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News from the biggest beat in the cosmos, going out 13.7 billion light-years and taking in everything from astronomy to zoology. Join the adventure!
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  • 47
    minutes
    ago
    from:msnbc.com

    Volcanic eruptions may have sparked Little Ice Age

    Research suggests tiny aerosols were spewed, reflecting solar radiation and cooling planet

    Leave your comment

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    Explore related topics: science, livescience, technology-science
  • 1
    hour
    ago

    Ocean motion could produce 9 percent of U.S. electricity

    Georgia Institute of Technology / DOE

    A map generated by Georgia Tech's tidal energy resource database shows mean current speed of tidal streams.

    By John Roach

    Next-generation technologies that harvest electricity from ocean waves and tides sloshing along the U.S. coasts could provide about 9 percent of the nation's demand by 2030, according to a pair of recent studies.

    The findings, which include maps of these ocean energy resources, should help guide companies looking to develop them.

    "We have believed for a long time that the resource was significant and these assessments add a tremendous level of confidence what that potential is," Mike Reed, water power team lead with the U.S. Department of Energy's Wind and Water Program told me Monday. 

    Today, about 6 percent of the nation's electricity comes from traditional hydropower projects, such as the Grand Coulee Dam, that direct the flow of the river through turbines to generate power.

    Since such dams plug up rivers and make it difficult for migrating fish species such as salmon to reach their spawning grounds, they have lost favor in recent years. 

    Looking forward, energy developers see promise in technologies that capture the energy in waves and tides off the coasts. 

    Designs to do this range from buoys that harness the up-and-down motion of passing waves to turbines on the ocean floor that are spun by the ebb and flow of the tides.

    The studies released earlier this month from the U.S. Department of Energy could help nudge along the development and deployment of these technologies by showing the resource is there to be captured.

    Motion of the ocean
    The U.S. uses about 4,000 terawatt hours of electricity per year. The maximum theoretical electric generation that could be produced from waves and tides is approximately 1,420 terawatt hours per year, the assessments found.

    "We are never suggesting that all of that would be captured," Hoyt Battey, team lead for water power market acceleration and deployment with the DOE Wind and Water Program, told me. 

    But based on the resource assessments and current understanding of what it will take to scale up and deploy the technology, wave and tidal power could be upwards of 9 percent by 2030.

    The DOE has set a goal that water power, including traditional hydroelectricity, total 15 percent of the nation's supply by 2030.

    To measure the wave resource, the DOE worked with the Electric Power Research Institute and Virginia Tech to develop a model that accurately predicted past wave regimes and used it predict future wave climate.

    Those predictions are converted into wave power densities. As surfers know, waves from one day to the next are not the same, but they know what beaches tend to have the best waves when conditions are right, Reed noted.

    Like surfers trying to figure out where and when to vacation, utility owners and operators can use the new resource data to figure out where the best reliable waves are to put their converters.

    This knowledge, combined with reliable forecasts out several days on wave heights, will allow utilities to balance their loads with other sources such as a natural gas fired power plant.

    "Wave energy is predictable and forecastable," he said. "If you are a utility operator or utility owner, that predictability adds value."

    Tides are even more predictable, noted Battey. "You know down to the second years ahead of time what the tidal regime will be," he said.

    The tidal resource maps were created by researchers at Georgia Tech and are available online.

    Realizing the potential
    Resource assessments such as these, as well as others mapping potential geothermal, solar and wind resources, can nudge development of green energy technologies.

    But a key word in such assessments is "potential." As long as generating electricity from coal, oil, and natural gas remains cheap and politically salable, wave and tidal resources will struggle to compete.

    Reed takes the long view. Although wave and tidal energy projects today are expensive, he said, their costs should fall as the technology is improved and scaled up over the next few decades.

    "A good comparison would be to go back 15 to 20 years in the wind and solar industry and see how their costs have dramatically come down," he said.

    While wind and solar still struggle to compete with traditional sources today, the falling prices of the technologies and abundance of the resources are beginning to make them attractive.

    Given the size of the wave and tidal resource identified, Reed said there's plenty of room for wave and tidal energy developers to get their feet wet and begin to drive down costs.

    More on wave and tidal energy:

    • $28 billion in wave energy projects proposed
    • IBM sees energy, money in motion of the ocean
    • Here's an idea: Floating webs that capture sun, wave power
    • Oregon coast could be wave energy hub
    • Maine offers testbed for power from tides

    John Roach is a contributing writer for msnbc.com. To learn more about him, check out his website. For more of our Future of Technology series, watch the featured video below.

     

    Next-gen nuclear plants could provide carbon-free energy, but the painfully slow process of approving better, safer reactors — not to mention real anxiety over meltdowns and waste — threaten to derail projects before they can be built.

     

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    Explore related topics: energy, power, green, science, wave, electricity, tide, innovation, featured
  • 3
    hours
    ago
    from:msnbc.com

    Pythons apparently wiping out Everglades mammals

    Scientists say pet snakes are bringing on an environmental nightmare in Florida

    125 comments, including:

    A $100 no questions asked, no permit required, bounty on pythons ought to go a long way toward controlling them. Bring a python head in and get your cash. The skin makes great handbags and boots, and the meat is tasty. At that rate, $10 million buys 100,000. Pretty cheap to save an entire ecosystem.

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  • 3
    hours
    ago
    from:msnbc.com

    Pythons apparently wiping out Everglades mammals

    1 comment, including:

    Talk about putting the squeeze on mother nature!! Unfortunately it sounds like the situation has gone past the point of being able to control the snake population. Carelessness and irresponsibility have created a mess, all in the name of being "cool" to own an exotic pet.

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  • 4
    hours
    ago
    from:msnbc.com

    Earth's 'missing energy' never lost after all, scientists find

    'A more rigorous analysis' shows that earlier study wasn't supported by the data

    1 comment, including:

    I saw no mention of the exothermic additions of deep ocean vents. What else did they miss? No doubt it is an improvement in the approximation but they loose me everytime when they try to sell this hooya as empirical evidence / the last word. There is so much we DO NOT KNOW.

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    Explore related topics: science, technology-science, ouramazingplanet
  • 6
    hours
    ago
    from:msnbc.com

    Whale-dolphin hybrid has baby wholphin

    Calf jumbo-sized compared to purebred dolphins

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  • 6
    hours
    ago
    from:msnbc.com

    'Unicorn' deer is found in Italian preserve

    1-year-old Roe 'Unicorn' was born in captivity in research center's park

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  • 7
    hours
    ago

    Peter Rosen / Rosenmedia.se

    Peter Rosen and about 100 other skywatchers congregated at the Aurora Sky Station in Sweden's Abisko National Park on Saturday. Check out Rosen's website.

    Afterglow from the solar storm

    By Alan Boyle

    Did you feel that magnetic breeze? Solar weather trackers say a "pulse" in the solar wind of electrically charged particles swept past monitoring satellites today, in the wake of last Friday's X-class solar flare and coronal mass ejection. But the main force of the blast was not pointing toward Earth, and thus no big impact on our planet's magnetic field is expected.

    "Another effect of Friday's eruption, a solar radiation storm, continues its leisurely decay and is nearing the end of the event," the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's Solar Weather Prediction Center reported on its website.

    The most significant effect of the past week's solar storming has been an upswing in spectacular pictures of the northern lights, as seen from Scandinavia and other high-latitude locales. Swedish photographer Peter Rosen got some great pictures over the weekend.

    "I live in Abisko, next to the Aurora Sky Station — a great place to see northern lights," Rosen told me in an email. "The Aurora Sky Station has become a very nice tourist attraction. ... I was there last Saturday and almost 100 people from all over the world were on the mountain. We had a great aurora from 9 p.m. to 12:30 due to another geomagnetic storm."

    For more of the latest and greatest pictures of the northern lights, check out the selection on Rosen's website, Rosenmedia.se, as well as on SpaceWeather.com. Stay tuned for further auroral updates as the sun's 11-year activity cycle heads toward an expected peak in 2013.

    More auroral glories:

    • Planet looks back at northern lights
    • Auroras spark awe across the north
    • Northern lights go way, way south
    • Speed through Lapland's lights
    • Beautiful blasts from solar storms
    • Get a video view of Canada's aurora
    • Slideshow: The best of the northern lights
    • Cosmic Log's auroral archive

    Alan Boyle is msnbc.com's science editor. Connect with the Cosmic Log community by "liking" the log's Facebook page, following @b0yle on Twitter or adding Cosmic Log's Google+ page to your circle. You can also check out "The Case for Pluto," my book about the controversial dwarf planet and the search for other worlds.

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    Explore related topics: sweden, images, featured, aurora, cosmic-log, tech-science, lspace
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  • 8
    hours
    ago
    from:msnbc.com

    Scientists test sick Alaska seals for radiation

    Experts not sure if woes, from hair loss to bloody lesions, tied to Fukushima nuclear plant

    1 comment, including:

    I WROTE TO DR. KELLEY WHO IS THE PERSON IN CHARGE OF TESTING THE RINGED SEAL SAMPLES. HERE ARE THE EMAILS. Dear Dr. Kelley;

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    Explore related topics: technology-science, science
  • 8
    hours
    ago
    from:msnbc.com

    Don't worry! Friday the 13th superstitions explained

    There are reasons we knock on wood, avoid black cats and cross our fingers on this day

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    Explore related topics: technology-science, science, livescience
  • 9
    hours
    ago
    from:msnbc.com

    First Michigan wolverine spotted in 200 years

    Last confirmed sightings were by fur traders in early 1800s

    Leave your comment

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  • 10
    hours
    ago
    from:msnbc.com

    Seven smashing atom-smashers

    Cutting-edge science preceded The Large Hadron Collider

    Leave your comment

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John Roach

John Roach is a contributing writer for msnbc.com. From climate change and mass extinctions to human evolution and deep space, his writing explores life on Earth and its place in the universe. He was a staff writer at the Environmental News Network for several years and has contributed to National Geographic News for more than a decade.

Alan Boyle

Science editor at msnbc.com, author of "The Case for Pluto," winner of the National Academies Communication Award for Cosmic Log in 2008. Alan Boyle covers the physical sciences, anthropology, technological innovation and space science and exploration for msnbc.com. Check out Cosmic Log's archives by following the links below, and see Boyle's full biography at http://bit.ly/boyle-bio

Alan Boyle Blogroll

  • Bad Astronomy
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  • Popular Science
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  • NASAEngineer.com
  • EurekAlert
  • Nature: The Great Beyond
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The Case for Pluto
Alan Boyle's first book tells the story of Pluto's ups and downs as well as the discoveries of other dwarf planets in our own solar system and even more alien worlds beyond. Buy "The Case for Pluto" ...

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