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YUBNUB.NEWSBREAKING: Congress in Chaos as President Trump Cites National Emergency, Issues Ultimatum to Pass SAVE ACTPresident Trump just threw Congress into a frenzy! Immediately prior to TODAYS signing ceremony for a Housing Bill, he suddenly refused to sign the legislation into law! The reason, according to the0 Comments 0 Shares 28 Views -
The 7 best tablets of 2026: Comparing iPad, Samsung, and LenovoThe 7 best tablets of 2026: Comparing iPad, Samsung, Lenovo Yes, we love iPads, but there are great alternatives out there. By ...0 Comments 0 Shares 32 Views
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WWW.LIVESCIENCE.COMSatellites reveal Earth has a surprising symmetry in the way it reflects light and it might be tied to the El Nio cycleFor half a century, scientists have known that Earth's Northern and Southern hemispheres have almost the exact same albedo the amount of sunlight they reflect back to space. This is true even though the two hemispheres look very different, with the Northern Hemisphere having more land and the Southern Hemisphere having more ocean. Now, researchers have uncovered another surprising symmetry hiding in the data: Earth's Eastern and Western halves appear to reflect the same amount of sunlight as well, they reported in a study published June 3 in the journal Nature. They found that the dividing line lies along a great circle that wraps around the whole planet. It's made up of two longitude lines: the 27 degrees east and 153 degrees west meridians, which stretch from the North to South Pole through Eastern Europe, Turkey, Central Africa, Norway and Alaska."Given that the Earth is approximately spherical, it is unsurprising that one can divide it into two non-overlapping hemispheres that reflect equal amounts of sunlight," the authors write in the paper. But what is surprising, they write, is how closely matched they are. The probability of the hemispheres naturally reflecting sunlight within 0.01 watts per square meter of each other is less than 3%. If the symmetry is a fundamental part of Earths climate, this finding could help scientists test and possibly improve global climate models to predict future warming. Secret symmetryWhile the exact mechanism for the northern and southern symmetry has evaded scientists for decades, the study authors said they may have identified a reason behind their discovery. Since the dawn of the space race in the late 1950s, scientists have wanted to figure out Earth's albedo. "That was a really burning question back then," Norman Loeb, an atmospheric scientist who leads NASA's Clouds and the Earth's Radiant Energy System (CERES) project who wasn't involved in the new study, told Live Science. And around a half century ago, they figured it out with satellite imagery.Earth's planetary albedo is about 29%, according to the study. This means that about 0.29 of the solar radiation that hits Earth is reflected back into space. In contrast, a perfect mirror would have an albedo of 1, as it would reflect back 100% of the light that hit it. Other analyses showed that the Northern Hemisphere's albedo was the same as the Southern Hemisphere's, although recent research co-authored by Loeb suggests that the Northern Hemisphere is now absorbing more light than the Southern, likely because of melting snow and ice, declining air pollution, and rising water vapor.This newfound imbalance aside, Zhang, a researcher at the Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences at the University of Colorado Boulder, and colleagues wondered if other symmetry pairs had been overlooked or if they were considered too trivial to investigate, Zhang wrote in a blog. To identify the symmetry, Zhang and his colleagues analyzed 25 years of satellite observations from 2001 to 2025 collected by the CERES program, which uses satellites to measure Earths energy budget. Instruments on these satellites measure how much reflected sunlight bounces back into space, as well as how much heat is emitted from Earth Earth's albedo is shaped by many factors; clouds, oceans, snow, ice and land each reflect a different amount of sunlight. This reflection influences Earth's climate, so understanding it is key to an accurate understanding of climate in the future. After running the first analysis, Zhang wrote he was both "absolutely amazed" and skeptical at what he saw, but three features stood out. First the symmetry is unique to the meridian at 27 east longitude. If you shift the line to any other longitude, the symmetry disappears. Second, it's consistent across a 25-year dataset. Lastly, there is "triple symmetry": The two hemispheres contain similar proportions of ice-free ocean, experience similar cloud effects, and reflect similar amounts of sunlight under clear skies. El Nio connectionZhang and his authors hypothesize the East-West symmetry is tied to the El Nio-Southern Oscillation (ENSO), a recurring climate pattern that shifts ocean temperatures and weather around the globe. When they examined the slight changes in the exact longitude of this symmetry, they found correlation with the ENSO record. In the tropics, a giant loop of air called the Walker circulation acts like a big conveyor belt. Warm, moist air rises in the West, travels eastward high in the atmosphere, and then cools and sinks, before blowing back westward at the surface. This circulation acts as the albedo adjustment mechanism, according to the study. The Walker circulation helps drive the difference between El Nio and La Nia, recurring climate patterns, based on weaker or stronger Pacific trade winds, respectively.During La Nia years, the circulation is stronger, causing warmer water and so the Eastern Hemisphere has more clouds, and thus reflects slightly more sunlight. During El Nio, the circulation weakens, warm water spreads across the Pacific and so the Western Hemisphere reflects more. Over many years, the swings average out, helping to keep the long-term east-west symmetry centered near 27 degrees east.The imaginary line runs along the 27 degrees east and 153 degrees west meridians. (Image credit: PeterHermesFurian via Getty Images)Related storiesEl Nio is officially here, and will be among the strongest ever recorded, NOAA announcesAntarctica could warm 1.4 times faster than the rest of the Southern Hemisphere in the coming decades, study findsPollution may fuel depression, anxiety and other mental health problems, emerging research suggests"Nature throws surprises at us, so this is a curious surprise that this one longitude seems to divide the globe up very symmetrically," Loeb said. "It's really interesting that there's this single point longitude at 27 degrees."Since the models are designed to simulate Earth's interactions among the atmosphere, oceans, lands, crust and other parts, the new symmetry offers another way to test if current climate models are accurate. "I think the short-term benefit of this type of discovery is that it's a further test of climate models," Loeb noted.But when the scientists tested how the current models predicted new symmetry, "the models didn't do very well," Loeb said. "They didn't produce this East-West symmetry." This problem may be "contributing to the persistent uncertainty in climate projections," according to the study.How much do you know about our blue planet? Test your terran knowledge with our Earth quiz!0 Comments 0 Shares 29 Views -
WWW.DUALSHOCKERS.COM10 PS1 JRPGs Where the World Feels Bigger the More You Learn About ItAh, the PS1. You could argue that there has never been a console to unleash so many iconic franchises upon the world, and you would have a good argument. It was the first console to make worlds feel real and big, and that was never more apparent than in the JRPG world.0 Comments 0 Shares 30 Views -
WWW.THEKITCHN.COMWe Found 37 Kitchen Deals This Week That Are Even Better Than (or Just as Good as) Prime DaySee what to buy at Wayfair, KitchenAid, and Le Creuset.READ MORE...0 Comments 0 Shares 28 Views
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WWW.THEKITCHN.COMMy Honest Review of All-Clad's Premiere Cookware Lines for 2026Spoiler: Theyre all great.READ MORE...0 Comments 0 Shares 28 Views
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TECHCRUNCH.COMCompanies are scrambling to stop employees from maxing out AI budgets with small tasksThe tokenmaxxing era was brief. We now appear to be entering the era of token rationing.0 Comments 0 Shares 28 Views