference at the U.N. agency's Rome headquarters, says 2 billion people worldwide already supplement their diets with insects, which are high in protein and minerals, and have environmental benefits.

Insects are "extremely efficient" in converting feed into edible meat, the agency said. On average, they can convert 4.4 pounds of feed into 2.2 pounds of insect mass. In comparison, cattle require 17.6 pounds of feed to produce a kilo of meat.

Most insects are likely to produce fewer environmentally harmful greenhouse gases, and also feed on human and food waste, compost and animal slurry, with the products being used for agricultural feed, the agency said.

Currently, most edible insects are gathered in forests and what insect farming does take place is often family-run and serves niche markets. But the U.N. says mechanization can ratchet up insect farming production. The fish bait industry, for example, has long farmed insects.

Insect farming is "one of the many ways to address food and feed security," the food agency said.

"Insects are everywhere and they reproduce quickly," the agency said, adding they leave a "low environmental footprint." They provide high-quality protein and nutrients when compared with meat and fish and are "particularly important as a food supplement for undernourished children," it said.

Insects can also be rich in copper, iron, magnesium, manganese, phosphorus, selenium and zinc, and are a source of fiber.

The agency noted that its Edible Insect Program is also examining the potential of arachnids, such as spiders and scorpions, although they are not strictly speaking insects.

University biologists have analyzed the nutritional value of edible insects, and some of them, such as certain beetles, ants, crickets and grasshoppers, come close to lean red meat or broiled fish in terms of protein per ounce.

But are they tasty?

The report noted that some caterpillars in southern Africa and weaver ant eggs in Southeast Asia are considered delicacies and command high prices.

And some people who might not entertain the thought of consuming insects might already be eating them. Many insects are ingested inadvertently.

RELATED ON SKYE: World's Freakiest Bugs

 

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Why Is This California Neighborhood Sinking?

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This photo taken Monday, May 6, 2013, shows the wreckage of the Tudor-style dream home of Robin and Scott Spivey who were forced to abandon it after the ground gave way, causing it to drop 10 feet below the street in Lakeport, Calif. (AP Photo/Rich Pedroncelli)

LAKEPORT, Calif. (AP) - Scott and Robin Spivey had a sinking feeling that something was wrong with their home when cracks began snaking across their walls in March.

The cracks soon turned into gaping fractures, and within two weeks their 600-square-foot garage broke from the house and the entire property - manicured lawn and all - dropped 10 feet below the street.

It wasn't long before the houses on both sides collapsed as the ground gave way in the Spivey's neighborhood in Lake County, about 100 miles north of San Francisco.

"We want to know what is going on here," said Scott Spivey, a former city building inspector who lived in his four-bedroom, Tudor-style dream home for 11 years.

Eight homes are now abandoned and 10 more are under notice of imminent evacuation as a hilltop with sweeping vistas of Clear Lake and the Mount Konocti volcano swallows the subdivision built 30 years ago.

The situation has become so bad that mail delivery was ended to keep carriers out of danger.

"It's a slow-motion disaster," said Randall Fitzgerald, a writer who bought his home in the Lakeside Heights project a year ago.

Unlike sinkholes of Florida that can gobble homes in an instant, this collapse in hilly volcanic country can move many feet on one day and just a fraction of an inch the next.

Officials believe water that has bubbled to the surface is playing a role in the destruction. But nobody can explain why suddenly there is plentiful water atop the hill in a county with groundwater shortages.

"That's the big question," said Scott De Leon, county public works director. "We have a dormant volcano, and I'm certain a lot of things that happen here (in Lake County) are a result of that, but we don't know about this."

Other development on similar soil in the county is stable, county officials said.

While some of the subdivision movement is occurring on shallow fill, De Leon said a geologist has warned that the ground could be compromised down to bedrock 25 feet below and that cracks recently appeared in roads well beyond the fill.

"Considering this is a low rainfall year and the fact it's letting go now after all of these years, and the magnitude that it's letting go, well it's pretty monumental," De Leon said.

County officials have inspected the original plans for the project and say it was developed by a reputable engineering firm then signed off on by the public works director at the time.

"I can only presume that they were checked prior to approval," De Leon said.

The sinkage has prompted county crews to redirect the subdivision's sewage 300 feet through an overland pipe as manholes in the 10-acre development collapsed.

Consultant Tom Ruppenthal found two small leaks in the county water system that he said weren't big enough to account for the amount of water that is flowing along infrastructure pipes and underground fissures, but they could be contributing to another source.

"It's very common for groundwater to shift its course," said Ruppenthal of Utility Services Associates in Seattle. "I think the groundwater has shifted."

If the county can't get the water and sewer service stabilized, De Leon said all 30 houses in the subdivision will have to be abandoned.

The owners of six damaged homes said they need help from the government.

The Lake County Board of Supervisors asked Gov. Jerry Brown to declare an emergency so funding might be available to stabilize utilities and determine the cause of the collapse. On May 6, state Sen. Noreen Evans, D-Santa Rosa, wrote a letter of support asking Brown for immediate action. The California Emergency Management Agency said Brown was still assessing the situation.

On Wednesday, the state sent a water resources engineer and a geologist to look at the problem. Sen. Dianne Feinstein sent a representative the next day.

Lake County, with farms, wineries and several Indian casinos, was shaped by earthquake fault movement and volcanic explosions that helped create the Coast Ranges of California. Clear Lake, popular for boating and fishing, is the largest freshwater lake wholly located in the state.

It is not unusual for groundwater in the region to make its way to the surface then subside. Many natural hot springs and geysers receded underground in the early 1900s and have since been tapped for geothermal power.

Homeowners now wonder whether fissures have opened below their hilltop, allowing water to seep to the surface. But they're so perplexed they also talk about the land being haunted and are considering asking the local Native American tribe if the hilltop was an ancient graveyard.

"Someone said it must be hexed," said Blanka Doren, a 72-year-old German immigrant who poured her life savings into the house she bought in 1999 so she could live on the rental income.

The home shares a wall with her neighbor, Jagtar Singh - who had two days' notice to move his wife, 4-year-old daughter and his parents before the hill behind the back of his home collapsed - taking the underside of his house and leaving the carpet dangling.

Doren is afraid that as Singh's house falls it will take hers with it. Already, cracks have spread across her floors.

Damaged houses in the subdivision have been tagged for mandatory removal, but the hillside is so unstable it can't support the heavy equipment necessary to perform the job.

"This was our first home," said Singh, who noticed a problem in April when he could see light between the wall and floor of his bedroom. A geotechnical company offered no solutions.

"We didn't know it would be that major, but in one week we were gone," he said.

So far insurance companies have left the owners of the homes - valued between $200,000 and $250,000, or twice the median price in the county - dangling, too. Subsidence is not covered, homeowners said. So, until someone figures out whether something else is going on, they'll be in limbo.

"It's a tragedy, really," contractor Dean Pick said as he took photos for an insurance company. "I've never seen anything like it. At least that didn't have the Pacific Ocean eating away at it."

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Will Glow-in-the-Dark Plants Replace Lights?

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Glowing Plants Coming to a Garden Near You?
The people behind the Glowing Plant Project hope to bioengineer plants so they'll glow and maybe even someday replace streetlights. The group of biotechnology entrepreneurs hatched the idea of creating glow-in-the-dark plants using synthetic techniques, with a goal of replacing lighting as we know it. Though their project has been a hit on the crowd-funding website, Kickstarter, many scientists aren't so sure their aims are realistic.

 

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Space Station Crew Returns to Earth Tonight

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Canadian astronaut Chris Hadfield, Expedition 35 commander, poses in his Russian Sokol spacesuit while preparing for a May 13, 2013, landing on a Soyuz spacecraft. (Credit: Canadian Space Agency/Chris Hadfield)


After months living in space, two astronauts and a Russian cosmonaut will return home from the International Space Station tonight (May 13) and you can watch their landing live online.

Canadian astronaut Chris Hadfield, American astronaut Tom Marshburn and cosmonaut Roman Romanenko are preparing to leave the space station aboard a Russian-built Soyuz spacecraft for a planned landing at 10:31 p.m. EDT (0231 May 14 GMT) on the Central Asian steppes of Kazakhstan, where the local time will be early Tuesday morning.

You can watch the Soyuz landing webcast live on SPACE.com, courtesy of NASA. The webcast will begin at 6:45 p.m. EDT (2245 GMT) to show the Soyuz departing the space station. [See photos of the Expedition 35 mission.]

The Soyuz landing will mark the end of the station's Expedition 35 mission, which Hadfield commanded, and comes just two days after an emergency spacewalk on Saturday (May 11) by Marshburn and NASA astronaut Chris Cassidy to fix a serious ammonia coolant leak on the station. The leak was detected on Thursday (May 9), forcing Mission Control and the astronauts to come up with the impromptu spacewalk plans in record time.

"The real-time execution of that is what made me feel so good as a commander of this crew," Hadfield said Sunday (May 13) as he handed command over to Russian cosmonaut Pavel Vinogradov, who will lead the station's Expedition 36 mission.

Vinogradov will remain behind on the space station with Cassidy and fellow Russian cosmonaut Alexander Misurkin. They will be joined by three new crewmembers in late May.

Hadfield, Marshburn and Romanenko are wrapping up a five-month mission to the space station that began in December. The launched as part of the station's Expedition 34 crew, with Hadfield taking command of the Expedition 35 mission midway through the flight.

Hadfield, Canada's first space station commander, shared his spaceflight with millions around the world by tapping into social media. He recorded songs and videos about life in space, shared photos via Twitter and Facebook and even had a close digital encounter with the captain of the Starship Enterprise - Canadian actor William Shatner, Captain Kirk on TV's 'Star Trek' - during his time on the station.

But, Hadfield said, this weekend's unprecedented spacewalk repair of the station's cooling system was the pinnacle of the mission.

"For me this was just a personification of what the international space station is, and what the people mean to it," Hadfield said. "This is a human research vessel. We've shared it with millions of people around the world, and we've done our absolute best to accomplish the work on board. "

Officials in Mission Control agreed.

"You, the crew of Expedition 35, have been nothing short of tremendous," Mission Control radioed to the station crew. "Not only have the efforts of Expedition 35 been extraordinary, but you've manage to bring us all along with you on your space odyssey."

During Expedition 35, the station crew performed two spacewalks and welcomed several unmanned spacecraft carrying cargo, including a private SpaceX Dragon capsule in March.

With the station's six-man crew now splitting up to go their separate ways, Vinogradov called it a "sad day" in space.

"You guys are wonderful. We worked together so well," Vinogradov said. "I think we will miss you badly, guys."

The International Space Station is the largest manmade structure in space and has been continuously manned by rotating crews of astronauts and cosmonauts since 2000. Construction of the $100 billion orbiting laboratory began in 1998. Five different space agencies representing 15 countries built the space station.

Tonight's space station departure will begin at 7:08 p.m. EDT (2308 GMT), when the Soyuz TMA-07M space capsule that ferried Hadfield and his crew to the space station is due to undock from the orbiting laboratory. At 9:37 p.m. EDT (0137 May 14 GMT), the Soyuz is expected to fire its rocket engine in a maneuver to leave orbit and place it on track for a 10:31 p.m. EDT landing.

"Enormous thanks to everybody on Earth that makes this possible," Hadfield said. "It's been a very special time for all of us onboard."

Email Tariq Malik at tmalik@space.com or follow him @tariqjmalikand Google+. Follow us @Spacedotcom, Facebookand Google+. Original article on SPACE.com.

Copyright 2013 SPACE.com, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.


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Warmest Days of 2013 for Southwest This Week

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Above average temperatures will continue into this week across much of the West following temperatures more than 15 degrees above normal Sunday.

Temperatures will once again climb into the lower 90s in California's Sacramento Valley and into the upper 90s in the San Joaquin Valley.

Temperatures will top out in the low 100s from Palm Springs, Calif., for the third day in a row, as well as southwestern Arizona.

Highs in the 90s will be seen as far north as the Snake River Valley in Idaho.

These above-normal temperatures are due to an upper-level ridge that has slowly been strengthening over the West since Friday.

This upper-level ridge will not dominate all of the West however.

A system will move into the Northwest today, allowing cooler Pacific air to move into the region's coast. Ahead of this system, a few showers and thunderstorms will develop with some storms producing hail and damaging winds gusting up to 65 mph.

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As temperatures ease in the Pacific Northwest, temperatures will be on the rise elsewhere. The ridge of high pressure over the Southwest will shift eastward Monday, bringing record-challenging warmth across the Rockies and into the central and northern Plains.

On Monday, the warmest days so far this year are expected in Salt Lake City, Fresno and Las Vegas.

But more seasonable conditions will return to the Northwest by Tuesday as a disturbance from the Pacific moves over Washington, drawing in cooler Pacific air.

The upper-level ridge will hold its ground over the Southwest heading into the middle of the week, allowing above-normal temperatures to continue across the region.

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