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- Written by: NATIONAL AERONAUTICS AND SPACE ADMINISTRATION
Could lava tubes, caves, or subsurface habitats offer safe refuge for future astronauts on Mars? Scientists with NASA’s Curiosity Mars rover team are helping explore questions like that with the Radiation Assessment Detector, or RAD.
Unlike Earth, Mars doesn’t have a magnetic field to shield it from the high-energy particles whizzing around in space. That radiation can wreak havoc on human health, and it can seriously compromise the life support systems that Mars astronauts will depend on, as well.
Based on data from Curiosity’s RAD, researchers are finding that using natural materials such as the rock and sediment on Mars could offer some protection from this ever-present space radiation. In a paper published this summer in JGR Planets, they detailed how Curiosity remained parked against a cliff at a location called “Murray Buttes” from Sept. 9 to 21, 2016.
While there, RAD measured a 4% decrease in overall radiation. More significantly, the instrument detected a 7.5% decrease in neutral particle radiation, including neutrons that can penetrate rock and are especially harmful to human health. These numbers are statistically high enough to show it was due to Curiosity’s location at the foot of the cliff rather than normal changes in the background radiation.
“We’ve been waiting a long time for the right conditions to get these results, which are critical to ensure the accuracy of our computer models,” said Bent Ehresmann of the Southwest Research Institute, lead author of the recent paper. “At Murray Buttes, we finally had these conditions and the data to analyze this effect. We’re now looking for other locations where RAD can repeat these kinds of measurements.”
A space weather outpost on Mars
Most of the radiation measured by RAD comes from galactic cosmic rays — particles cast out by exploding stars and sent pinballing throughout the universe. This forms a carpet of “background radiation” that can pose health risks for humans.
Far more intense radiation sporadically comes from the Sun in the form of solar storms that throw massive arcs of ionized gas into interplanetary space.
“These structures twist in space, sometimes forming complex croissant-shaped flux tubes larger than Earth, driving shock waves that can efficiently energize particles,” said Jingnan Guo, who led a study, published in September in The Astronomy and Astrophysics Review, analyzing nine years of RAD data while she was at Germany’s Christian Albrecht University.
“Cosmic rays, solar radiation, solar storms — they are all components of space weather, and RAD is effectively a space weather outpost on the surface of Mars,” says Don Hassler of the Southwest Research Institute, principal investigator of the RAD instrument.
Solar storms occur with varying frequency based on 11-year cycles, with certain cycles bearing more frequent and energetic storms than others. Counterintuitively, the periods when solar activity is at its highest may be the safest time for future astronauts on Mars: The increased solar activity shields the Red Planet from cosmic rays by as much as 30 to 50%, compared to periods when solar activity is lower.
“It’s a trade-off,” Guo said. “These high-intensity periods reduce one source of radiation: the omnipresent, high-energy cosmic ray background radiation around Mars. But at the same time, astronauts will have to contend with intermittent, more intense radiation from solar storms.”
“The observations from RAD are key to developing the ability to predict and measure space weather, the Sun’s influence on Earth and other solar system bodies,” said Jim Spann, space weather lead for NASA’s Heliophysics Division. “As NASA plans for eventual human journeys to Mars, RAD serves as an outpost and part of the Heliophysics System Observatory — a fleet of 27 missions that investigates the Sun and its influence on space — whose research supports our understanding of and exploration of space.”
RAD has measured the impact of more than a dozen solar storms to date (five while traveling to Mars in 2012), although these past nine years have marked an especially weak period of solar activity.
Scientists are just now starting to see activity pick up as the Sun comes out of its slumber and becomes more active. In fact, RAD observed evidence of the first X-class flare of the new solar cycle on Oct. 28, 2021. X-class flares are the most intense category of solar flares, the largest of which can lead to power outages and communications blackouts on Earth.
“This is an exciting time for us, because one of the important objectives of RAD is to characterize the extremes of space weather. Events such as solar flares and storms are one type of space weather that happens most frequently during increased solar activity — the time we are approaching now,” Ehresmann said. More observations are needed to assess just how dangerous a really powerful solar storm would be to humans on the Martian surface.
RAD’s findings will feed into a much larger body of data being compiled for future crewed missions. In fact, NASA even equipped Curiosity’s counterpart, the Perseverance rover, with samples of spacesuit materials to assess how they hold up to radiation over time.
For more information visit https://mars.nasa.gov/msl/home/ and https://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/msl/index.html.
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- Written by: Elizabeth Larson
Following the open session of its regular Tuesday night meeting, the council went into a nearly hourlong closed session just before 6:45 p.m. to discuss the city’s lawsuit against opioid distributor AmerisourceBergen Drug Corp. as well as another potential case of litigation.
When the council emerged shortly after 7:35 p.m., City Attorney David Ruderman said the council had voted 5-0 to approve a settlement with McKesson, AmerisourceBergen, Cardinal Health and Janssen, also known as Johnson & Johnson, regarding the city’s lawsuit against them related to their contribution to the opioid epidemic.
The city reported that the settlement will provide up to $2.263 billion to California and its 431 eligible counties and cities.
On July 21, several states attorneys general, including California’s, entered into a $26 billion settlement with Cardinal, McKesson and AmerisourceBergen — the nation’s three major pharmaceutical distributors — and Johnson & Johnson, which manufactured and marketed opioids.
At that time, the California Attorney General’s Office said eligible cities and counties had until Jan. 2, 2022, to join the settlements.
City Manager Kevin Ingram confirmed to Lake County News that the council’s action was necessary to comply with the upcoming deadline.
“We do not have a good estimate to report yet on what Lakeport might receive,” said Ingram.
To determine amounts, he said there is a complicated formula based on the number of current litigants to approve the settlement and the number of other jurisdictions who are not currently litigants but would like to join as participants.
“Once this is known, likely at the end of January, we should have a better idea as to what the city will be entitled to,” Ingram said.
On Tuesday, Ruderman also announced a second council action from closed session, to initiate litigation against McKinsey and Co. for its role in furthering the opioid epidemic. That vote also was unanimous.
Earlier this year, McKinsey and Co., a global consulting firm, reached agreements with 49 states, along with several territories and the District of Columbia, to pay $600 million in settlements for its part in the opioid crisis.
Email Elizabeth Larson at
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- Written by: LAKE COUNTY NEWS REPORTS
The Big Valley Basin Draft Groundwater Sustainability Plan, or GSP, is now available for review during a formal 21-day public comment period that ends Dec. 3.
The GSP is being prepared pursuant to the requirements of the Sustainable Groundwater Management Act of 2014, or SGMA, which was amended in 2015.
Deputy Water Resources Director Marina Deligiannis told Lake County News that the Big Valley Draft GSP is the first and only draft GSP prepared for Lake County as required by SGMA.
She said Lake County has only one priority basin, Big Valley Basin (5-015), a “medium” priority basin as identified under California Department of Water Resources Bulletin 118.
Bulletin 118 is the state’s official publication on the occurrence and nature of groundwater in California. An updated version of the plan was just released this week.
In 2018, the state was considering the reclassification of the Upper Lake groundwater basin as a priority basin, but after efforts from the Lake County Water Resources Department, Department of Agriculture and Farm Bureau to update the irrigated acres in the basin, the state dropped the classification to “very low,” Deligiannis said.
On April 13 the county brought on Luhdorff & Scalmanini, Consulting Engineers, and Stantec Consulting Services to develop and implement the Big Valley GSP, she said.
“Since then, the team has been hard at work to develop the GSP with anticipation of GSP adoption by the SGMA deadline of Jan. 31, 2022,” Deligiannis said.
County officials offered the following suggestions for providing written comments.
• When submitting comments, please include the Draft GSP section number to which you are referring, along with any line numbers that relate to the content you are referencing. Each section is labeled, and you will find line numbers on the left side of each document.
• If you have comments on tables or figures in the Draft GSP, please provide the number and title for tables and figures you are referencing.
• If you have multiple comments, please organize them by section.
• Please also note, any comments submitted become part of the public record.
All comments on the Draft GSP must be submitted by Dec. 3 in one of three ways:
• By email to
• By postal mail: Big Valley Basin Draft GSP Comments, c/o Lake County Water Resources Department, 255 N. Forbes St., Room 309, Lakeport, CA 95453.
• In-person drop-off: Water Resources front desk, Big Valley Basin Draft GSP Comment, Attention: Lake County Water Resources Department, 255 N. Forbes St., Room 309, Lakeport, CA 95453.
If you have questions regarding the Draft GSP public comment period, or if you have any issues accessing the Draft GSP files, contact Water Resources at
You can find all GSP-related meetings, including meeting agendas, presentation materials, and recordings, in the archive here.
To receive updates about GSP development and future implementation, sign up for the Big Valley Basin GSP Interested Parties list here.
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- Written by: Lake Family Resource Center
The center, or LFRC, is now accepting donations at any branch of WestAmerica Bank. These donations go toward the purchase of food for residents of Lake County only and are much
appreciated by all who receive them.
This program is funded 100% from generous community donations and that support will help keep this program going year after year.
A gift to the program also allows donors to write a dedication to loved ones past and present, if desired.
The 2021 Holiday Food Program will be drive-thru only. Participants will receive one gift card per family to either Foods Etc. in Clearlake, or Bruno’s Shop Smart in Lakeport, depending on the home address of the recipient.
To sign up and receive a card you must bring photo identification and proof of physical address. All participants must wear masks, no exceptions.
Residents of Glenhaven, Clearlake Oaks, Spring Valley, Clearlake and Lower Lake, are invited to sign up and receive their gift card on Dec. 4 at the Burns Valley School parking lot from 10 a.m. until 400 households have applied.
Residents of Kelseyville, Finley, Lakeport, Upper Lake, Nice and Lucerne are invited to sign up and receive their gift card on Friday, Dec. 17, starting at 9 a.m. until 400 gift cards have been distributed. That sign-up event will be held in the Lake Family Resource Center parking lot at 896 Lakeport Boulevard, Lakeport.
For more information on how to receive a card or to donate please call 707-279-0563, Extension 135, or contact the center at www.facebook.com/LakeFRC.
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