Monday, April 08, 2024

SPACE

 

How the moon turned itself inside out


University of Arizona scientists combined computer simulations and spacecraft data to solve a long-standing mystery surrounding the moon's "lopsided" geology


UNIVERSITY OF ARIZONA

Gravity data coinciding with vestiges of downwellings from lunar mantle overturn 

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SCHEMATIC ILLUSTRATION WITH A GRAVITY GRADIENT MAP (BLUE HEXAGONAL PATTERN) OF THE LUNAR NEARSIDE AND A CROSS-SECTION SHOWING TWO ILMENITE-BEARING CUMULATE DOWNWELLINGS FROM LUNAR MANTLE OVERTURN.

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CREDIT: ADRIEN BROQUET/UNIVERSITY OF ARIZONA & AUDREY LASBORDES



About 4.5 billion years ago, a small planet smashed into the young Earth, flinging molten rock into space. Slowly, the debris coalesced, cooled and solidified, forming our moon. This scenario of how the Earth's moon came to be is the one largely agreed upon by most scientists. But the details of how exactly that happened are "more of a choose-your-own adventure novel," according to researchers in the University of Arizona Lunar and Planetary Laboratory who published a paper in Nature Geoscience. The findings offer important insights into the evolution of the lunar interior, and potentially for planets such as the Earth or Mars.

Most of what is known about the origin of the moon comes from analyses of rock samples, collected by Apollo astronauts more than 50 years ago, combined with theoretical models. The samples of basaltic lava rocks brought back from the moon showed surprisingly high concentrations of titanium. Later satellite observations found that these titanium-rich volcanic rocks are primarily located on the moon's nearside, but how and why they got there has remained a mystery – until now.

Because the moon formed fast and hot, it was likely covered by a global magma ocean. As the molten rock gradually cooled and solidified, it formed the moon's mantle and the bright crust we see when we look up at a full moon at night. But deeper below the surface, the young moon was wildly out of equilibrium. Models suggest that the last dregs of the magma ocean crystallized into dense minerals including ilmenite, a mineral containing titanium and iron.

"Because these heavy minerals are denser than the mantle underneath, it creates a gravitational instability, and you would expect this layer to sink deeper into the moon's interior," said Weigang Liang, who led the research as part of his doctoral work at LPL.

Somehow, in the millennia that followed, that dense material did sink into the interior, mixed with the mantle, melted and returned to the surface as titanium-rich lava flows that we see on the surface today.

"Our moon literally turned itself inside out," said co-author and LPL associate professor Jeff Andrews-Hanna. "But there has been little physical evidence to shed light on the exact sequence of events during this critical phase of lunar history, and there is a lot of disagreement in the details of what went down – literally."

Did this material sink as it formed a little at a time, or all at once after the moon had fully solidified? Did it sink into the interior globally and then rise up on the near side, or did it migrate to the near side and then sink? Did it sink in one big blob, or several smaller blobs?   

"Without evidence, you can pick your favorite model. Each model holds profound implications for the geologic evolution of our moon," said co-lead author Adrien Broquet of the German Aerospace Center in Berlin, who did the work during his time as a postdoctoral research associate at LPL.

In a previous study, led by Nan Zhang at Peking University in Beijing, who is also a co-author on the latest paper, models predicted that the dense layer of titanium-rich material beneath the crust first migrated to the near side of the moon, possibly triggered by a giant impact on the far side, and then sunk into the interior in a network of sheetlike slabs, cascading into the lunar interior almost like waterfalls. But when that material sank, it left behind a small remnant in a geometric pattern of intersecting linear bodies of dense titanium-rich material beneath the crust.

"When we saw those model predictions, it was like a lightbulb went on," said Andrews-Hanna, "because we see the exact same pattern when we look at subtle variations in the moon’s gravity field, revealing a network of dense material lurking below the crust."

In the new study, the authors compared simulations of a sinking ilmenite-rich layer to a set of linear gravity anomalies detected by NASA's GRAIL mission, whose two spacecraft orbited the moon between 2011 and 2012, measuring tiny variations in its gravitational pull. These linear anomalies surround a vast dark region of the lunar near side covered by volcanic flows known as mare (Latin for "sea").

The authors found that the gravity signatures measured by the GRAIL mission are consistent with ilmenite layer simulations, and that the gravity field can be used to map out the distribution of the ilmenite remnants left after the sinking of the majority of the dense layer.

"Our analyses show that the models and data are telling one remarkably consistent story," Liang said. "Ilmenite materials migrated to the near side and sunk into the interior in sheetlike cascades, leaving behind a vestige that causes anomalies in the moon's gravity field, as seen by GRAIL."

The team's observations also constrain the timing of this event: The linear gravity anomalies are interrupted by the largest and oldest impact basins on the near side and therefore must have formed earlier. Based on these cross-cutting relationships, the authors suggest that the ilmenite-rich layer sank prior to 4.22 billion years ago, which is consistent with it contributing to later volcanism seen on the lunar surface.

"Analyzing these variations in the moon's gravity field allowed us to peek under the moon's surface and see what lies beneath," said Broquet, who worked with Liang to show that the anomalies in the moon’s gravitational field match what would be expected for the zones of dense titanium-rich material predicted by computer simulation models of lunar overturn.

Three views of the moon's nearside: the familiar sight from Earth (left), regions covered by titanium-rich volcanic flows (center) and polygonal pattern of gravity anomalies

More than 50 years ago, Apollo astronauts brought basaltic lava rocks back from the moon with surprisingly high concentrations of titanium. Later, satellite observations found that these titanium-rich volcanic rocks are primarily located on the moon's nearside - but how and why they got there has remained a mystery – until now.

CREDIT

NASA

Lopsided moon

While the detection of lunar gravity anomalies provides evidence for the sinking of a dense layer in the moon’s interior and allows for a more precise estimate of how and when this event occurred, what we see on the surface of the moon adds even more intrigue to the story, according to the research team.

"The moon is fundamentally lopsided in every respect," Andrews-Hanna said, explaining that the near side facing the Earth, and particularly the dark region known as Oceanus Procellarum region, is lower in elevation, has a thinner crust, is largely covered in lava flows, and has high concentrations of typically rare elements like titanium and thorium. The far side differs in each of these respects. Somehow, the overturn of the lunar mantle is thought to be related to the unique structure and history of the near side Procellarum region. But the details of that overturn have been a matter of considerable debate among scientists.

"Our work connects the dots between the geophysical evidence for the interior structure of the moon and computer models of its evolution," Liang added.

"For the first time we have physical evidence showing us what was happening in the moon’s interior during this critical stage in its evolution, and that's really exciting," Andrews-Hanna said. "It turns out that the moon’s earliest history is written below the surface, and it just took the right combination of models and data to unveil that story."

"The vestiges of early lunar evolution are present below the crust today, which is mesmerizing," Broquet said. "Future missions, such as with a seismic network, would allow a better investigation of the geometry of these structures."

Liang added: "When the Artemis astronauts eventually land on the moon to begin a new era of human exploration, we will have a very different understanding of our neighbor than we did when the Apollo astronauts first set foot on it."

​CSIRO telescope detects unprecedented behaviour from nearby magnetar



CSIRO AUSTRALIA

Magnetar animation 

VIDEO: 

ARTIST’S IMPRESSION OF A MAGNETAR WITH MAGNETIC FIELD AND POWERFUL JETS. 

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CREDIT: CSIRO



Researchers using Murriyang, CSIRO’s Parkes radio telescope, have detected unusual radio pulses from a previously dormant star with a powerful magnetic field. 

​New results published today in Nature Astronomy describe radio signals from magnetar XTE J1810-197 behaving in complex ways.  

​Magnetars are a type of neutron star and the strongest magnets in the Universe. At roughly 8,000 light years away, this magnetar is also the closest known to Earth.  

​Most are known to emit polarised light, though the light this magnetar is emitting is circularly polarised, where the light appears to spiral as it moves through space. 

​Dr Marcus Lower, a postdoctoral fellow at Australia’s national science agency – CSIRO, led the latest research and said the results are unexpected and totally unprecedented. 

​"Unlike the radio signals we've seen from other magnetars, this one is emitting enormous amounts of rapidly changing circular polarisation. We had never seen anything like this before,” Dr Lower said. 

​Dr Manisha Caleb from the University of Sydney and co-author on the study said studying magnetars offers insights into the physics of intense magnetic fields and the environments these create.  

​"The signals emitted from this magnetar imply that interactions at the surface of the star are more complex than previous theoretical explanations.” 

​Detecting radio pulses from magnetars is already extremely rare: XTE J1810-197 is one of only a handful known to produce them.  

​While it’s not certain why this magnetar is behaving so differently, the team has an idea.  

​“Our results suggest there is a superheated plasma above the magnetar's magnetic pole, which is acting like a polarising filter,” Dr Lower said.  

​“How exactly the plasma is doing this is still to be determined.” 

​XTE J1810-197 was first observed to emit radio signals in 2003. Then it went silent for well over a decade. The signals were again detected by the University of Manchester's 76-m Lovell telescope at the Jodrell Bank Observatory in 2018 and quickly followed up by Murriyang, which has been crucial to observing the magnetar’s radio emissions ever since.  

​The 64-m diameter telescope on Wiradjuri Country is equipped with a cutting edge ultra-wide bandwidth receiver. The receiver was designed by CSIRO engineers who are world leaders in developing technologies for radio astronomy applications.  

​The receiver allows for more precise measurements of celestial objects, especially magnetars, as it is highly sensitive to changes in brightness and polarisation across a broad range of radio frequencies. 

​Studies of magnetars such as these provide insights into a range of extreme and unusual phenomena, such as plasma dynamics, bursts of X-rays and gamma-rays, and potentially fast radio bursts.  

​Lower, M. E., et al., Linear to circular conversion in the polarized radio emission of a magnetar, Nature Astronomy, vol. 8 (2024) 

​– ends –  

​CSIRO acknowledges the Wiradjuri People as the traditional custodians of the Parkes Observatory site where Murriyang, our Parkes radio telescope, is located. 

Images and b-roll video are available here.


CAPTION

Murriyang, CSIRO’s Parkes radio telescope beneath the Milky Way.  

CREDIT

Alex Cherney/CSIRO

Artist’s impression of a magnetar. 

CREDIT

Carl Knox, OzGrav/Swinburne University of Technology

Artist’s impression of a magnetar with magnetic field and powerful jets. 

CREDIT

CSIRO


JOURNAL

Scientists make largest and most precise 3D map of expanding universe


Ellie Crabbe
THE ARGUS
Sun, 7 April 2024 

Graphic by Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory of the largest 3D map of our universe to date (Image: Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory/PA)

Scientists have made the largest 3D map of the universe, measuring how fast it has expanded over billions of years by using the most precise measurements to date.

An international team, including researchers from Sussex university, used an instrument known as the Dark Energy Spectroscopic Instrument (Desi) to create the map.

Their aim was to measure the effects of dark energy, a mysterious force that is believed to be making the universe expand faster and faster.


The scientists said they were able to measure the expansion history of the universe spanning 11 billion years with a precision better than one per cent.

The map, comprising more than six million galaxies, is the largest 3D map of the cosmos constructed.

Dr Eva-Maria Mueller, Ernest Rutherford Fellow at the University of Sussex, who led part of the cosmological interpretation of the Desi data, said she could not initially believe the “fascinating” results.

READ MORE: Sussex university asking people to join its bee experiment

Dr Mueller said: “It was a moment I’d been eagerly anticipating since the start of my PhD.

“The findings were not just interesting – they were captivating, sparking fresh insights into the fundamental nature of our universe.

“It’s moments like these that remind me why I’m passionate about cosmology.”

The Desi instrument uses 5,000 tiny robots within a mountaintop telescope near Tucson, Arizona.

Scientists were able to map the cosmos as it was billions of years ago and traced its growth to what it is today, using light from distant objects in space which are only now reaching Desi.

Professor Carlos Frenk, of Durham University’s department of physics and a member of the Desi team, described the findings as “hugely exciting”.

He said: “Never before has mankind measured the basic properties of our universe with such precision.”

At present, Lambda CDM, a cosmological model that describes the structure and evolution of the universe, is seen by scientists as the leading framework determining how the universe is evolving.

It includes both a weakly interacting type of matter, known as cold dark matter (CDM), and dark energy – also referred to as Lambda.

According to the model, both matter and dark matter slow down the universe’s expansion, while dark energy speeds it up.


Starwatch: exploding nova promises rare sight in coming months


Stuart Clark
Sun, 7 April 2024 
Interactive

Get ready for a “new” star to appear in the night sky. Not really new of course, but a star that is now below the naked-eye visibility limit is gearing up for an outburst that will bring it within sight of the unaided eye for the first time since the 1940s.

Such a star is called a nova, Latin for “new”. The star, T Coronae Borealis, is actually composed of two stars: a red giant and a white dwarf. The white dwarf is a dense stellar core about the size of the Earth and its gravity is pulling gas off the red giant. This gas accumulates on the white dwarf’s surface before detonating in a thermonuclear explosion, causing the star to temporarily brighten. Eventually, it returns to normal and the cycle repeats.

In the case of T Coronae Borealis, historical observations show that it explodes approximately every 80 years. Astronomers expect it to blow any time between now and September. The chart shows the view looking east from London at about 22.00 BST this week, and marks the location to keep an eye on. When it erupts, the star is expected to reach the same brightness as Alphecca, the brightest star in its home constellation.

 

Nuclear projects receive UK space funding boost

08 April 2024


Two projects featuring nuclear energy are among 11 international space projects selected to received funding from the UK Space Agency. Rolls-Royce's collaboration with BWXT receives GBP1.18 million (USD1.5 million) to further its work on fission nuclear systems for space power missions, while an international project led by the University of Leicester receives GBP800,000.

A Rolls-Royce Micro-Reactor could provide power for a lunar base (Image: Rolls-Royce)

A total of GBP13 million of funding, the second phase of investment awarded through the Agency's GBP20 million International Bilateral Fund (IBF), is being announced today at the 39th Space Symposium in Colorado Springs, USA, the UK Space Agency said. This follows a first phase announced last year, which provided funds of up to GBP75,000 each for 32 projects which then entered into a competitive process to receive Phase 2 funding.

The funding to Rolls-Royce Submarines and BWXT Advanced Technologies LLC is for a project to "identify the optimum technologies for a fission nuclear system which balances flexibility to a range of space power missions and maximises performance whilst minimising programme and technical risk."

The second nuclear project to receive Phase 2 funding is a collaboration between the University of Leicester and partners from the UK, USA and Japan who will work together to identify a range of mission opportunities for UK space nuclear power technologies. The collaboration also includes the development of hybrid power systems with existing US conversion technologies.

"We want to draw on the best global talent to push the boundaries of new technology such as AI and space nuclear power, enhance our homegrown space capabilities and catalyse investment into the UK economy," Chief Executive of the UK Space Agency Paul Bate said. "The projects supported by our International Bilateral Fund champion the best of British innovation, while strengthening our ties with the wider space community."

UK-US collaboration


All space missions depend on a power source to support systems for communications, life-support and science experiments. Nuclear power has the potential to dramatically increase the duration of future space missions and their scientific value. Space micro-reactors are a solution to meet these requirements in a sustainable and resilient way, Rolls-Royce said.

This latest investment follows GBP2.9 million awarded to Rolls-Royce from the UK Space Agency under the Lunar Surface Nuclear Power Contract and Phase 1 of the IBF in 2023, which culminated in an initial demonstration of a UK lunar modular nuclear reactor. Rolls-Royce unveiled its Space Micro-Reactor Concept Model to show how nuclear power could be used to support a future Moon base for astronauts last December.

The new funding award is part of a larger teaming agreement between Rolls-Royce and BWXT Advanced Technologies LLC which facilitates business collaboration and joint developments of new and novel nuclear applications in terrestrial, space and commercial maritime domains using the core nuclear design and manufacturing strengths of both companies. It will benefit both UK and US space nuclear development programmes for a range of space power missions, the companies said, and further strengthens UK and US collaboration on first-of-a-kind space technology innovation set out under the Atlantic Declaration commitment by UK Prime Minister Rishi Sunak and US President Joe Biden last year, in which both countries pledged to study "opportunities for co-operation on space nuclear power and propulsion."

"This exciting research by Rolls-Royce to develop space nuclear power is an opportunity to showcase the UK as a spacefaring nation," Anu Ojha, director of Championing Space at the UK Space Agency, said. "Innovative technologies such as this one could pave the way for continuous human presence on the Moon, whilst enhancing the wider UK space sector, creating jobs and generating further investment."

Researched and written by World Nuclear News

PSEG to apply for second licence renewals for New Jersey plants

08 April 2024


PSEG Nuclear LLC has notified US regulators of its intent to seek subsequent licence renewal for the Salem and Hope Creek nuclear power plants, which together produce nearly half of New Jersey’s electricity and 85% of the state’s carbon-free generation.

PSEG's three New Jersey units: Hope Creek and Salem units 1 and 2 (Image: Peretz Partensky)

It formally informed the US Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) on 28 March that it expects to submit the application in the second quarter of 2027. This would mark the start of a comprehensive NRC review and approval process taking about two years to complete. If approved, the licences for Salem unit 1 and unit 2 would be extended from 2036 and 2040 to 2056 and 2060, respectively, while the single-unit Hope Creek's licence would be extended from its current 2046 expiration to 2066.

The two pressurised water reactors at Salem began commercial operation in 1976 (unit 1) and 1980 (unit 2), and the boiling water reactor at Hope Creek in 1986. The stations obtained their first 20-year operating licence renewals from the NRC in 2011. The units had all been under threat of premature closure before New Jersey passed the Zero Emissions Certificate Law in 2018, enabling the state to recognise and compensate eligible nuclear power plants for their zero-carbon attributes and contribution to fuel diversity.

"For more than five decades, the nuclear generating stations in South Jersey have safely generated reliable, always-on carbon-free energy," said PSEG Nuclear President and Chief Nuclear Officer Charles McFeaters. "Seeking to renew our licences signifies our commitment to continuing to contribute to New Jersey’s clean energy future and serving as a vital economic engine for the local community."

"I'd like to recognise Congressman Bill Pascrell, the author of the federal nuclear production tax credit legislation in Congress, without which we would not be considering these investments in the site," he added.

The nuclear production tax credit, created in the federal Inflation Reduction Act, will provide nuclear generators with nine years of financial support until 2032. The pricing visibility it has provided "drove PSEG's decision to retain and grow our nuclear fleet via prudent capital investments and will keep our state’s carbon-free nuclear fleet viable for the long-term," the company said.

Over USD100 million in nuclear capital investment projects have already been approved and are in progress, including plant upgrades and a transition to a two-year operating cycle at Hope Creek. PSEG Nuclear is also developing detailed plans to implement power uprates for both Salem units and to upgrade and optimise the nuclear fleet’s turbine generator trains.

The units also deliver positive local economic impacts, the company added, directly employing some 1600 people with additional contract workers supporting refuelling outages and major project work each year and fostering an extensive indirect workforce throughout the community.

Salem is 57% owned by PSEG, with Constellation Energy owning the remaining 43%.

Fourth Korean APR-1400 begins commercial operation

08 April 2024


Unit 2 of the Shin Hanul nuclear power plant in South Korea has entered commercial operation, Korea Hydro & Nuclear Power (KHNP) announced. The unit is the second of two APR-1400 reactors at the site, with a further two planned.

Shin Hanul units 1 and 2 (Image: KHNP)

Shin Hanul 2 received an operating licence from the Nuclear Safety and Security Commission on 7 September last year, after which it completed a preliminary inspection by the regulator. The loading of 241 fuel assemblies into the reactor's core was carried out between 11 and 18 September. High-temperature functional tests were subsequently conducted.

The 1350 MWe pressurised water reactor reached first criticality - a sustained chain reaction - on 6 December and it was connected to the grid on 21 December.

Following seven months of commissioning tests, which included step-by-step power increase tests and performance tests of the reactor and turbine generator, Shin Hanul 2 was declared to be in commercial operation on 5 April.

Ground breaking for the first two units at the Shin Hanul (formerly Shin Ulchin) site took place in May 2012. First concrete for unit 1 was poured two months later, with that for unit 2 following in June 2013. Shin Hanul 1 achieved first criticality on 22 May 2022 and was connected to the grid on 9 June last year.

"With the commercial operation of Shin Hanul unit 2, Korea's 28th nuclear power unit, the total number of nuclear power units operating in Korea has increased to 26 (including Kori unit 2, which is being prepared for continued operation)," KHNP noted.

Shin Hanul 2 is South Korea's fourth operational APR1400 - after Saeul units 1 and 2 (formerly Shin Kori 3 and 4) and Shin Hanul unit 1. Two further APR1400s are under construction as Saeul units 3 and 4, with two more units planned as Shin Hanul units 3 and 4.

Four APR1400 units have been built at the Barakah nuclear power plant in the UAE, which are all now in operation.

Researched and written by World Nuclear News

 

Grossi condemns drone strikes at Zaporizhzhia site

08 April 2024


International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) Director General Rafael Mariano Grossi described three drone strikes at the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant site as a serious incident that endangered nuclear safety and security.

The Zaporizhzhia plant (Image: Energoatom)

While there are no indications of damage to critical nuclear safety or security systems at the site, the IAEA said the military strikes were "another stark reminder of persistent threats to the ZNPP and other nuclear facilities during the armed conflict".

After receiving information from the plant about the drone attacks on 7 April, the IAEA experts stationed at the site went to three affected locations. They were able to confirm the physical impact of the drone detonations, including at one of the site's six reactor buildings where surveillance and communication equipment appeared to have been targeted. While they were at the roof of the reactor, unit 6, Russian troops engaged what appeared to be an approaching drone. This was followed by an explosion near the reactor building.

The IAEA team reported that they observed remnants of drones at this and two other impact locations at the site. At one of them, outside a laboratory, they saw blood stains next to a damaged military logistics vehicle, indicating at least one casualty.

The experts reported hearing explosions and rifle fire on the site throughout the day. Additionally, the IAEA team heard several rounds of outgoing artillery fire from near the plant.

While the team so far has not observed any structural damage to systems, structures, and components important to nuclear safety or security of the plant, they reported observing minor superficial scorching to the top of the reactor dome roof of unit 6 and scoring of a concrete slab supporting the primary make-up water storage tanks.

"This is a major escalation of the nuclear safety and security dangers facing the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant," Grossi said. "Such reckless attacks significantly increase the risk of a major nuclear accident and must cease immediately.

"As I have repeatedly stated - including at the Security Council and the IAEA Board of Governors - no one can conceivably benefit or get any military or political advantage from attacks against nuclear facilities. Attacking a nuclear power plant is an absolute no go. I firmly appeal to military decision makers to abstain from any action violating the basic principles that protect nuclear facilities."

The IAEA noted that it is the first time since November 2022 that the Zaporizhzhia plant - which has been under Russian military control since early March 2022 - has been directly targeted in military action.

Russian state nuclear corporation Rosatom said the first drone hit the area adjacent to the canteen at 11.38 am, injuring three people, one of them seriously. Half an hour later, a drone attacked the cargo port area. Then the dome of unit 6 was hit by a drone.

Both Russia and Ukraine blamed each other for the drone attacks at the plant, with Rosatom saying it "categorically condemns the unprecedented attack".

Researched and written by World Nuclear News



Mediterranean marine worm has developed eyes “as big as millstones"


Scientists are amazed at the discovery of a bristle worm with eyes as sharp as those of mammals. The researchers from University of Copenhagen and Lund University suspect that they may have a secretive language, only seen by their own species



UNIVERSITY OF COPENHAGEN - FACULTY OF SCIENCE

Torrea_candida head 

IMAGE: 

MARVELOUS EYES, BUT YOU BE THE JUDGE OF THIS SEA CRITTER’S BEAUTY. VANADIS IS A BYNAME OF THE NORSE GODDESS OF LOVE, FREYA.
PHOTO: MICHAEL BOK

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CREDIT: PHOTO: MICHAEL BOK




Scientists are amazed at the discovery of a bristle worm with such sharp-seeing eyes that they can measure up to those of mammals and octopuses. The researchers from University of Copenhagen and Lund University suspect that these marine worms may have a secretive language, which uses UV light only seen by their own species. The advanced vision of such a primitive creature helps to finally settle an epic debate about the evolution of eyes.

The Vanadis bristle worm has eyes as big as millstones – relatively speaking. Indeed, if our eyes were proportionally as big as the ones of this Mediterranean marine worm, we would need a big sturdy wheelbarrow and brawny arms to lug around the extra 100kg.

As a set, the worm's eyes weigh about twenty times as much as the rest of the animal’s head and seem grotesquely out of place on this tiny and transparent marine critter. As if two giant, shiny red balloons have been strapped to its body.

Vanadis bristle worms, also known as polychaetes, can be found around the Italian island of Ponza, just west of Naples. Like some of the island's summertime partiers, the worms are nocturnal and out of sight when the sun is high in the sky. So what does this polychaete do with its walloping peepers after dark? And what are they good for?

Neuro- and marine biologist Anders Garm from the University of Copenhagen’s Department of Biology couldn’t ignore the question. Setting other plans aside, the researcher felt compelled to dive in and try to find out. He was hooked as soon as his colleague Michael Bok at Lund University showed him a recording of the bristle worm.

"Together, we set out to unravel the mystery of why a nearly invisible, transparent worm that feeds in the dead of night has evolved to acquire enormous eyes. As such, the first aim was to answer whether large eyes endow the worm with good vision," says Michael Bok who together with Anders Garm, authors a new research article that does just that.[LINK]

It turns out that the Vanadis’ eyesight is excellent and advanced. Research has demonstrated that this worm can use its eyes to see small objects and track their movements.

"It's really interesting because an ability like this is typically reserved for us vertebrates, along with arthropods (insects, spiders, etc.) and cephalopods (octopus, squid). This is the first time that such an advanced and detailed view has been demonstrated beyond these groups. In fact, our research has shown that the worm has outstanding vision. Its eyesight is on a par with that of mice or rats, despite being a relatively simple organism with a miniscule brain," says Garm.

This is what makes the worm's eyes and extraordinary vision unique in the animal kingdom. And it was this combination of factors about the Vanadis bristle worm that really caught Anders Garm's attention. The researcher’s work focuses on understanding how otherwise simple nervous systems can have very complex functions – which was definitely the case here.

UV light and a secret language

For now, the researchers are trying to find out what caused the worm to develop such good eyesight. The worms are transparent, except for their eyes, which need to register light to function. So they can't be inherently transparent. That means that they come with evolutionary trade-offs. As becoming visible must have come at a cost to the Vanadis, something about the evolutionarily benefits of its eyes must outweigh the consequences.

Precisely what the worms gain remains unclear, particularly because they are nocturnal animals that tuck away during the day, when eyes usually work best.

“No one has ever seen the worm during the day, so we don't know where it hides. So, we cannot rule out that its eyes are used during the day as well. What we do know is that its most important activities, like finding food and mating, occur at night. So, it is likely that this is when its eyes are important," says Anders Garm.

Part of the explanation may be due to the fact that these worms see different wavelengths of light than we humans do. Their vision is geared to ultraviolet light, invisible to the human eye. And according to Garm, this may indicate that the purpose of its eyes is to see bioluminescent signals in the otherwise pitch-black nighttime sea.

"We have a theory that the worms themselves are bioluminescent and communicate with each other via light. If you use normal blue or green light as bioluminescence, you also risk attracting predators. But if instead, the worm uses UV light, it will remain invisible to animals other than those of its own species. Therefore, our hypothesis is that they’ve developed sharp UV vision so as to have a secret language related to mating," says Garm, who continues:

"It may also be that they are on the lookout look for UV bioluminescent prey. But regardless, it makes things truly exciting as UV bioluminescence has yet to be witnessed in any other animal. So, we hope to be able to present this as the first example," says the researcher.

Exciting for robotics research and evolutionary history

As a result of the discovery, Anders Garm and his research colleagues have also started working with robotics researchers from the Maersk Mc-Kinney Møller Institute at the University of Southern Denmark (SDU) who find technological inspiration in biology. Together, they share a common goal of investigating whether it is possible to understand the mechanism behind these eyes well enough so as to translate it into technology.

"Together with the robotics researchers, we are working to understand how animals with brains as simple as these can process all of the information that such large eyes are likely able to collect. This suggests that there are super smart ways to process information in their nervous system. And if we can detect these mechanisms mathematically, they could be integrated into computer chips and used to control robots," explains Ander Garm.

According to Garm, Vanadis' eyes are also interesting with regards to evolutionary theory because they could help settle one of the heaviest academic debates surrounding the theory: Whether eyes have only evolved once – and evolved into every form that we know of today, or whether they have arisen several times, independently of one another, in evolutionary history.

Vanadis' eyes are built simply, but equipped with advanced functionality. At the same time, they have evolved in a relatively short evolutionarily time span of just a few million years. This means that they must have developed independently of, for example, human eyes, and that the development of vision, even with a high level of function, is possible in a relatively short time.

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Extra Info: The eye and evolution

In general, eyes come in complex sizes, which is the case with the human eye, for example. Evolutionary skeptics have often pointed to the eye and said 'see for yourself, this must have been created by God'. The eyes of the Vanadis worm have a surprisingly simple natural "design" that has evolved in a relatively short time span compared to typical evolutionary timelines – i.e., a few million years. Despite their simplicity, they are advanced.

The emergence of eyes has been the subject of many debates since Darwin presented his theory of evolution in On the Origin of Species, both among those who are religious and skeptics outside science, as well as among eye biology and vision researchers.

One of these debates has been about whether eyes have only evolved once – and into every form that we know today, or whether they have arisen several times, independently of one another, in evolutionary history. Research in recent years has provided a number of pieces of evidence to support the latter, and the eyes of the Vanadis worm are another powerful piece of evidence in that direction.

“This means that they must have developed independently of, for example, human eyes and that the development of vision, even with a high level of function, is possible in a relatively short time. Because, this worm is so young on an evolutionary scale," says Michael Bok.

Darwin and the eye

In Charles Darwin’s major work, On the Origin of Species, he wrote about the incredible nature of the eye in relation to his theory of evolution by natural selection. He is often quoted by evolutionary skeptics as saying:

“To suppose that the eye with all its inimitable contrivances for adjusting the focus to different distances, for admitting different amounts of light, and for the correction of spherical and chromatic aberration, could have been formed by natural selection, seems, I confess, absurd in the highest degree...”

But these quotations often forget to add the end of the passage:

“Yet reason tells me, that if numerous gradations from a perfect and complex eye to one very imperfect and simple, each grade being useful to its possessor, can be shown to exist; if further, the eye does vary ever so slightly, and the variations be inherited, which is certainly the case; and if any variation or modification in the organ be ever useful to an animal under changing conditions of life, then the difficulty of believing that a perfect and complex eye could be formed by natural selection, though insuperable by our imagination, can hardly be considered real.” (Origin of Species, chap. 6)


Facts: The Worm

  • The Vanadis worm belongs to a family of large-eyed bristle worms, or polychaeta, found in many parts of the world.
  • Its eyesight rivals that of rodents such as mice and rats. Vanadis' eyes weigh about 20 times more than the rest of its head
  • The worms can see UV light and focus on relatively small objects, tracking them as they move.
  • It is nocturnal. The researchers believe that these bristle worms use their eyes to communicate for mating and hunting prey.


Facts: Bioluminescence

  • Bioluminescence is when organisms are luminescent, i.e., capable of producing light using their own power. This can be done chemically within the body, as with glow-worms.
  • Should the researchers succeed in documenting it, the Vanadis worm could become the first animal proven to use UV bioluminescence, meaning that they create ultraviolet light naturally, for communication, among other things. 
Peruvian gold mine’s power infrastructure attacked for the 14th time in two years

Valentina Ruiz Leotaud | April 7, 2024 |

High-voltage towers knocked down at the Poderosa mine in Peru. (Image by Minera Poderosa).

The Poderosa gold mine in northwestern Peru experienced yet another attack by illegal miners, who this time around used dynamite to take down two high-voltage towers that supply energy to the operation, located in the province of Pataz.


In a communiqué, Minera Poderosa said that the criminals broke into the mine’s pits right after knocking down the towers.

“This attack occurred despite there being a State of Emergency and a contingent of more than 300 members of the National Police and the army in the area. This new attack occurred shortly after the police evacuated 150 troops from specialized units that had been providing services in Pataz, who had not yet been replaced,” the release states.

The mining company noted that although the deployment of law enforcement officers in Pataz has been a positive step, their presence has not been matched with any strategy to deter illegal miners from carrying out their activities and attacking legal operations.

In Poderosa’s view, illegal miners feel protected by the Comprehensive Mining Formalization Registry (REINFO) and the recent repeal by the Peruvian Congress of the regulations that sought to halt their modus operandi.

Earlier in March, the parliament repealed the first provision of legislative decree 1607 that gave the police special powers to detain miners who are not registered in REINFO and who are illegally transporting weapons and explosives.

“Unfortunately, law enforcement actions have been severely limited by the lack of support from the Prosecutor’s Office and regional representatives of the Energy, Mines and Hydrocarbons Management. Let us remember that the latter is in charge of supervising the work of artisanal and small-scale miners,” the statement reads. “This criminal act emulates the actions of the terrorist groups that sieged the country in past decades, as it threatened the integrity of our personnel and endangered our operations. In the last two years, 16 employees have lost their lives in attacks by illegal miners and 14 towers have been knocked down.”
Government and industry respond

In response to Poderosa’s declarations, the Minister of Energy and Mines, Rómulo Mucho, condemned the attack and emphasized that the operation would continue to be protected by the army and National Police.

Mucho also recognized that the mining formalization process has been more complex than expected, particularly after certain decision-making processes were transferred to the regional directorates.

But the minister’s statement wasn’t enough for industry representatives.

In Lima, the Chamber of Commerce demanded that authorities take swift action to locate and prosecute the criminal organizations behind such acts.

Similarly, Supera – a firm dedicated to the business transformation of mining companies – published a commentary saying that authorities must commit and take action to provide security to established mining companies, as they are the main engine of the Peruvian economy.

Poderosa is an underground operation situated at an altitude that ranges between 1,250 and 3,000 metres above sea level.

Gold and silver are its main products, having produced 300,662 ounces of gold and 191,898 ounces of silver in 2022.
First Quantum alerts Panamanian authorities of dangers of long-term concentrate storage at disputed copper mine

Staff Writer | April 7, 2024 

Copper concentrate stored at the Cobre Panama mine. (Image by First Quantum Minerals).

First Quantum Minerals’ (TSX: FM) subsidiary, Minera Panamá, issued a communiqué alerting of the dangers posed by the long-term storage of copper concentrate at the Cobre Panamá mine.


According to the miner, regular monitoring has detected an increase in the chemical reactions that generate dangerous gases and a rise in the material’s temperatures, which poses environmental risks and threatens the health and safety of those doing care and maintenance work at the operation.

Following the forced closure of Cobre Panamá ordered by the Laurentino Cortizo administration last December, First Quantum has not been allowed to export the copper concentrate stockpiled at the site. Typically, the product was quickly sold abroad to ensure its stability and safety.

“The immediate transfer of the material is critical to mitigate these risks. Cobre Panamá will export the copper concentrate as soon as it obtains the corresponding authorization from the government,” the release states. “In response to these concerns and highlighting our commitment to environmental preservation, Cobre Panamá will allocate the proceeds from the sale of the concentrate towards the costs of the site’s Preservation and Safe Management Plan, which amount to between $15 million and $20 million per month.”

The miner pointed out that in compliance with a request from the Ministry of Commerce and Industries (MICI), on March 26, 2024, the company presented the updated Preservation and Safe Management Plan, as well as a detailed report on the situation of the copper concentrate stored at the site, which was processed before operations were halted.

“Transparency and cooperation are fundamental elements of our approach to the responsible and safe management of this situation, seeking to benefit all the parties involved,” the statement concludes. “We are committed to the dissemination of clear and transparent information.”