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Clearlake Animal Control: ‘Hulk,’ ‘Archie’ and the dogs

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Written by: Elizabeth Larson
Published: 03 August 2024
CLEARLAKE, Calif. — Clearlake Animal Control has more new dogs among those waiting to be adopted this week.

The Clearlake Animal Control website lists 43 adoptable dogs.

"Hulk." Photo courtesy of Clearlake Animal Control.

The available dogs include “Hulk,” a male American pit bull terrier mix with a short brown coat.

There is also “Archie,” a 7-month-old Carolina dog mix puppy with a tan and white coat.

Staff said he is full of energy and loves to play with other dogs in the pool and the sprinkler. Archie also likes to snuggle and give kisses, take walks and play with his toys.

"Archie." Photo courtesy of Clearlake Animal Control.

The shelter is located at 6820 Old Highway 53. It’s open from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Tuesday through Saturday.

For more information, call the shelter at 707-762-6227, email This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it., visit Clearlake Animal Control on Facebook or on the city’s website.

This week’s adoptable dogs are featured below.

Email Elizabeth Larson at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.. Follow her on Twitter, @ERLarson, or Lake County News, @LakeCoNews.

Space News: A new ‘guest star’ will appear in the sky in 2024 − a space scientist explains how nova events work and where to look

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Written by: Vahe Peroomian, USC Dornsife College of Letters, Arts and Sciences
Published: 03 August 2024

 


The stars aren’t fixed and unchanging, unlike what many ancient people thought. Once in a while, a star appears where there wasn’t one before, and then it fades away in a matter of days or weeks.

The earliest record of such a “guest star,” named so by ancient Chinese astronomers, is a star that suddenly appeared in skies around the world on July 4, 1054. It quickly brightened, becoming visible even during the day for the next 23 days.

Astronomers in Japan, China and the Middle East observed this event, as did the Anasazi in what is now New Mexico.

In the second half of 2024, a nova explosion in the star system called T Coronae Borealis, or T CrB, will once again be visible to people on Earth. T CrB will appear 1,500 times brighter than usual, but it won’t be as spectacular as the event in 1054.

A medieval illustration of a man looking at and pointing at a star bright in the sky over a town.
Art depicts the Roman Emperor Henry III viewing the supernova explosion of 1054.

I am a space scientist with a passion for teaching physics and astronomy. I love photographing the night sky and astronomical events, including eclipses, meteor showers and once-in-a-lifetime astronomical events such as the T CrB nova. T CrB will become, at best, the 50th brightest star in the night sky – brighter than only half the stars in the Big Dipper. It might take some effort to find, but if you have the time, you’ll witness a rare event.

What is a nova?

In 1572, the famous Danish astronomer Tycho Brahe observed a new star in the constellation Cassiopeia. After reporting the event in his work “De Nova Stella,” or “On the New Star,” astronomers came to associate the word nova with stellar explosions.

Stars, regardless of size, spend 90% of their lives fusing hydrogen into helium in their cores. How a star’s life ends, though, depends on the mass of the star. Very massive stars – those more than eight times the mass of our Sun – explode in dramatic supernova explosions, like the ones people observed in 1054 and 1572.

In lower mass stars, including our Sun, once the hydrogen in the core is exhausted, the star expands into what astronomers call a red giant. The red giant is hundreds of times its original size and more unstable. Eventually, all that is left is a white dwarf – an Earth-sized remnant made up of carbon and oxygen. White dwarves are a hundred thousand times denser than diamond. Unless they’re part of a binary star system, where two stars orbit each other, they slowly fade in brightness over billions of years and eventually disappear from sight.

T CrB is a binary star system – it’s made up of a red giant and a white dwarf, which orbit each other every 228 days at about half the distance between Earth and the Sun. The red giant is nearing the end of its life, so it has expanded dramatically, and it’s feeding material into a rotating disk of matter called an accretion disk, which surrounds the white dwarf.

Matter from the accretion disk, which is made mostly of hydrogen, spirals in and slowly accumulates on the surface of the white dwarf. Over time, this blanket of hydrogen becomes thicker and denser, until its temperature exceeds 18 million degrees Fahrenheit (10 million degrees Celsius).

A nova is a runaway thermonuclear reaction similar to the detonation of a hydrogen bomb. Once the accretion disk gets hot enough, a nova occurs where the hydrogen ignites, gets blown outward and emits bright light.

When will it occur?

Astronomers know of 10 recurrent novae – stars that have undergone nova explosions more than once. T CrB is the most famous of these. It erupts on average every 80 years.

Because T CrB is 2,630 light-years from Earth, it takes light 2,630 years to travel the distance from T CrB to Earth. The nova we will see later this year occurred over 2,000 years ago, but its light will be just reaching us later this year.

The accretion of hydrogen on the surface of the white dwarf is like sand in an 80-year hourglass. Each time a nova occurs and the hydrogen ignites, the white dwarf itself is unaffected, but the surface of the white dwarf is wiped clean of hydrogen. Soon after, hydrogen begins accreting on the surface of the white dwarf again: The hourglass flips, and the 80-year countdown to the next nova begins anew.

Careful observations during its past two novae in 1866 and 1946 showed that T CrB became slightly brighter about 10 years before the nova was visible from Earth. Then, it briefly dimmed. Although scientists aren’t sure what causes these brightness changes, this pattern has repeated, with a brightening in 2015 and a dimming in March 2023.

Based on these observations, scientists predict the nova will be visible to us sometime in 2024.

How bright will it be?

Astronomers use a magnitude system first devised by Hipparchus of Nicaea more than 2,100 years ago to classify the brightness of stars. In this system, a difference of 5 in magnitude signifies a change by a factor of 100 in brightness. The smaller the magnitude, the brighter the star.

In dark skies, the human eye can see stars as dim as magnitude 6. Ordinarily, the visible light we receive from T CrB comes entirely from its red giant, a magnitude 10 star barely visible with binoculars.

During the nova event, the white dwarf’s exploding hydrogen envelope will brighten to a magnitude 2 or 3. It will briefly become the brightest star in its home constellation, Corona Borealis. This maximum brightness will last only several hours, and T CrB will fade from visibility with the naked eye in a matter of days.

A map showing constellations, with T CrB circled above the bright star Arcturus.
What the Los Angeles sky will look like on, as an example, Aug. 15, 2024, at 10 p.m. local time. The view will be very similar across the U.S., but T CrB will get closer and closer to the horizon and will be halfway between where it’s shown here and the horizon by early September. By early October, it will be right on the horizon. Vahé Peroomian/Stellarium

Where to look

Corona Borealis is not a prominent constellation. It’s nestled above Bootes and to the west of Ursa Major, home to the Big Dipper, in northern skies.

To locate the constellation, look due west and find Arcturus, the brightest star in that region of the sky. Then look about halfway between the horizon and zenith – the point directly above you – at 10 p.m. local time in North America.

Corona Borealis is approximately 20 degrees above Arcturus. That’s about the span of one hand, from the tip of the thumb to the tip of the pinky, at arm’s length. At its brightest, T CrB will be brighter than all the stars in Corona Borealis, but not as bright as Arcturus.

To find Corona Borealis, locate Arcturus, and then look about a handspan above.

You can also use an interactive star chart such as Stellarium, or one of the many apps available for smartphones, to locate the constellation. Familiarizing yourself with the stars in this region of the sky before the nova occurs will help identify the new star once T CrB brightens.

Although T CrB is too far from Earth for this event to rival the supernova of 1054, it is nevertheless an opportunity to observe a rare astronomical event with your own eyes. For many of us, this will be a once-in-a-lifetime event.

For children, however, this event could ignite a passion in astronomy. Eighty years in the future, they may look forward to observing it once again.The Conversation

Vahe Peroomian, Professor of Physics and Astronomy, USC Dornsife College of Letters, Arts and Sciences

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

Lake County Watershed Protection District to host Clear Lake Integrated Science Symposium Aug. 15-16

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Written by: Lake County News reports
Published: 02 August 2024
LAKE COUNTY, Calif. — The Clear Lake watershed will be the focus of an upcoming science seminar.

The Clear Lake Integrated Science Symposium, or CLISS 2024, will be the first scientific conference to focus on the Clear Lake watershed in more than two and a half decades.

The last dedicated Clear Lake conference in Lake County occurred in 1998.

CLISS 2024 will take place Aug. 15 and 16 at the Robinson Rancheria Conference Center, and feature researchers and practitioners from federal, state, county, and tribal agencies and nonprofit organizations.

This historic symposium will cover the latest developments in water quality monitoring, lake and lakebed management, and conservation and restoration efforts in the Clear Lake Watershed.

Attendees will gain unique insights into ongoing scientific research on issues that deeply concern all county residents: the risks associated with hazardous algal (cyanobacteria) blooms, changes to Clear Lake fish populations, how to get waterway projects approved through local and state permitting processes, the potential for volcanic eruptions, and mitigation strategies for Clear Lake.

While in-person attendance is limited to 250 participants, all sessions will be video-recorded and made available for future viewing on the Lake County Water Resources Department’s YouTube channel. Some portions will likewise be available for remote Zoom Webinar access.

Geneva Thompson, deputy secretary for tribal affairs at the California Natural Resources Agency, will kick off the event with a keynote address.

Thursday morning’s panel sessions will focus on an overview of $13 million in funding allocated by the Blue Ribbon Committee for the Rehabilitation of Clear Lake since 2021 for projects ranging from watershed, lake, and mercury modeling to carp management and environmental education.

Friday morning panels will feature local and state experts discussing fish and waterfowl population trends and changes in Clear Lake, and efforts to prevent and mitigate the negative effects of invasive species like goldfish, invasive mussels, and creeping yellow water primrose.

During afternoon sessions held simultaneously at the Robinson Rancheria Conference Center and the Habematolel Meeting Hall in Upper Lake, scientists and agency staff will cover in-lake, lakeside, landscape and waterway improvement and restoration projects (including “good fire,” or cultural burning), environmental permitting, local geology and stewardship efforts, Clear Lake water quality monitoring and modeling of lake parameters including nutrient loads, depths and currents.

To enhance public engagement with scientists, the symposium is also offering evening programming: a poster session, mixer and reception on Thursday in the Robinson Rancheria Conference Center, the debut of a new documentary film, “Big Lake, Big Science,” and a Science Slam on Friday night at the Soper Reese Theater in downtown Lakeport.

Friday evening’s activities at the Soper Reese Theater are open to families. Accommodations are available for attendees with access and functional needs.

Thanks to over a dozen sponsors including, but not limited to, the Lake County Watershed Protection District, the county of Lake, Yolo County Flood Control and Water Conservation District, Westside Sac Integrated Water Management Plan Committee and the software platform Ex Ordo. Symposium attendance is free with pre-registration on EventBrite.

For any inquiries regarding this update, please contact the Water Resources Department at 707-263-2344 or email at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.v.

For more information, please visit the event website: https://www.lakecountyca.gov/1662/Clear-Lake-Integrated-Science-Symposium-.

Links to registration, facebook / social media pages, and Volunteer Registration are available here: https://www.lakecountyca.gov/1662/Clear-Lake-Integrated-Science-Symposium-.

Senate Republicans block tax relief bill for wildfire victims

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Written by: Lake County News reports
Published: 02 August 2024
On Thursday, Senate Republicans blocked the consideration and passage of the Tax Relief for American Families and Workers Act, or H.R. 7024, a bipartisan, comprehensive tax legislation containing Rep. Mike Thompson’s disaster tax relief legislation for wildfire victims.

“In the years since the devastating PG&E wildfires in our community, I haven’t met a single person on either side of the aisle who believes it’s right to tax victims on the settlement money meant to help them rebuild their lives. Survivors have been through enough,” said Thompson (CA-04), Ranking Member of the House Ways & Means Subcommittee on Tax.

“While no victim can ever be made truly whole after losing loved ones and cherished belongings, Congress has a responsibility to ensure disaster victims are not taxed on their settlements and to retroactively provide relief for those who have already been unfairly forced to pay. That’s why I co-led an historic petition in the House of Representatives this Spring to force a House vote on my disaster tax relief legislation for a second time and pressure the Senate to act,” Thompson said.

He added, “I’m deeply disappointed that all but three Senate Republicans voted to block the consideration and passage of the bipartisan, comprehensive tax legislation containing my disaster tax relief bill today. I remain determined to deliver this relief to fire survivors and I will never quit working to make this relief a reality. It’s time Senate Republicans step up and help pass my standalone disaster tax bill for victims.”

The bipartisan, comprehensive tax legislation voted on Thursday by the Senate contains Rep. Thompson’s disaster tax relief legislation and passed in the House on Jan. 31 with a strong bipartisan vote of 357 to 70.

In addition to the bipartisan, comprehensive tax legislation, Rep. Thompson co-led an effort with Rep. Greg Steube (FL-17) in May to successfully advance a discharge petition which forced House Speaker Mike Johnson to bring their standalone disaster tax relief legislation, H.R. 5863, the Federal Disaster Tax Relief Act, to the House floor for a vote.

The historic advancement of Rep Thompson and Rep. Steube’s petition marked only the third time a House discharge petition has succeeded in the 21st Century. H.R. 5863 passed the House on May 22 with a strong bipartisan vote of 382 to 7. The Senate has yet to consider or vote on this legislation.

Rep. Thompson has urged Senate leaders Schumer, McConnell, Wyden and Crapo to bring the Federal Disaster Tax Relief Act up for a vote immediately.
  1. California Wildlife Officer Academy graduates largest class in history; pins badges on 54 new wildlife officers
  2. Recent U.S. Forest Service upgrades to the Redding Air Attack Base provide critical services to wildfires across the Western U.S.
  3. Lake County Code Enforcement officer arrested for bribery, extortion and grand theft
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