Monday, September 26, 2022

Chrysalis: Saturn’s Ancient, Missing Moon

By JENNIFER CHU, 
MASSACHUSETTS INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY
 SEPTEMBER 25, 2022


Scientists propose a lost moon of Saturn, which they call Chrysalis, pulled on the planet until it ripped apart, forming rings and contributing to Saturn’s tilt. This natural color view of Saturn was created by combining six images captured by NASA’s Cassini spacecraft on May 6, 2012. It features Saturn’s huge moon Titan, which is larger than the planet Mercury. Below Titan are the shadows cast by Saturn’s rings. 
Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/Space Science Institute

Saturn’s Rings and Tilt Could Be the Product of an Ancient, Missing Moon

According to a new study, a “grazing encounter” may have smashed the moon to bits to form Saturn’s rings.

Swirling around the planet’s equator, the rings of Saturn are an obvious indicator that the planet is spinning at a tilt. The belted gas giant rotates at a 26.7-degree angle relative to the plane in which it orbits the sun. Because Saturn’s tilt precesses, like a spinning top, at nearly the same rate as the orbit of its neighbor Neptune, astronomers have long suspected that this tilt comes from gravitational interactions with Neptune.

Saturn is the sixth planet from the Sun and the second-largest planet in our solar system. Saturn, a gas giant like Jupiter, is a massive ball made mostly of hydrogen and helium. While it is not the only planet to have rings, none are as magnificent or as complex as Saturn’s. Saturn also has dozens of moons. It is named for the Roman god of agriculture and wealth, who was also the father of Jupiter.

However, a new modeling study by astronomers at MIT and elsewhere has found that, while the two planets may have once been in sync, Saturn has since escaped Neptune’s pull. What was responsible for this planetary realignment? The research team has one meticulously tested hypothesis: a missing moon. Their study was published in the journal Science on September 15.

In the study, the team proposes that Saturn, which today hosts 83 moons, once harbored at least one more, an extra satellite that they named Chrysalis. Together with its siblings, the astronomers suggest, Chrysalis orbited Saturn for several billion years, pulling and tugging on the planet in a way that kept its tilt, or “obliquity,” in resonance with Neptune.

However, the team estimates that around 160 million years ago, Chrysalis became unstable and came too close to its planet in a grazing encounter that pulled the satellite apart. The loss of the moon was sufficient to remove Saturn from Neptune’s grasp and leave it with the present-day tilt.

Furthermore, the astronomers surmise, while most of Chrysalis’ shattered body may have made impact with Saturn, a fraction of its fragments could have remained suspended in orbit, eventually breaking into small icy chunks to form the planet’s signature rings.

Chrysalis, the missing satellite, therefore, could explain two longstanding mysteries: Saturn’s present-day tilt and the age of its rings, which were previously estimated to be about 100 million years old — much younger than the planet itself.



This was Cassini’s view from orbit around Saturn on January 2, 2010. In this image, the rings on the night side of the planet have been brightened significantly to more clearly reveal their features. On the day side, the rings are illuminated both by direct sunlight, and by light reflected off Saturn’s cloud tops. Credit: ASA/JPL-Caltech/Space Science Institute

“Just like a butterfly’s chrysalis, this satellite was long dormant and suddenly became active, and the rings emerged,” says Jack Wisdom. He is lead author of the new study and a professor of planetary sciences at MIT.

The study’s co-authors include Rola Dbouk at MIT, Burkhard Militzer of the University of California at Berkeley, William Hubbard at the University of Arizona, Francis Nimmo and Brynna Downey of the University of California at Santa Cruz, and Richard French of Wellesley College.

A moment of progress

In the early 2000s, scientists put forward the idea that Saturn’s tilted axis is a result of the planet being trapped in a resonance, or gravitational association, with Neptune. However, observations taken by NASA’s Cassini spacecraft, which orbited Saturn from 2004 to 2017, put a new twist on the problem. Scientists discovered that Titan, Saturn’s largest satellite, was migrating away from Saturn at a faster clip than expected, at a rate of about 11 centimeters per year. Titan’s fast migration, and its gravitational pull, led scientists to conclude that the moon was likely responsible for tilting and keeping Saturn in resonance with Neptune.


A view from NASA’s Cassini spacecraft shows Saturn’s northern hemisphere in 2016 as that part of the planet nears its northern hemisphere summer solstice. A year on Saturn is 29 Earth years; days only last 10:33:38, according to a new analysis of Cassini data. Credits: NASA/JPL-Caltech/Space Science Institute

Yet this explanation hinges on one major unknown factor: Saturn’s moment of inertia, which is how mass is distributed in the planet’s interior. Saturn’s tilt could behave differently, depending on whether matter is more concentrated at its core or toward the surface.

“To make progress on the problem, we had to determine the moment of inertia of Saturn,” Wisdom says.

The lost element

In their new study, Wisdom and his colleagues looked to pin down Saturn’s moment of inertia using some of the last observations taken by Cassini in its “Grand Finale,” a phase of the mission during which the spacecraft made an extremely close approach to precisely map the gravitational field around the entire planet. The gravitational field can be used to determine the distribution of mass in the planet.

Wisdom and his colleagues modeled the interior of Saturn and identified a distribution of mass that matched the gravitational field that Cassini observed. Surprisingly, they discovered that this newly identified moment of inertia placed Saturn close to, but just outside the resonance with Neptune. The planets may have once been in sync, but are no longer.

“Then we went hunting for ways of getting Saturn out of Neptune’s resonance,” Wisdom says.



Hubble’s 2021 look at Saturn shows rapid and extreme color changes in the bands of the planet’s northern hemisphere. Credit: NASA, ESA, A. Simon (NASA-GSFC), and M. H. Wong (UC Berkeley); Image Processing: A. Pagan (STScI)

First, the team carried out simulations to evolve the orbital dynamics of Saturn and its moons backward in time, to see whether any natural instabilities among the existing satellites could have influenced the planet’s tilt. This search came up empty.

So, the researchers reexamined the mathematical equations that describe a planet’s precession, which is how a planet’s axis of rotation changes over time. One term in this equation has contributions from all the satellites. The team reasoned that if one satellite were removed from this sum, it could affect the planet’s precession.

Saturn Facts 
Planet Type: Gas giant
Radius: 36,183.7 miles / 58,232 kilometers
Day: 10.7 hours
Year: 29 Earth years
Moons: 63 confirmed and named / 20 provisional
Axis Tilt: 26.73 degrees


The question was, how massive would that satellite have to be, and what dynamics would it have to undergo to take Saturn out of Neptune’s resonance?

Simulations were run by Wisdom and his colleagues to determine the properties of a satellite, such as its mass and orbital radius, and the orbital dynamics that would be required to knock Saturn out of the resonance.

From their results, they conclude that Saturn’s present tilt is the result of the resonance with Neptune and that the loss of the satellite, Chrysalis, which was about the size of Saturn’s third-largest moon, Iapetus, allowed it to escape the resonance.

Sometime between 200 and 100 million years ago, Chrysalis entered a chaotic orbital zone, experienced a number of close encounters with Iapetus and Titan, and eventually came too close to Saturn, in a grazing encounter that ripped the satellite to bits, leaving a small fraction to circle the planet as a debris-strewn ring.

The loss of Chrysalis, they found, not only explains Saturn’s precession, and its present-day tilt, but it also explains the late formation of its spectacular rings.

“It’s a pretty good story, but like any other result, it will have to be examined by others,” Wisdom says. “But it seems that this lost satellite was just a chrysalis, waiting to have its instability.”

Reference: “Loss of a satellite could explain Saturn’s obliquity and young rings” by Jack Wisdom, Rola Dbouk, Burkhard Militzer, William B. Hubbard, Francis Nimmo, Brynna G. Downey and Richard G. French, 15 September 2022, Science.

DOI: 10.1126/science.abn1234

This research was supported, in part, by NASA and the National Science Foundation.

'We have impact!' NASA slams spacecraft into asteroid in unprecedented test

1st attempt to shift the position of a natural object in space

Close-up of a spacecraft headed for an asteroid.
In this image made from a NASA livestream, the Double Asteroid Redirection Test (DART) spacecraft heads straight into the asteroid Dimorphos on Monday. (ASI/NASA/The Associated Press)

A NASA spacecraft slammed into an asteroid at blistering speed Monday in an unprecedented dress rehearsal for the day a killer rock menaces Earth.

The galactic grand slam happened 11.3 million kilometres away, with the spacecraft — the Double Asteroid Redirection Test (DART) — plowing into the rock at 22,500 km/h. Scientists expected the impact to carve out a crater, hurl streams of rocks and dirt into space and, most importantly, alter the asteroid's orbit.

"We have impact!" Mission Control's Elena Adams announced, jumping up and down and thrusting her arms skyward.

Telescopes around the world and in space aimed at the same point in the sky to capture the spectacle. Though the impact was immediately obvious — DART's radio signal abruptly ceased — it will be days or even weeks to determine how much the asteroid's path was changed.

"Now is when the science starts," said NASA's Lori Glaze, planetary science division director. "Now we're going to see for real how effective we were."

The $325-million US mission was the first attempt to shift the position of an asteroid or any other natural object in space.

"What an amazing thing. We've never had that capability before," Glaze added.

WATCH | DART's impact with asteroid:

Orbiting sun for eons

Earlier in the day, NASA Administrator Bill Nelson reminded people via Twitter that, "No, this is not a movie plot." He added in a prerecorded video: "We've all seen it on movies like Armageddon, but the real-life stakes are high."

Monday's target was a 160-metre asteroid named Dimorphos. It's actually a moonlet of Didymos (Greek for "twin"), a fast-spinning asteroid five times bigger that flung off the material that formed the junior partner.

The pair have been orbiting the sun for eons without threatening Earth, making them ideal save-the-world test candidates.

Launched last November, the vending machine-size DART navigated to its target using new technology developed by Johns Hopkins University's Applied Physics Laboratory, the spacecraft builder and mission manager.

A dark shot in space showing two masses approaching each other.
DART approaches Dimorphos, centre, as the larger asteroid Didymos fades from view. (ASI/NASA/The Associated Press)

DART's on-board camera, a key part of this smart navigation system, caught sight of Dimorphos barely an hour before impact.

"Woo hoo," exclaimed Adams at the time. "We're seeing Dimorphos, so wonderful, wonderful."

Days or months before new orbit confirmed

With an image beaming back to Earth every second, Adams and other ground controllers in Laurel, Md., watched with growing excitement as Dimorphos loomed larger and larger in the field of view alongside its bigger companion. Within minutes, Dimorphos was alone in the pictures; it looked like a giant grey lemon, but with boulders and rubble on the surface. The last image froze on the screen as the radio transmission ended.

Flight controllers cheered, hugged one another and exchanged high fives.

A mini satellite followed a few minutes behind to take photos of the impact; the Italian Cubesat was released from DART two weeks ago.

Scientists insisted DART would not shatter Dimorphos. The spacecraft packed a scant 570 kilograms, compared with the asteroid's five billion kilograms. But that should be plenty to shrink its 11-hour, 55-minute orbit around Didymos.

WATCH | NASA panel speaks after successful mission: 

The impact should pare 10 minutes off that, but telescopes will need anywhere from a few days to nearly a month to verify the new orbit. The anticipated orbital shift of one per cent might not sound like much, scientists noted. But they stressed it would amount to a significant change over years.

Planetary defence experts prefer nudging a threatening asteroid or comet out of the way, given enough lead time, rather than blowing it up and creating multiple pieces that could rain down on Earth.

Multiple impactors might be needed for big space rocks or a combination of impactors and so-called gravity tractors, not-yet-invented devices that would use their own gravity to pull an asteroid into a safer orbit.

"The dinosaurs didn't have a space program to help them know what was coming, but we do," NASA's senior climate adviser Katherine Calvin said, referring to the mass extinction 66 million years ago believed to have been caused by a major asteroid impact, volcanic eruptions or both.

Close up of what appears to be gravelly chunks of rock.
In this image made from a NASA livestream, DART crashes into the asteroid. (ASI/NASA/The Associated Press)

Countless space rocks

The non-profit B612 Foundation, dedicated to protecting Earth from asteroid strikes, has been pushing for impact tests like DART since its founding by astronauts and physicists 20 years ago. Monday's feat aside, the world must do a better job of identifying the countless space rocks lurking out there, warned the foundation's executive director, Ed Lu, a former astronaut.

Significantly fewer than half of the estimated 25,000 near-Earth objects in the deadly 140-metre range have been discovered, according to NASA. And fewer than one per cent of the millions of smaller asteroids, capable of widespread injuries, are known.

The Vera Rubin Observatory, nearing completion in Chile by the National Science Foundation and U.S. Energy Department, promises to revolutionize the field of asteroid discovery, Lu said.

Finding and tracking asteroids, "That's still the name of the game here. That's the thing that has to happen in order to protect the Earth," he said.



Residents, businesses take aim at Edmonton's approach to homeless camps

City says it's taken down 1,370 camps so far this year, 

complaints up 25 per cent from 2021

Edmonton police order campers to leave a property on 106th Avenue and 96th Street Thursday afternoon. (Craig Ryan/CBC)

The City of Edmonton's approach to dealing with homeless encampments this year is pushing social disorder to new neighbourhoods and new levels, business leaders and residents say. 

The city's encampment response teams have taken down more than 1,370 homeless camps so far this season, a spokesperson told CBC News last week. 

In 2021, the city dismantled 1,780 for the entire year.

The city said public complaints about encampments have gone up 25 per cent. In 2021, the city had 6,693 complaints and it's received 5,693 complaints so far this year. 

Michael Shandro, general manager of the Best Western Plus City Centre Inn on 113th Avenue and 109th Street, said every day, his employees have issues with people who aren't guests. 

"Daily, I'm getting reports of them being either verbally or physically assaulted," he said of his staff. "People refusing to leave."

Shandro said his staff have discovered people who aren't guests of the hotel drinking in the hallway, and others setting up camps along the side of the inn. 

"It used to be like every week or two we'd have an incident, we'd talk about it, we'd deal with it and that was it," he said. "My staff are getting jaded."

Ellie Sasseville, executive director of the Kingsway District Association, said they've noticed more camps in the area, one recently behind the building on 118th Avenue.

She said they paid $700 to have cleaners haul away trash and debris left by campers last week and businesses shouldn't have to do that. 

Refocusing patrols

In May, police and city peace officers started refocusing patrols in Chinatown, downtown and on Edmonton transit, after two men were killed in Chinatown. 

Since then, smaller camps have appeared beyond the inner core in places like Kingsway, along 107th Avenue and Whyte Avenue. 

Mayor Amarjeet Sohi said he's hearing concerns from business leaders and residents.

"Problems are spilling over into neighbouring communities," Sohi told CBC News. 

Sohi said he hopes a fully staffed Healthy Streets Operations Centre, set up in Chinatown, will allow hot-spot policing and enforcement. 

"That will help neighbouring communities as well, so I hope that will work," he said. "But we know that enforcement is a Band-Aid solution." 

Tim Pasma, manager of homeless programs with Hope Mission, also said clamping down on camps in the inner city means pushing people out. 

However, he thinks the increased police presence in Chinatown, where there's typically a lot of social disorder, has helped make the neighbourhood safer. 

"There's been a lot of crime, there's been a lot of pain suffered by the community, you know, from a lot of the encampments," Pasma said in an interview last week. 

"We do feel like it's safer," he said. "There's still a lot of issues that need to be addressed. So it's really, it's a Band-Aid solution. I think everybody knows that, but it's at least one step in the right direction."

Taking down tents 

The number of people identifying as homeless doubled from the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic. 

More than 2,750 people have no permanent home and almost 1,300 people are sleeping outside or in shelters on any given night, the city and housing agency Homeward Trust report. 

The city developed a new encampment strategy last year, with response teams made up of social agency workers, police and city peace officers clean-up crews.

Last Thursday, the city's encampment response teams dismantled a camp of at least 20 tents at 96th Street and 106th Avenue.

Barb Laidlaw, a resident living across the street for 15 years, said she complained about the social disorder more than two weeks earlier.

"This is the worst year that it's been for all these camps," Laidlaw said. "It's very exhausting. We're always filing 311 complaints about drug use and litter and stolen property." 

A day later, tents appeared again on the same site, CBC News found.

The city's new approach to dealing with camps stems from preventing a huge encampment like Camp Pekiwewin in the Rossdale neighbourhood and the Peace Camp in Old Strathcona in summer and fall 2020. 

Pasma said large encampments are a safety risk to the general public, first responders and people living in the tent city, where there's exploitation, drug use and crime. 

"A lot of the effort has been placed on making sure that these encampments don't grow exponentially to a point where we can't control it anymore," Pasma said. 

Winter plan

City, social, agencies and the province are still working on a plan to create more winter shelter spaces but they don't know where that will be. 

Last winter, the Spectrum building at the Northlands property on 118th Avenue and Commonwealth Stadium were used as temporary emergency shelters, but the city said neither site is likely to be used this year.

In 2020, the Edmonton Convention Centre was the designated 24/7 shelter during the first winter of the COVID-19 pandemic. 

"I think there is an urgency to it," Pasma said. "I think everybody that works in the sector and from a funding level is aware of the urgency."

It's a challenge to find temporary spaces, staff, and the logistics of setting up and operating an emergency shelter, Pasma noted. 

"As soon as we can have something in place, the better." 

Sohi said he's hopeful the province will come through with funding for winter shelter spaces and then longer-term housing solutions for more of Edmonton's homeless population.

PRIVATIZATION FIRE SALE

Alberta government unveils how it plans to divest social housing properties

Critics say divestment could not come at a worse time

Seniors and Housing Minister Josephine Pon has insisted her government isn't trying to privatize its social housing. (Chris Schwarz/Government of Alberta)

The provincial government plans to transfer or sell most of the affordable housing properties owned and managed by the Alberta Social Housing Corporation over the next decade.

On Friday, the seniors and housing ministry unveiled the Affordable Housing Management Framework, the strategy that will be used to determine whether the Alberta government keeps a property, transfers ownership to another operator, or sells it on the open market.

"Alberta will shift away from being a significant owner of housing stock and focus on regulating and funding affordable housing," the document states. 

The government describes the framework as a complementary document to Stronger Foundations, its 10-year affordable housing strategy that was released last year. 

The Alberta Social Housing Corporation, a Crown corporation, owns and operates 3,000 properties — or about 27,000 units.

The provincial government suggests it cannot afford to update the existing stock of affordable housing, nor meet the current need for certain types of housing. Transferring ownership would allow "more responsive and preventive maintenance over the long-term." 

Per the framework, each year for 10 years, the government would sell about 20 properties — that are vacant, or inappropriate for affordable housing — to generate revenue that would be used to renovate, expand or redevelop other affordable housing properties.

Other properties — assets that could be transformed into mixed-income developments as tenants move out — would be transferred to housing operators such as municipalities, non-profit groups and private companies.

The new operators could use surpluses and "leveraged equity" to renovate or maintain the properties, or build new ones, the framework says. An encumbrance or caveat will be placed on the land title, however, ensuring the property continues as affordable housing.

The Alberta government did not provide CBC News with an estimate of how many of the Crown corporation's assets would fall into the second category, prior to publication. Such a figure was not included in the document. 

Under the framework, the government still has to own some social housing, such as properties for people with disabilities, or if no one within a community wants to take over ownership. 

The government says no one will lose their homes during a transfer. Changes will be put on hold until tenants either move out, or are moved to another affordable housing unit.

The strategy and framework — which were enabled after the Alberta Housing Amendment Act passed last fall — will expand affordable housing in Alberta and create 13,000 new units by 2032, the province says.

When the Alberta Housing Amendment Act was tabled, Seniors and Housing Minister Josephine Pon insisted the government was not privatizing housing, but instead working in partnership with other organizations. 

Housing crisis

Critics say the province's decision to divest its social housing stock could not come at a worse time, as high inflation rates and surging rent have priced many people out of the housing they need. 

Building affordable housing through the Alberta Social Housing Corporation may be the best way to meet the urgent need for housing, said Bradley Lafortune, executive director of Public Interest Alberta, a non-partisan advocacy group.

"We're not seeing the market really take care of itself when it comes to housing affordability and adequacy," he said. 

"It's a real crisis for a lot of people and it is actually time for us to look very seriously about more public intervention." 

Marie Renaud, Opposition NDP critic for community and social services, is concerned about a lack of transparency throughout the process. 

The current problems of high rent, homelessness and the cost of living should compel the government to act more quickly, she said. 

"There doesn't seem to be urgency from this government to get shovels in the ground, build more housing stock, create more units," she said.

The framework report says transfers and sales of government housing assets will be reported in the annual reports for Alberta Seniors and Housing. 

$4M compost facility to be built near Ryley, east of Edmonton

Claystone Waste Ltd. plans to process up to 20,000 tonnes 

of organic waste a year


WASTE MANAGEMENT (WM) HAS IT'S COMMERCIAL DUMP IN RYLEY THE LARGER BLANK SQUARE LOWER LEFT
Claystone Waste Ltd. plans to build a compost facility by the landfill it runs near the village of Ryley. (Submitted by Corey Popick)

A municipally owned company that runs a large landfill in central Alberta plans to build a compost facility that could process up to 20,000 tonnes of organic waste per year. 

Claystone Waste Ltd. — formerly known as Beaver Municipal Solutions — is controlled by Beaver County, the towns of Tofield and Viking and the villages of Ryley and Holden. Like Epcor, the municipally owned corporation pays dividends to the communities when the business succeeds.

The corporation announced this week that it is beginning construction on a $4-million compost facility beside its landfill near the village of Ryley, which is about 85 kilometres east of Edmonton.

CEO Pierre Breau said the corporation wasn't able to secure the contracts to process organic waste from the City of Edmonton but would be interested in doing so in the future. 

In the meantime, he said, the facility could serve other municipalities and clients in the private sector, like shopping malls.

"They want to be able to show that they're doing green cart collections just because it's the right thing to do, and many of them say they're thrilled that we're opening up a compost facility," Breau told CBC News on Wednesday.

Claystone Waste Ltd. owns nine quarters of land near Ryley. The landfill occupies one quarter while the compost facility, which has been in the works since 2015, will be built on an adjacent one.

The company would make money by charging fees for dumping organic waste and it plans to give away the compost it creates.

Resident concerns

The west Edmonton composting company Cleanit Greenit Composting Systems recently lost its provincial licence and a court application for permission to keep running.

Some residents who live in neighbourhoods near that facility complained for years about odour.

Charles Young splits his time between Edmonton and his rural property, which is about 1,500 metres from Claystone Waste's landfill.

He said there is odour, traffic and noise from the landfill and he worries a compost facility could exacerbate those issues.

"I like composting — I'm thrilled with that — I just don't know if it's the right location," he said.

Young said he wants the facility to be continually monitored.

Tracey Carter-Janus, who lives about 200 metres from the landfill, said she was shocked to learn about the compost facility through CBC on Thursday and wished residents had been notified a year ago.

"It's devastating," she said.

Cater-Janus said she opposes the project and worries about effects on her property value.

A woman stands in front of a landfill fence
Tracey Carter-Janus lives close to Claystone Waste's landfill and opposes a plan to build a compost facility beside it. (Markus Janus)

Breau said the corporation has a plan to prevent odour, which typically results from a lack of oxygen.

Chief operating officer Corey Popick said organic material will be dumped on a concrete pad and screened so the company can determine how to manage every load.

He said each compost pile will be monitored with wireless temperature probes. The probes will send signals to a control system that determines how much air is blown through the piles. 

The company's fail-safe is using a bulking agent, like wood chips. These would add carbon, rigidity, room for air to circulate, and be able to absorb volatile organic compounds.

"The biggest thing we have to do, as the operator, is not have any off-site mitigations… odour, air control and temperature management are the keys that we will need to monitor and optimize at all times," Popick said.

Breau said the company is accountable to residents in the rural area.

"We'll know immediately if, for whatever reason, we screwed up someone's Saturday barbecue and we want to do everything possible not to do that," he said. 

The facility is scheduled to start operating by the summer of 2023.

 WEAR YOUR MASK

Respiratory illness outbreaks at 22 Edmonton schools: AHS


So far this school year, Alberta Health Services (AHS) sent letters out to parents and guardians of 22 schools in the Edmonton Zone. During the same time period, only 3 schools in the Calgary region.

Respiratory illness outbreaks have been declared at nearly two dozen Edmonton schools as of Wednesday.

So far this school year, Alberta Health Services (AHS) sent letters out to parents and guardians of 22 schools in the Edmonton Zone. During the same time period, three schools in the Calgary region were given the same designation.

According to a spokesperson, the letters were to inform “parents and guardians of a respiratory illness outbreak at their children’s school based on the threshold of 10 per cent total absenteeism, in line with past practice before COVID.”

AHS says respiratory illness outbreaks are not based on what virus is circulating, but rather on the symptoms.

RELATED: Albertans prepare for cold and flu season with COVID-19 in the mix – and no health restrictions

While it’s not uncommon to see a rise in respiracarlytory infections in the fall and winter, an expert in pediatric infectious diseases says there are other factors at play this year.

“There’s no reason for parents to be alarmed about the current situation,” said Dr. Joan Robinson, a professor at the University of Alberta.

Robinson says the factors are everything from a shift in behaviour to a shift in virus patterns.

“As we all know, COVID has never gone away,” Robinson told CityNews.

On top of adding an extra virus to the mix, other viruses common in children are appearing outside of their normal patterns.

“Now we have kids back at school with more viruses than we would normally see in September.”

Robinson points to influenza as an example. She says typically the flu spreads in Edmonton from December to February, but this year it hit later and there may still be cases circulating.

“The other thing that has changed is that parents are so much more aware of colds than we were in the past,” she added.

Robinson believes this is a good thing, but notes it could drive up absentee numbers.

She says the best thing parents can do is continue with lessons learned during the pandemic: good hand washing, staying home when sick and staying up to date on immunization.

“People can get flu vaccines in October,” said Robinson. “I would really encourage people to do that. Because it seems it is going to be a bad flu season.”

17 EPSB schools on outbreak

Seventeen of the schools on outbreak are in the Edmonton Public School Board:

  • Sweetgrass
  • Keheewin
  • Beacon Heights
  • Oliver
  • Virginia Park
  • Ekota
  • Belmont
  • King Edward
  • Clara Tyner
  • Elmwood
  • McKee
  • Duggan
  • Kirkness
  • York
  • James Gibbons
  • Belmead
  • Forest Heights

At a meeting Tuesday, the superintendent encouraged parents to continue using rapid COVID-19 tests, which are still offered for free at Alberta pharmacies, saying it helps them to know what virus is circulating in their schools.

“Moving forward, our Division will not be confirming specific schools on outbreak status because when a school is placed on outbreak status and removed, is a decision made by Alberta Health Services,” said EPSB in a statement.

AHS says symptomatic students should stay home from school.

“Students who are ill with respiratory symptoms should remain away from school until their symptoms have improved and they have been free of fever for 24 hours without the use of fever reducing medication, and they feel well enough to return to normal activities.”