Tag: Researchers

  • Researchers reveals why they believe Mars is red

    Researchers reveals why they believe Mars is red

    Mars’ distinctive red color comes from the mineral ferrihydrite, which only forms in the presence of cool water, a new study claims. 

    Ferrihydrite also forms at a lower temperature than other minerals that make up the aptly-named red planet’s surface, like hematite, which had previously been considered the main reason for its rouge hue.

    “This suggests that Mars may have had an environment capable of sustaining liquid water before it transitioned from a wet to a dry environment billions of years ago,” NASA said in a news release this week. 

    NASA partially funded the study. 

    GRIFF JENKINS: ‘THE RACE TO MARS IS ON’

    Mars’ distinctive red color comes from the mineral ferrihydrite, which only forms in the presence of cool water, a new study claims.  (AFP via Getty Images)

    Researchers in the study, published in Nature Communications this week, analyzed data from several Mars missions, including several Mars’ rovers, and the findings were compared to lab experiments “where the team tested how light interacts with ferrihydrite particles and other minerals under simulated Martian conditions,” NASA said.

    “The fundamental question of why Mars is red has been considered for hundreds if not for thousands of years,” the study’s lead author Adam Valantinas said in a statement. 

    Valantinas is a postdoctoral fellow at Brown University who began the study as a Ph.D. student at Switzerland’s University of Bern. 

    He continued, “From our analysis, we believe ferrihydrite is everywhere in the dust and also probably in the rock formations, as well. We’re not the first to consider ferrihydrite as the reason for why Mars is red, but we can now better test this using observational data and novel laboratory methods to essentially make a Martian dust in the lab.”

    The surface of Mars

    In this handout released by NASA, a Mars landscape is seen in a photo taken by the panoramic camera on the Mars Exploration Rover Spirit in 2003.  (NASA/Jet Propulsion Laboratory/Cornell University via Getty Images)

    NASA’S MARTIAN HELICOPTER PROMISES UNPRECEDENTED VIEWS OF THE RED PLANET

    Senior author of the study, Jack Mustard, called the study a “door-opening opportunity.” 

    “It gives us a better chance to apply principles of mineral formation and conditions to tap back in time,” Mustard, a professor at Brown University, said. “What’s even more important, though, is the return of the samples from Mars that are being collected right now by the Perseverance rover. When we get those back, we can actually check and see if this is right.”

    The research shows that Mars likely had a cool but wet and potentially habitable climate in its ancient past.

    Mars’ atmosphere is too cold and then to support life now, but billions of years ago the planet had an abundance of water, NASA said, which is also evidenced in the ferrihydrite found in its dust. 

    lab sample of simulated Mars dust

    Lab sample of simulated Mars dust.  (NASA/Adam Valantinas)

    “These new findings point to a potentially habitable past for Mars and highlight the value of coordinated research between NASA and its international partners when exploring fundamental questions about our solar system and the future of space exploration,” Geronimo Villanueva, Associate Director for Strategic Science of the Solar System Exploration Division at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Maryland, and co-author of the study, said. 

    CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

    Valantinas said what the researchers “want to understand is the ancient Martian climate, the chemical processes on Mars — not only ancient — but also present.”

    He continued, “Then there’s the habitability question: Was there ever life? To understand that, you need to understand the conditions that were present during the time of this mineral’s formation. What we know from this study is the evidence points to ferrihydrite forming and for that to happen there must have been conditions where oxygen from air or other sources and water can react with iron. Those conditions were very different from today’s dry, cold environment. As Martian winds spread this dust everywhere, it created the planet’s iconic red appearance.”

  • Researchers blame CA wildfires on climate change, peddle ‘alarmist’ non-peer reviewed studies: experts

    Researchers blame CA wildfires on climate change, peddle ‘alarmist’ non-peer reviewed studies: experts

    An international research group backed by billionaire Jeff Bezos and the progressive George Soros Foundation has made headlines in major news outlets recently for its study claiming that the LA wildfires were caused by “human-induced” climate change.

    The World Weather Attribution (WWA) group, founded in 2014 by Dr. Friederike Otto and Dr. Geert Jan van Oldenborgh, has published many scientific studies built on the presupposition that climate change may affect, and even cause, extreme weather events. The group also receives funds from the Grantham Institute and the European Climate Foundation. 

    On Jan. 28, the research group published what it called a “rapid attribution” study titled, “Climate change increased the likelihood of wildfire disaster in highly exposed Los Angeles area,” and was subsequently picked up by several major media outlets.

    EDERAL AGENCIES SCRUB CLIMATE CHANGE FROM WEBSITES AMID TRUMP REBRANDING

    Burned residential areas in Los Angeles on Jan. 12, 2025. (Lokman Vural Elibol/Anadolu via Getty Images)

    Some environmental critics are pushing back on the group’s rise to notoriety in the media and classified it as “alarmist,” fueled by “leftist organizations that are driving the climate narrative.”

    “They’re just trying to manipulate people, and it’s effective. It works. I’ve talked to people that are saying that this is caused by climate change, and it’s frustrating,” Jason Isaac, founder and CEO of the American Energy Institute, a nonprofit think tank group platforming environmental policies that “promote economic freedom,” told Fox News Digital in an interview. 

    “There’s no peer review that’s been done on this data,” he added. “They rush out a flash study that supposedly found that global warming boosted fire weather conditions in the area by 35% and intensity by 6%. Well, what about the fires that happened in 1895? Who’s to blame for those? This is just a geography that’s sort of right for this situation to happen from time to time.”

    Isaac added that California’s “poor management” is largely to blame and will “happen when they’re telling people they can’t clear their land.”

    Isaac criticized California’s spending priorities, noting that while the state allocates tens of billions of dollars to its climate commitment – originally over $50 billion, later reduced to around $45 billion – it spent roughly $4.2 billion on fire prevention in the 2024-2025 fiscal year.

    TRUMP ELIMINATING LNG PAUSE TO HAVE ‘QUICKEST EFFECT’ ON ENERGY INDUSTRY: RICK PERRY

    Aftermath of the Los Angeles wildfires

    A helicopter drops water on the Palisades Fire in Mandeville Canyon, Jan. 11, 2025, in Los Angeles. (Etienne Laurent/AP Photo)

    “You would think it would be a major priority for California, because of how susceptible they are to wildfires,” he said.

    Steve Milloy, former Trump EPA Transition Team member, also told Fox News Digital that the WWA’s recent study was problematic, and dubbed it “pal-reviewed.” 

    “There’s no peer review going on. It’s not science,” Milloy said. “You know, this whole attribution thing is bogus. There’s no scientific foundation for it. It’s good propaganda, because they have the whole system organized where no one in the media asks any questions, they hide the origin and everything, and it makes for good headlines.”

    Aftermath of the California wildfires

    The sun rises over the Pacific Palisades neighborhood, in the aftermath of devastating wildfires in the Los Angeles area, Jan. 9, 2025. (Maria Alejandra Cardona/Reuters)

    Both Milloy and Isaac agreed that there will likely be an uptick in climate change-driven initiatives after President Donald Trump signed an executive order last month to axe the Biden-era U.S. climate commitments, which aimed to reduce emissions 61-66% by 2035. 

    The WWA co-founder, Otto, has previously claimed in a 2022 U.K. magazine article that “Who ‘does science’ is a hugely important issue,” and that if “climate change is worked on exclusively by white men, it means that the questions asked are those that are relevant to white men.”

    “But people most affected by climate change are not white men, so if all these other people are effectively excluded from the scientific process, the problems we have to face in climate change will not be properly addressed and you will not find solutions for how to best transform a society,” Otto wrote.

    CLIMATE ACTIVISTS HIT WITH FELONY CHARGES AFTER DEFACING US CONSTITUTION’S DISPLAY CASE

    Fireman wildfire

    There is an ongoing debate on whether climate change has any impact on wildfires. (iStock)

    According to the WWA’s FAQ page on its website, “rapid attribution studies are published before peer review in order to release the results soon after events have taken place” and adds that its studies are later published in peer-reviewed journals. 

    “Scientific studies on extreme weather events, going through peer-review, are usually published months or even years after an event occurred, when the public has moved on and questions about responsibilities, rebuilding or relocating have been debated without taking scientific evidence on the influence of climate change into account,” the WWA website states. 

    TRUMP MEETS WITH CALIFORNIA RESIDENTS, FIRE AND LAW ENFORCEMENT OFFICIALS TO SEE LA WILDFIRE DAMAGE FIRST HAND

    Trump at the White House

    President Donald Trump signs a series of executive orders at the White House on Jan. 20, 2025. (Jabin Botsford /The Washington Post via Getty Images)

    On its website, WWA lists several papers included in peer-reviewed journals, including in the Weather and Climate Extremes, Environmental Research: Climate and Natural Hazards and Earth System Sciences, among others.

    WWA conducts its studies by analyzing real-world weather data from regional weather stations to determine how rare and intense an extreme weather event is, according to its website. Researchers then compare the likelihood of such events currently with their expected frequency before the widespread burning of fossil fuels in the late 1800s. 

    WWA researchers occasionally face difficulties that prevent them from providing numerical results in their studies. These challenges may arise, its website states, if there isn’t enough reliable weather data available or if the computer models used for analysis are not well-suited to accurately simulate the specific weather event being studied.

    “If a study does not have a conclusive result because of these challenges, that does not necessarily mean that climate change played no role in the weather event,” the WWA website states.

    CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

    WWA did not respond to repeated requests for comment from Fox News Digital.

  • Researchers blame CA wildfires on climate change, peddle ‘alarmist’ non-peer reviewed studies: experts

    Researchers blame CA wildfires on climate change, pedal ‘alarmist’ non-peer reviewed studies: Experts

    An international research group backed by billionaire Jeff Bezos and the progressive George Soros Foundation has made headlines in major news outlets recently for its study claiming that the LA wildfires were caused by “human-induced” climate change.

    The World Weather Attribution (WWA) group, founded in 2014 by Dr. Friederike Otto and Dr. Geert Jan van Oldenborgh, has published many scientific studies built on the presupposition that climate change may affect, and even cause, extreme weather events. The group also receives funds from the Grantham Institute and the European Climate Foundation. 

    On Jan. 28, the research group published what it called a “rapid attribution” study titled, “Climate change increased the likelihood of wildfire disaster in highly exposed Los Angeles area,” and was subsequently picked up by several major media outlets.

    EDERAL AGENCIES SCRUB CLIMATE CHANGE FROM WEBSITES AMID TRUMP REBRANDING

    A general view of the burned residential areas as wildfires continue to wreak havoc, reaching their fifth day and leaving extensive damage in residential areas in Los Angeles, California, United States on January 12, 2025.  (Lokman Vural Elibol/Anadolu via Getty Images)

    Some environmental critics are pushing back on the group’s rise to notoriety in the media and classified the group as “alarmist,” fueled by “leftist organizations that are driving the climate narrative.”

    “They’re just trying to manipulate people, and it’s effective. It works. I’ve talked to people that are saying that this is caused by climate change, and it’s frustrating,” Jason Isaac, founder and CEO of the American Energy Institute – a nonprofit think tank group platforming environmental policies that “promote economic freedom” – told Fox News Digital in an interview. 

    “There’s no peer review that’s been done on this data,” he added. “They rush out a flash study that supposedly found that global warming boosted fire weather conditions in the area by 35% and intensity by 6%. Well, what about the fires that happened in 1895? Who’s to blame for those? This is just a geography that’s sort of right for this situation to happen from time to time.”

    Isaac added that California’s “poor management” is largely to blame and will “happen when they’re telling people they can’t clear their land.”

    Isaac criticized California’s spending priorities, noting that while the state allocates tens of billions of dollars to its climate commitment – originally over $50 billion, later reduced to around $45 billion – it spent roughly $4.2 billion on fire prevention in the 2024-2025 fiscal year.

    TRUMP ELIMINATING LNG PAUSE TO HAVE ‘QUICKEST EFFECT’ ON ENERGY INDUSTRY: RICK PERRY

    Aftermath of the Los Angeles wildfires

    A helicopter drops water on the Palisades Fire in Mandeville Canyon, Saturday, Jan. 11, 2025, in Los Angeles. (Etienne Laurent)

    “You would think it would be a major priority for California, because of how susceptible they are to wildfires,” he said.

    Former Trump EPA Transition Team Member, Steve Malloy, also told Fox News Digital that the WWA’s recent study was problematic, and dubbed it “pal-reviewed.” 

    “There’s no peer review going on. It’s not science,” Malloy said. “You know, this whole attribution thing  is bogus. There’s no scientific foundation for it. It’s good propaganda, because they have the whole system organized where no one in the media asks any questions, they hide the origin and everything, and it makes for good headlines.”

    Aftermath of the California wildfires

    Sun rises over the Pacific Palisades neighborhood of west Los Angeles, in the aftermath of devastating wildfires in the Los Angeles area forcing people to evacuate, in California, U.S., January 9, 2025. (Maria Alejandra Cardona/Reuters)

    Both Malloy and Isaac agreed that there will likely be an uptick in climate change-driven initiatives after President Donald Trump signed an executive order last month to axe the Biden-era U.S. climate commitments, which aimed to reduce emissions 61-66% by 2035. 

    The WWA co-founder, Otto, has previously claimed in a 2022 UK magazine article that “Who ‘does science’ is a hugely important issue,” and that if “climate change is worked on exclusively by white men, it means that the questions asked are those that are relevant to white men.”

    “But people most affected by climate change are not white men, so if all these other people are effectively excluded from the scientific process, the problems we have to face in climate change will not be properly addressed and you will not find solutions for how to best transform a society,” Otto wrote.

    CLIMATE ACTIVISTS HIT WITH FELONY CHARGES AFTER DEFACING US CONSTITUTION’S DISPLAY CASE

    Fireman wildfire

    Firefighter spray water to bushfire. Tropical wildfires release carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions that contribute to climate change and global warming. (iStock)

    According to the WWA’s FAQ page on its website, “rapid attribution studies are published before peer review in order to release the results soon after events have taken place” and adds that its studies are later published in peer-reviewed journals. 

    “Scientific studies on extreme weather events, going through peer-review, are usually published months or even years after an event occurred, when the public has moved on and questions about responsibilities, rebuilding or relocating have been debated without taking scientific evidence on the influence of climate change into account,” the WWA website states. 

    TRUMP MEETS WITH CALIFORNIA RESIDENTS, FIRE AND LAW ENFORCEMENT OFFICIALS TO SEE LA WILDFIRE DAMAGE FIRST HAND

    Washington , DC - January 20: President Donald Trump signs a series of executive orders at the White House on January 20, 2025, in Washington, DC. (Photo by Jabin Botsford /The Washington Post via Getty Images)

    Washington , DC – January 20: President Donald Trump signs a series of executive orders at the White House on January 20, 2025, in Washington, DC. (Photo by Jabin Botsford /The Washington Post via Getty Images) (Getty)

    On its website, WWA lists several papers included in peer-reviewed journals including in the Weather and Climate Extremes, Environmental Research: Climate and Natural Hazards and Earth System Sciences, among others.

    WWA conducts its studies by analyzing real-world weather data from regional weather stations to determine how rare and intense an extreme weather event is, according to its website. Researchers then compare the likelihood of such events currently with their expected frequency before the widespread burning of fossil fuels in the late 1800s. 

    WWA researchers occasionally face difficulties that prevent them from providing numerical results in their studies. These challenges may arise, its website states, if there isn’t enough reliable weather data available or if the computer models used for analysis are not well-suited to accurately simulate the specific weather event being studied.

    “If a study does not have a conclusive result because of these challenges, that does not necessarily mean that climate change played no role in the weather event,” the WWA website states.

    CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

    WWA did not respond to repeated requests for comment from Fox News Digital.