Scientists plan to study solar eclipse with planes and NASA probe



For the millions of people across North America who will be treated to a total solar eclipse on April 8, it will be spectacular show — a chance to see the moon fully obscure the sun’s face.

But for scientists, it is a rare opportunity to study Earth, the moon and the sun “in entirely different ways than we usually do,” said Pam Melroy, NASA’s deputy administrator.

One of the agency’s main priorities will be to observe the sun’s outer atmosphere, or the corona, which normally can’t be seen because the star is too bright. During a total solar eclipse, the corona comes into view as faint wisps around a glowing halo when the moon blocks light from the sun’s surface.

“Things are happening with the corona that we don’t fully understand, and the eclipse gives us a unique opportunity to collect data that may give insights into the future of our star,” Melroy said in a news briefing last week.

Scientists are interested in the corona because it plays a key role in transferring heat and energy into the solar wind, the constant stream of charged particles released from the sun’s outer atmosphere. The solar wind ebbs and flows, occasionally shooting high-powered solar flares into space. These can hit Earth with electromagnetic radiation, which can cause radio blackouts and knock out power grids.

Amir Caspi, a solar astrophysicist at the Southwest Research Institute in Boulder, Colorado, has an instrument installed in the nose of a WB-57 aircraft that will study the sun’s atmosphere as the plane chases the eclipse.

It’s a golden opportunity, he said, since even the special telescopes that can block out a star’s light, known as coronagraphs, have limitations.

“A total solar eclipse is like nature’s perfect coronagraph,” he said. “The moon comes between us and the sun, and it’s exactly the right size in the sky to block out the disc of the sun but not too much more.”

Caspi will focus on trying to understand the origin of the solar wind. He also hopes to gather clues about a long-standing mystery: why the corona is millions of degrees hotter than the surface of the sun.

He pioneered this method of imaging the sun’s corona in 2017, during the last total solar eclipse to cross the continental U.S.

“We didn’t know what we would get,” he said. “It was nail-biting for quite some time, and then we got amazing data. I could see it coming down off the live satellite feed.”

The WB-57 plane can fly at an altitude of 60,000 feet, well above any clouds and high enough that Earth’s atmosphere won’t interfere as much with the observations.

Many researchers plan to gather data about the sun’s atmosphere from other vantage points during the eclipse, including from space.

Several spacecraft, including NASA’s Parker Solar Probe, will have their eyes trained on the sun throughout the celestial event. The probe launched in 2018, so it wasn’t available to study the 2017 solar eclipse.

In 2021, the Parker probe became the first spacecraft to fly through the corona, and it has since flown more than a dozen close approaches to “touch” the sun. Due to the timing of its orbit, the probe will not be on a close encounter on April 8. But it will be near enough to the sun to measure and image solar wind as the charged particles stream by, according to Nour Raouafi, the Parker Solar Probe project scientist and an astrophysicist at the Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Laboratory.

Additionally, a spacecraft from the European Space Agency, known as Solar Orbiter, will be circling almost directly above the Parker Solar Probe at the time of the eclipse. Together, the observatories will tag-team to capture details of the sun’s atmosphere and the solar wind.

“It’s one of the rare occasions that these two spacecraft come so close together,” Raouafi said. “So, we will have a lot of synergies between them, in between all the observation we will do during the eclipse from Earth, which is something totally, totally unprecedented.”

The sun has been ramping up toward a peak in its roughly 11-year cycle of activity, expected in 2025. That means the Parker Solar Probe will have a front-row seat should any eruptions belch from the sun.

There are no guarantees that such outbursts will happen during the eclipse, but Raouafi said measurements of the solar wind from space will still be crucial to understanding the effects of the sun’s activity on Earth.

“These are the drivers of space weather, and the probe is probably the best tool we have out there, the best spacecraft mission we have out there, to help us understand that,” he said. “And the way to do it? Let’s hope for the sun to give us the biggest show it can produce.”



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Chinese investigators arrive in Pakistan to probe suicide attack that killed 5 of its nationals


ISLAMABAD (AP) — A team of Chinese investigators arrived in Pakistan on Friday to join a probe into a suicide attack that killed five of its nationals earlier this week, officials said, as Pakistan continued its own investigations into the attack.

The slain Chinese engineers and workers were heading on Tuesday to the Dasu Dam, the biggest hydropower project in northwest Pakistan, when a suicide bomber rammed his explosives-laden car into their vehicle.

A Pakistani driver was also killed in Tuesday’s attack in Shangla, a district in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province. Beijing condemned the attack and asked Pakistan to conduct a detailed investigation and ensure protection of thousands of its nationals who work on the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor.

According to a government statement, Interior Minister Mohsin Naqvi on Friday briefed the Chinese investigators about Pakistan’s investigations into the attack.

Two days earlier, Pakistani officials shared with the Chinese embassy the preliminary findings of their investigation into the attack, for which so far no group has claimed responsibility.

Chinese working on CPEC-related projects have been targeted in Pakistan in recent years.

In July 2021, at least 13 people, including nine Chinese nationals, were killed when a suicide bomber detonated the explosives in his vehicle near a bus carrying Chinese and Pakistani engineers and laborers, prompting Chinese companies to suspend work for a time.



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House Oversight Chairman invites Biden to testify in impeachment probe



The Republican chairman of the House Oversight panel on Thursday formally invited President Joe Biden to testify before his committee as a part of its impeachment probe.

Rep. James Comer, R-Ky., who leads the committee, proposed in a letter Thursday that Biden appear on April 16, and cited testimony at a public hearing last week from former business associates of Hunter Biden, Tony Bobulinski and Jason Galanis, as well as former Ukrainian businessman Lev Parnas.

The proposed testimony would come at a pivotal moment for Biden’s main 2024 challenger, former President Donald Trump. The trial for Trump’s New York criminal case is set to begin a day earlier, on April 15.

In response, the White House pointed to this post on X from spokesman Ian Sams from last week when Comer made the public announcement that he planned to invite Biden to testify:

“Comer knows 20+ witnesses have testified that POTUS did nothing wrong,” Sams said. “He knows that the hundreds of thousands of pages of records he’s received have refuted his false allegations. This is a sad stunt at the end of a dead impeachment. Call it a day, pal.”

This is a developing story. 

 





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Book made with dead woman’s skin removed from Harvard Library amid probe of human remains found at school


Lawsuit against Harvard for stolen body parts case dismissed


Lawsuit against Harvard for stolen body parts case dismissed

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Harvard Library says it has removed a book that’s been in its collection for nearly a century that is partially made with human skin that was taken from a deceased hospital patient without consent. The book’s space in the library has long been in question, as it was bound with a woman’s skin and included a handwritten note from its first owner saying, “a book about the human soul deserved to have a human covering.” 

The library announced that it would remove the book, “Des Destinées de L’âme” (“Destinies of the Soul”), earlier this month. The book, published by Arsène Houssaye in 1879, was not originally made of skin. That part was added by the book’s first owner, French physician Dr. Ludovic Bouland, who, according to Harvard Library, “bound the book with skin he took without consent from the body of a deceased female patient in a hospital where he worked.” 

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Arsène Houssaye’s “Des destinées de l’âme” has been removed from the Houghton Library amid controversy over human skin from a deceased hospital patient being used in the binding. 

Houghton Library, Harvard University


Bouland included a handwritten note in the volume that says, “a book about the human soul deserved to have a human covering,” Tom Hyry, associate university librarian for archives and special collections, said in a Harvard Library update. 

“Evidence indicates that Bouland bound the book with skin, taken from a woman, which he had acquired as a medical student,” Hyry said. “A memo accompanying the book written by John Stetson, which has since been lost, told us that Bouland took this skin from the body of an unknown deceased woman patient from a French psychiatric hospital.”

Bouland died in 1933 and the book was added to Harvard’s collection in 1934 on deposit. That note also included a description of the process that was used to treat the skin so that it could be bound with the book. The book was formally donated to the university in 1954 and Harvard Library said that it tested the binding in 2014 to confirm that it was bound with human remains. 

Until recently, the book had been available to “anyone who asked for it,” Harvard Library said, “regardless of their reason for wishing to consult it.” 

“Library lore suggests that decades ago, students employed to page collections in Houghton’s stacks were hazed by being asked to retrieve the book without being told it included human remains,” the library states. “Harvard Library acknowledges past failures in its stewardship of the book that further objectified and compromised the dignity of the human being whose remains were used for its binding. We apologize to those adversely affected by these actions.”

Anne-Marie Eze, associate librarian of Harvard’s Houghton Library, said the book’s removal was the culmination of years-long efforts and “as part of the University’s larger project of addressing human remains in its collections.” 

In 2022, the university published a report about human remains found in university collections. A committee found remains of 15 people who “may have been enslaved” in the Peabody Museum, which also holds “one of the nation’s largest collections of human remains of Native American individuals.” Most of the human remains found across the university collections system are rooted in archaeological context or are used for educational purposes. 

The book was not included in that category – and it’s not the only piece of human remains believed to be in the library system. 

“There is a bone fragment purportedly of Saint Sebastian (ca. 3rd century) in a medallion reliquary,” the report states. 

The library says that it’s now conducting additional research into the book, Bouland and the female patient whose skin was removed, and that the skin itself is in “secure storage at Harvard Library.” They are also working with France to “determine a final respectful disposition of these human remains.” 

Eze said that the book has been “fully digitized” – sans binding – and that those scans have been made publicly available. All images of the skin have been removed from the online catalog and blog posts, and the book itself will only be made available to researchers in the future without its cover. 

“The core problem with the volume’s creation was a doctor who didn’t see a whole person in front of him and carried out an odious act of removing a piece of skin from a deceased patient, almost certainly without consent, and used it in a book binding that has been handled by many for more than a century,” Hyry said. “We believe it’s time the remains be put to rest.”



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Baltimore bridge collapse investigators probe collision timeline


Baltimore bridge collapse investigators probe collision timeline – CBS News

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The National Transportation Safety Board is leading the investigation into Baltimore’s Francis Scott Key Bridge collapse. The ship’s data recorder has been recovered to determine what happened aboard the vessel moments before the collision. CBS News’ Natalie Brand has the latest, and Khalid Mosalam, an engineering professor at the University of California, Berkeley, joins CBS News with more on the probe.

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Shohei Ohtani addresses media amid gambling probe


Shohei Ohtani addresses media amid gambling probe – CBS News

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Los Angeles Dodgers star Shohei Ohtani spoke to the media for the first time since his interpreter was fired after his lawyers accused the interpreter of stealing millions from Ohtani to use for gambling purposes. Ohtani said Monday he did not bet on baseball and never asked anyone to do so for him. Adam Yamaguchi reports.

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Child sex abuse probe leads to Australia arrests after FBI murders


Nearly 100 people in the United States and Australia have so far been arrested over child sex abuse allegations after the fatal shooting of two FBI agents led to the unraveling of a suspected international pedophile ring, officials announced Tuesday.

The Australian Federal Police (AFP) said that 19 men had been arrested for allegedly sharing child-abuse material online, while at least 13 children were rescued from further harm as a result of a joint operation with the FBI, dubbed “Operation Bakis.”

The development brought the total number of people arrested as part of the joint probe up to 98, with at least 79 arrests so far carried out by the FBI, according to the AFP.

The joint investigation began after two FBI agents investigating the alleged pedophile ring were fatally shot in 2021 while executing a search warrant in Sunrise, Florida, for a man suspected of being in possession of child abuse material, the AFP noted in a news release.

Special Agents Daniel Alfin and Laura Schwartzenberger were fatally shot, while the gunman, David Lee Huber, 55, was also killed, NBC News previously reported.

The AFP said the coordinated probe was formally launched in 2022 after the FBI provided the AFP-led Australian Centre to Counter Child Exploitation with intelligence about Australian individuals suspected of being part of a “peer-to-peer network allegedly sharing child abuse material on the dark web.”

Dozens arrested over alleged child sex abuse in probe that saw 2 FBI agents killed
Operation Bakis was a joint investigation with Australian state and territory police that had its origins in the murder of two FBI agents in Florida in 2021.Australian Federal Police

The Australian suspects are between the ages of 32 to 81 years old, the AFP said. So far, two have been sentenced, it said.

Most of the Australian suspects were employed in occupations that required a high degree of knowledge on internet networks, the AFP said.

“Members used software to anonymously share files, chat on message boards and access websites within the network,” it said.

Some were also accused of having produced their own child abuse material to share with members of the network, the AFP said.

“Viewing, distributing or producing child abuse material is a horrific crime, and the lengths that these alleged offenders went to in order to avoid detection makes them especially dangerous — the longer they avoid detection the longer they can perpetuate the cycle of abuse,” AFP Commander Helen Schneider said in a statement.

“The success of Operation Bakis demonstrates the importance of partnerships for law enforcement, at a national level here in Australia, but also at an international level,” she said.

“We are proud of our longstanding relationship with the Australian Federal Police resulting in 19 Australian men facing criminal prosecution as a result of our collaborative investigation,” FBI Legal Attaché Nitiana Mann said in a separate statement.

“The complexity and anonymity of these platforms means that no agency or country can fight these threats alone,” Mann said. “As we continue to build bridges through collaboration and teamwork, we can ensure the good guys win and the bad guys lose.”

Mann said that 43 people had been convicted of child abuse offenses in the U.S. as part of the investigation, according to the Associated Press.

The FBI had also alerted other countries to suspects within their jurisdictions, Mann said according to the AP, but did not name those countries.




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War crimes by Myanmar’s military ‘more frequent and brazen’, UN probe finds


GENEVA (Reuters) – War crimes committed by Myanmar’s military, including the bombing of civilians, have become “increasingly frequent and brazen”, a team of United Nations investigators said in a report published on Tuesday.

The report by the Independent Investigative Mechanism for Myanmar (IIMM), which covered the period between July 2022 and June 2023, said there was “strong evidence that the Myanmar military and its affiliate militias have committed three types of combat-related war crimes with increasing frequency and brazenness”.

These crimes include the indiscriminate or disproportionate targeting of civilians using bombs and the burning of civilian homes and buildings, resulting at times in the destruction of entire villages, it said.

The report also cited “killings of civilians or combatants detained during operations”.

“Our evidence points to a dramatic increase in war crimes and crimes against humanity in the country, with widespread and systematic attacks against civilians, and we are building case files that can be used by courts to hold individual perpetrators responsible,” said Nicholas Koumjian, head of the IIMM.

Since a junta seized power two years ago, Myanmar has been plunged into chaos, with a resistance movement fighting the military on multiple fronts after a bloody crackdown on opponents that saw Western countries re-impose sanctions.

A spokesperson for the junta could not be reached for comment on the findings made by U.N. investigators.

The junta has previously denied atrocities have taken place, saying it is carrying out a legitimate campaign against terrorists.

Although it has justified bombings as attacks against military targets, UN investigators said the Myanmar military “should have known or did know” that a large number of civilians were in or around the alleged targets when the attacks took place.

(Reporting by Gabrielle Tétrault-Farber and Thu Thu Aung; Editing by Gareth Jones)



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Former Georgia lieutenant governor subpoenaed in election probe


Former Georgia lieutenant governor subpoenaed in election probe – CBS News

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Less than a week after Donald Trump’s third indictment, his legal team is already bracing for a fourth in the Fulton County, Georgia, investigation into Trump’s alleged attempts to overturn the 2020 election. Former Georgia Republican Lt. Gov. Geoff Duncan received subpoenas in the inquiry. CBS News congressional correspondent Nikole Killion reports from Atlanta.

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Former Georgia lieutenant governor subpoenaed in election probe


Former Georgia lieutenant governor subpoenaed in election probe – CBS News

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Less than a week after Donald Trump’s third indictment, his legal team is already bracing for a fourth in the Fulton County, Georgia, investigation into Trump’s alleged attempts to overturn the 2020 election. Former Georgia Republican Lt. Gov. Geoff Duncan received subpoenas in the inquiry. CBS News congressional correspondent Nikole Killion reports from Atlanta.

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