Friday, December 02, 2022

Pandemic

South African boffins unpack origins of Omicron that began causing havoc a year ago

New study sheds light on where and how the variant evolved

02 December 2022 - 
Tanya Farber
SENIOR SCIENCE REPORTER

Covid-19 is still with us, and Omicron remains the dominant variant. 
Stock photo.
Image: 123RF/phonlamaiphoto

South Africa found itself ostracised this time last year for being the “home” of the then newly detected Omicron variant of the virus that causes Covid-19.

Local scientists and the World Health Organisation (WHO), however, said the country had made a breakthrough by discovering a variant that was likely present in several countries already at the time, and was being unfairly labelled as being the origin of the virus itself.

This had caused major restrictions for the country in terms of international travel.

Now, local scientists have made another breakthrough and again, it is to do with the Omicron variant.

A new study led by Stellenbosch University (SU) and published in the journal Science this week shows that predecessors to the Omicron variant existed on the African continent months before cases were first identified.

It also suggests that Omicron emerged gradually over several months in different countries across Africa.

“This important study sheds light on the question of when, where and how the dominating Omicron variant developed,” says Dr Tongai Maponga from SU’s division of medical virology. “The somewhat unexpected results not only enhance our understanding of the novel virus, but provide valuable guidance on how to better respond — and not to respond — to similar situations in the future.”

The study also casts doubt, but does not disprove, two theories on the Omicron variant.

The one is that the virus was transmitted from a human to an animal, where it spread and evolved before infecting a human again.

The other is that it infected a person with a weakened immune system for a prolonged period during which mutations accumulated.

Either scenario could explain how the mutated virus evades pre-existing immunity (after infection or vaccination, or both) and can be transmitted easily between people.

The team concluded that Omicron seems to have evolved in Africa but not necessarily in the two countries in which it was first discovered and shared with the rest of the world

Omicron was the variant with the most mutations and by the end of December 2021, it had replaced the previously dominant Delta variant worldwide.

For the purpose of the study, a PCR (polymerase chain reaction) test was designed to specifically detect the BA.1 lineage of the Omicron variant. It was used to test more than 13,000 respiratory samples from Covid-19 patients collected in 22 African countries between mid-2021 and early 2022.

All samples were tested by researchers within the countries of collection. These tests allowed them to estimate when the Omicron variant started to appear and how fast it spread.

The team concluded that Omicron seems to have evolved in Africa but not necessarily in the two countries in which it was first discovered and shared with the rest of the world. 

This further questions the reasoning behind the travel bans that were placed on South Africa, causing economic losses and other hardships, and which did nothing to prevent the explosive global spread of Omicron. 

Future outbreaks will require better collaboration between countries and measures must not disincentivise global data sharing for the good of humanity, SU said in a statement.

TimesLIVE

 

Orion begins return leg of Artemis 1 mission

by  — 

WASHINGTON — NASA’s Orion spacecraft started its trip back to Earth Dec. 1 with the first of two maneuvers that will put the spacecraft on course for a splashdown in the Pacific Ocean in a week and a half.

The main engine in Orion’s service module fired at 4:53 p.m. Eastern for 1 minute at 45 seconds. That burn nudged the spacecraft out of the distant retrograde orbit around the moon it had been in since Nov. 25.

Orion is now descending back towards the moon, where it will perform a second maneuver, called the return powered flyby, on Dec. 5. That will set up Orion for a reentry and splashdown off the California coast Dec. 11.

At a Nov. 30 briefing, NASA managers said the spacecraft continued to perform well with only minor issues. “We are very proud that our system is functioning perfectly. It’s better than we ever expected,” said Philippe Deloo, ESA program manager for the European Service Module. The spacecraft was producing more electrical power than expected but consuming less than expected because of better thermal stability.

The propulsion system, which includes the main engine that is a repurposed shuttle-era Orbital Maneuvering System engine as well as several auxiliary thrusters and reaction control system thrusters, also is working well, he said, despite problems in its development. “The regulation of the propulsion system has been our trouble child throughout development, and it has just worked beautifully,” he said. “No problem whatsoever with this propulsion system.”

That lack of problems has freed up controllers to perform additional tests of the spacecraft. “With how well the mission is going, we have found ourselves, rather than having to work anomalies, able to push the boundaries,” said Zebulon Scoville, deputy chief flight director. That, he said, helps further reduce the risks for astronauts on Artemis 2, the first crewed mission.

Mission managers earlier added seven flight objectives during the spacecraft’s stay in distant retrograde orbit to test out the thermal characteristics of the spacecraft and its propulsion system. That included a thruster firing to maintain that orbit Nov. 30 that used auxiliary thrusters for longer than previous burns to see how they performed.

Mike Sarafin, Artemis 1 mission manager, said they have added four more objectives for the return leg of the mission. Two involve tests of a valve in a helium pressurization system to characterize its leak rate. A third will test attitude control maneuvers at a faster rate, and the fourth will test a different attitude control mode that could save propellant.

“We all came into the mission expecting to have challenges,” Scoville said, with controllers going through extensive training for such problems. “Instead, it’s kind of purring along and staying very smooth. The kinds of discussions we’re having are how to rev the engine a little bit harder and how to push it a little bit harder and faster.”

NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope Captures Signs Of Weird Weather On Titan For The First Time

Eric Mack
Contributor
I cover science and innovation and products and policies they create.

Dec 2, 2022


Dust storm of the surface of Titan, illustration. Titan, the largest moon of Saturn


Saturn’s moon Titan is one of the weirdest and most intriguing worlds in our solar system. It is the only place we know of in the universe for sure beyond Earth that has rivers, lakes and larger bodies of liquid, but on Titan these features are filled with flammable hydrocarbons like methane and ethane.

Studying Titan in depth has been difficult due to a thick atmosphere of clouds and haze, but NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) is giving scientists their first detailed glimpse of those clouds, and by extension, the weather patterns at work on this unique world.

"We had waited for years to use Webb's infrared vision to study Titan's atmosphere,” said JWST Principal Investigator Conor Nixon. “Detecting clouds is exciting because it validates long-held predictions from computer models about Titan’s climate, that clouds would form readily in the mid-northern hemisphere during its late summertime when the surface is warmed by the Sun.”

JWST’s advanced instruments also allow astronomers to determine the altitudes of the clouds with a higher degree of confidence.

MORE FROM FORBESSaturn's Moon Titan Could Harbor This Weird Form Of Life

Further observations from Keck Observatory telescopes on the summit of Mauna Kea in Hawaii helped confirm that scientists were in fact seeing clouds and that they appeared to be shifting subtly.

“We were concerned that the clouds would be gone when we looked at Titan one and two days later with Keck, but to our delight there were clouds at the same positions, looking like they might have changed in shape,” said University of California, Berkeley, astronomer Imke de Pater.

The data is exciting for a number of researchers like Maël Es-Sayeh, a graduate student at the Université Paris Cité, who have had to rely on computer models to investigate Titan for years.

“It's very exciting to finally get the real data after years of simulations. I can't wait to see what will come in part two next year.”

Observations of Titan from Webb and other telescopes well help inform NASA’s planned Dragonfly mission to the moon, which will send a helicopter-like lander to explore it further and look for signs of life. That mission is currently scheduled for launch in 2027.


Colossal 'planet killer' asteroid sparked mega-tsunami on Mars, and now we know where it landed

Story by Harry Baker • 

A newly discovered impact crater on Mars was likely left by an enormous asteroid that slammed into the Red Planet around 3.4 billion years ago and may have triggered an 800-foot-tall "mega-tsunami." The colossal explosion was similar to the asteroid impact on Earth that wiped out the nonavian dinosaurs, a new study shows.


null© Shutterstock

From about 3.5 billion to 3 billion years ago, Mars was covered by vast, shallow oceans. During that time, one of these oceans, which once covered Mars' northern lowlands (Vastitas Borealis), experienced multiple mega-tsunamis when asteroids slammed into the ancient body of water, according to NASA.

Past research has found evidence of at least two massive wave events on the ancient shoreline that once surrounded the long-lost ocean, including large chunks of debris that washed ashore and rock markings that likely carved out as displaced water slowly drained back into the ocean. The first event likely occurred around 3.4 billion years ago, and the second likely emerged around 3 billion years ago as Mars' oceans began to dry up, according to NASA.

Related: Mars' oldest meteorite traced to strange double impact crater

In a new study, published Dec. 1 in the journal Scientific Reports, planetary scientists identified a new impact crater, named Pohl, which is a highly plausible candidate for the first of the mega-tsunamis. Pohl is around 68 miles (110 kilometers) wide and lies around 394 feet (120 meters) beneath the suspected sea level at the time. The massive impact structure is also surrounded by 3.4 billion-year-old rocks.

Based on the size of Pohl, researchers estimate that the asteroid responsible for birthing the crater spanned somewhere between 1.9 to 5.6 miles (3 to 9 km) and released up to 13 million megatons of TNT energy. For context, the most powerful nuclear bomb ever detonated on Earth, the Tsar bomba, released around 50 megatons of TNT energy.

The study team then used computer simulations to recreate the massive wave that would have been generated by this colossal impact. They found that the waves could have reached up to 820 feet (250 m) tall and traveled around 932 miles (1,500 km) away from the crater. These waves would have been large enough to leave behind the geological evidence already uncovered by past researchers, the team said in a statement.

Related: Giant reservoir of 'hidden water' discovered on Mars

This gargantuan impact structure has some key similarities with the Chicxulub crate, which was left by an asteroid impact that triggered a mass extinction event around 66 million years ago and wiped out the nonavian dinosaurs, the researchers wrote.

The Chicxulub crater, located on Mexico's Yucatán Peninsula, is significantly larger than Pohl, spanning around 112 miles (180 km), and was birthed by a larger asteroid that was around 7.5 miles (12 km) across. The Chicxulub asteroid also landed on top of an ancient ocean on Earth that was around 656 feet (200 m) deep at the time. In October, a pair of unrelated studies found that the Chicxulub impact also triggered a mega-tsunami with mile-high waves and triggered a mega-earthquake that rocked the planet for months.

This is not the first time that researchers have identified a potential impact crater for Martian mega-tsunamis. In 2019, a separate team of researchers proposed that the Lomonosov crater, which measures around 90 miles (145 km) across, was left by an impactor that could have sparked a mega-tsunami.

However, the Lomonosov crater has not been precisely dated, so it is unclear which mega-tsunami the impactor could have kickstarted or if the impact happened when oceans were present at all.

OH THEY HAVE A POLICY, NOW
KANYE WEST’S SWASTIKA TWEET FORCES ELON MUSK TO FINALLY DO SOME MODERATING

The new Twitter CEO announced that the antisemitic rapper’s account would be suspended for violating the company’s policies on inciting violence.


 DECEMBER 2, 2022

Kanye West on Feb. 9, 2020, in Beverly Hills, Calif.BY EVAN AGOSTINI/INVISION/AP/SHUTTERSTOCK

Shortly after tweeting an image of a swastika inside the Star of David and hours after going on a pro-Hitler tirade, Ye, the artist formerly known as Kanye West, was suspended from Twitter Friday. Twitter CEO Elon Musk confirmed as much early Friday morning, less than a few weeks after Twitter reversed an October restriction on his account that came in response to a separate antisemitic tweet.



Thursday's tweet was deleted before West’s account page became inaccessible. Prior to West’s suspension, he also posted an unflattering image of Musk in a bathing suit, writing, “Let’s always remember this as my final tweet,” to which Musk responded, “That is fine. This is not,” referring to the swastika tweet. West then took his grievances to Truth Social, former President Donald Trump's social media platform, where he shared an apparent text-message exchange between him and Musk, per the Guardian. “Sorry, but you have gone too far. This is not love,” Musk wrote. “Who made you the judge,” West replied.

The spectacular downfall of one of the most influential rappers in the world is coinciding with another spectacle: Musk’s takeover of Twitter, which has forced the Tesla CEO—a self-proclaimed “free speech absolutist”—to become a de facto moderator. To say that Musk has been resistant to this aspect of his new role is an understatement, given that he’s granted “general amnesty” to previously suspended accounts (including Trump); ended Twitter’s policy against COVID misinformation; and dismantled the company's trust and safety teams amid mass layoffs. But West's latest pro-Nazi antics were apparently beyond the pale for Musk, raising questions around how the Tesla CEO will crack down on antisemitism going forward.


West's comments also underscore the ongoing confusion around Twitter's new content moderation policies, such as those related to impersonation and hate speech. Many commentators have argued that Musk has failed to consistently enforce these policies, as seemingly evidenced by Thursday's incident:

West’s suspension comes on the heels of his horrifyingly antisemitic outburst on conspiracy theorist Alex Jones’s InfoWars show, during which even Jones—who Friday morning filed for bankruptcy because he owes nearly $1.5 billion in damages caused by his lies about the Sandy Hook massacre—seemed uncomfortable with West’s comments. “There’s a lot of things that I love about Hitler," West said during his appearance, claiming the Holocaust never happened. Also on Thursday, Parler, the right-wing social media platform, announced that West’s deal to acquire the company fell apart in mid-November. While the rapper's antisemitic rhetoric has earned him scores of critics over the past several months, he was still greeted with a warm embrace in Mar-a-Lago last week, where the former president hosted West, as well as white supremacist Nick Fuentes, for dinner shortly after announcing his 2024 presidential bid.

Biden slaps down Hitler-praising Kanye West while subtly knocking Trump for his silence

Brad Reed
December 02, 2022

Joe Biden (AFP)

President Joe Biden on Friday slapped down Hitler-praising rapper Kanye West while at the same time taking a subtle shot at former President Donald Trump for hosting him at his Mar-a-Lago resort.

In a post on Twitter, Biden directly addressed the multiple false and offensive statements made by West during his anti-Semitic tirade during his appearance on Alex Jones' InfoWars on Thursday.

"I just want to make a few things clear: The Holocaust happened," Biden wrote. "Hitler was a demonic figure. And instead of giving it a platform, our political leaders should be calling out and rejecting antisemitism wherever it hides. Silence is complicity."

Trump last week hosted both West and notorious Holocaust denier Nick Fuentes at Mar-a-Lago. Although Trump has since claimed that he did not know who Fuentes was at the time he came to dinner, he has also notably not condemned Fuentes' frequently racist and anti-Semitic diatribes.

Likewise, Trump has remained completely silent about West in the wake of his anti-Semitic outbursts this week, which included attacks on "the Jewish media" for portraying Nazis in a negative light, as well as a flat-out declaration that "I like Hitler."


I just want to make a few things clear: The Holocaust happened. Hitler was a demonic figure. And instead of giving it a platform, our political leaders should be calling out and rejecting antisemitism wherever it hides. Silence is complicity.

House Judiciary GOP finally deletes tweet praising Kanye West after he tells Alex Jones he likes Hitle
r

Sky Palma
December 01, 2022

Kanye West is seen exiting his hotel on September 3, 2016 in New York City. (Shutterstock)

After leaving it up for almost two months, the House Judiciary GOP's official Twitter account has finally deleted their infamous tweet that read, "Kanye. Elon. Trump."

The tweet went up on Oct. 6, and soon afterwards, rapper Kanye West started giving interviews and making statements that are unquestionably antisemitic. While both liberal and conservative figures called on the House Judiciary GOP to disavow the tweet as West's antisemitism reached a fever pitch, the tweet was not deleted.


But now that West has gone on Infowars and blatantly told host Alex Jones, "I like Hitler," the people behind the account have apparently decided that it was time to take it down.

“You’re not Hitler,” Jones told West. “You're not a Nazi.”

“Well, I see good things about Hitler,” West said, later adding: “Every human being has value that they brought to the table, especially Hitler.”

“[The Nazis] did good things too,” West said. “We’ve got to stop dissing the Nazis all the time.”
























Stunned TMZ hosts live-react to Ye's meltdown: 'Kanye West is ranting about Hitler'

David Edwards
December 01, 2022

TMZ/screen grab

As Ye ranted to Alex Jones about his "love" for Adolf Hitler, stunned TMZ hosts reacted live on the air.

"Kanye West, who as we speak is on Alex Jones's InfoWars," host Harvey Levin said at the top of the show, "is off the rails."

"He's saying a lot about Hitler," Levin's co-host agreed, "about Nazis and praising them, which of course coming on the heels of the anti-Semitic rants he's been on for more than a month is — it's just disturbing."

"This has been going on for more than an hour," a stunned Levin added. "And we have no idea how long this is going to keep going. But Nick Fuentes, the white supremacist, is right by his side as Kanye West is ranting about, you know, Hitler."

"He said the Nazis invented the highways and microphones," he remarked.

Levin later suggested that Ye might need to return to a mental health facility, calling the interview his "downfall."

Watch the video from TMZ. You can also watch at this link.



'Disgusting': Key Republican group slams 'horrific cesspool' of hate from Trump allies on InfoWars show

Matthew Chapman
December 01, 2022

Kanye West talks in the Oval Office (Screen cap).

On Thursday, the Republican Jewish Coalition came out with a statement tearing into the InfoWars radio segment between conspiracy theorist webcaster Alex Jones, rapper Kanye "Ye" West, and white nationalist livestreamer Nick Fuentes — all of whom have taken meetings with former President Donald Trump.

"Today's InfoWars show featuring Alex Jones, Nick Fuentes, and Kanye West — a disgusting triumvirate of conspiracy theorists, Holocaust deniers, and antisemites — was a horrific cesspool of dangerous, bigoted Jew hatred," said the RJC's statement. "We vehemently condemn those comments and call on all political leaders to reject these messengers of hate and relegate them to the dustbin of history where they belong."

During this segment, Ye actively praised Nazi dictator Adolf Hitler, saying “I see good things about Hitler ... Jewish people are not going to tell me you can love us, and you can love what we’re doing to you with the contracts, and you can love what we’re pushing with the pornography. But this guy that invented highways, invented the very microphone that I use as a musician, you can’t say out loud that this person ever did anything good, and I’m done with that.”

"Given his praise of Hitler, it can't be overstated that Kanye West is a vile, repellant bigot who has targeted the Jewish community with threats and Nazi-style defamation," said the RJC. "Conservatives who have mistakenly indulged Kanye West must make it clear that he is a pariah. Enough is enough."

This comes shortly after Trump met with Ye and Fuentes, who has also compared himself to Hitler and supports creating a white, Christian theocracy where Jews are stripped of political power, at his Mar-a-Lago country club in Palm Beach, Florida.

The RJC has broken with Trump on occasion in the past. The group sharply criticized Doug Mastriano, a Trump-backed unsuccessful candidate for Pennsylvania governor, for his use of and financial ties to Gab, a far-right social network whose CEO, Andrew Torba, has declared Jews are unwelcome on his platform