421 results on '"Planetary"'
Search Results
2. Rivers of the Asian Highlands
- Author
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Gamble, Ruth, Tan, Gillian G., Xu, Hongzhang, Beavis, Sara, Maurer, Petra, Pittock, Jamie, Powers, John, and Wasson, Robert J.
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Planetary ,Social ,Regulated Rivers ,Asian Highland rivers ,river ,Brahmaputra ,Yangzi ,braided river ,Dri Chu ,upper reaches ,eastern Himalayan Mountains ,thema EDItEUR::T Technology, Engineering, Agriculture, Industrial processes::TN Civil engineering, surveying and building ,thema EDItEUR::T Technology, Engineering, Agriculture, Industrial processes::TH Energy technology and engineering::THV Alternative and renewable energy sources and technology ,thema EDItEUR::R Earth Sciences, Geography, Environment, Planning::RB Earth sciences::RBK Hydrology and the hydrosphere ,thema EDItEUR::R Earth Sciences, Geography, Environment, Planning::RN The environment::RNP Pollution and threats to the environment::RNPG Climate change ,thema EDItEUR::R Earth Sciences, Geography, Environment, Planning::RN The environment::RNF Environmental management ,thema EDItEUR::R Earth Sciences, Geography, Environment, Planning::RN The environment::RNT Social impact of environmental issues ,thema EDItEUR::K Economics, Finance, Business and Management::KC Economics::KCV Economics of specific sectors::KCVG Environmental economics ,thema EDItEUR::M Medicine and Nursing::MB Medicine: general issues::MBN Public health and preventive medicine::MBNH Personal and public health / health education::MBNH2 Environmental factors ,thema EDItEUR::R Earth Sciences, Geography, Environment, Planning::RN The environment::RNR Natural disasters ,thema EDItEUR::R Earth Sciences, Geography, Environment, Planning::RG Geography::RGC Human geography ,thema EDItEUR::R Earth Sciences, Geography, Environment, Planning::RG Geography::RGL Regional geography ,thema EDItEUR::R Earth Sciences, Geography, Environment, Planning::RG Geography::RGB Physical geography and topography ,thema EDItEUR::R Earth Sciences, Geography, Environment, Planning::RB Earth sciences::RBP Meteorology and climatology - Abstract
Rivers of the Asian Highlands introduces readers to the intersecting headwaters of Asia’s eight largest rivers, focusing on the upper reaches of two river systems: the Brahmaputra’s highland tributaries in the eastern Himalayan Mountains and the Dri Chu (upper Yangzi), which descends from the Tibetan Plateau’s east through the Hengduan Mountains. This book guides its readers through these two rivers’ physical, environmental, cultural, social, and political histories before providing a multifaceted assessment of their present. It uses general and detailed insights from multiple disciplines, including anthropology, conservation, geography, geomorphology, climate science, ecology, history, hydrology, and religious studies. The rivers’ stories explain how the catchments’ hazards—earthquakes, landslides, floods, droughts, and erosion—interact with their energetic, hydrological, ecological, cultural, and social abundance. This book’s multiple cultural and disciplinary perspectives on the rivers will interest anyone who wants to understand the rivers of this critically important region as the environment faces climate change and other ecological crises.
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- 2025
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3. Rethinking the Anthropocene: Not a time-transgressive event but a sudden rupture on the geologic time scale
- Author
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Chakraborty, Abhik
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- 2024
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4. Combination of altimetry crossovers and Doppler observables for orbit determination and geodetic parameter recovery: Application to Callisto.
- Author
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Desprats, William, Bertone, Stefano, Arnold, Daniel, Lasser, Martin, Jäggi, Adrian, and Blanc, Michel
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ORBIT determination , *SOFTWARE libraries (Computer programming) , *PLANETARY orbits , *GLOBAL Positioning System , *SOLAR system , *ARTIFICIAL satellite tracking - Abstract
An accurate knowledge of the orientation, the tidal deformability, and the gravity field of a celestial body is fundamental to provide constraints on its internal structure. These quantities may be retrieved by processing radiometric tracking and altimetry data from a probe in orbit around such body. This paper presents a method to combine altimetry crossovers with two-way Doppler tracking observations at normal equation level, using the Bernese GNSS Software and the pyXover software library. This method was applied to a proposed 200 km altitude orbiter around Callisto, a privileged destination for the upcoming phase of Solar System exploration. Enhancing "standard" Doppler tracking with altimetry generally benefited both orbit determination and a joint estimation of the orientation of the north pole and of planetary librations. The retrieval of low-degree gravity field parameters was also improved by the addition of altimetry data. However, the improvements on the estimated parameters were highly dependent on the characteristics of the simulation, e.g., the underlying topography roughness. Overall, combining radioscience with altimetry data accounted for a visible reduction of correlations among estimated parameters, while also allowing for a consistent estimation of the "vertical" Love number h 2 along with gravity. • An original method to combine altimetry crossovers and Doppler data is presented. • Applied to Callisto, this combination improves the orbit of a low altitude probe. • Low-degree gravity and orientation parameters benefit from the combination. • Combining observations allows for consistent estimations of Love numbers k 2 and h 2. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2025
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5. Global adherence to a healthy and sustainable diet and potential reduction in premature death.
- Author
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Xiao Gu, Linh P. Bui, Fenglei Wang, Dong D. Wang, Springmann, Marco, and Willett, Walter C.
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SUSTAINABILITY , *HUMAN biology , *EARLY death , *REDUCTION potential , *NEURODEGENERATION - Abstract
The Planetary Health Diet (PHD), also known as the EAT-Lancet reference diet, was developed to optimize global dietary quality while keeping the environmental impacts of food production within sustainable planetary boundaries. We calculated current national and global adherence to the PHD using the Planetary Health Dietary Index (PHDI). In addition, we used data on diet and mortality from three large US cohorts (n = 206,404 men and women, 54,536 deaths) to estimate the total and cause-specific mortality among adults 20 y of age and older that could be prevented by shifting from current diets to the reference PHD. The PHDI varied substantially across countries, although adherence was universally far from optimal (mean PHDI = 85 out of 140). By improving the global PHDI to 120, approximately 15 million deaths (27% of total deaths) could be prevented annually. Estimates of preventable deaths due to this shift ranged from 2.5 million for cardiovascular diseases to 0.7 million for neurodegenerative diseases. Our analysis suggests that adopting healthy and sustainable diets would have major direct health benefits by reducing mortality due to multiple diseases and could contribute substantially to achieving the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals. These numbers of preventable deaths are based on evidence that human biology is similar across racial and ethnic groups, but the exact numerical estimates should be interpreted with caution because some assumptions used for the calculations build on limited data. Refinement of these estimates will be possible when additional regional data on diet and mortality become available. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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6. Toward a planetary ethnography?: From "frictions" to "tensions" in understanding post-truth capitalist power.
- Author
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Büscher, Bram
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POLITICAL ecology , *FRICTION , *ANTHROPOLOGY , *CONSCIOUSNESS , *DECONSTRUCTION - Abstract
It is time for anthropology to reclaim truth and speak it to capitalist power more forcefully. The rise of post-truth and the truth of our planetary socioecological predicaments demand this. How to do so is not straightforward. Recalibrating deconstruction and finding a new balance between epistemic solidities and shifting sands is only part of the task. The greater anthropological challenge is reorienting ethnography from frictions (how "global connections" fragment) to tensions (how and why contradictory global connections came about and endure or not). To explore this reorientation, I propose a political ecology of truth and the cultivation of a planetary ethnography. Both aspire to do anthropological justice to the dramatic transformations in our dominant planetary consciousness and the contradictory socioecological predicaments this is mired in. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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7. Transculturality and ecology in francophone North African poetry: Human/non-human and global/local communities
- Author
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Jane Hiddleston
- Subjects
planetary ,ecology ,non-human ,plant ,North Africa ,Laâbi ,Language and Literature - Abstract
As an alternative to a model of world literature complicit with global capitalism and its ecological destruction, critics have proposed the ‘planetary turn’ to name the emergence of a mode of thinking capable of accommodating both social and ecological diversity. Global relationality in this context is understood not only as connectivity between different cultures but also that between the human and the non-human, and emphasizes not only cultural differences and interactions but also our deep embeddedness in and reliance on the ecological environment. Planetary thinking champions the dynamic entanglement between manifold peoples and cultures at the same time as it insists on the connections between the human and the physical world. This article focuses on the ways in which francophone postcolonial North African poetry also betrays a peculiar attentiveness at once to cultural hybridization and to the riches of the ecological landscape. The Moroccan Abdellatif Laâbi and the Tunisian Tahar Bekri are contemporary writers whose poetry has combined, over the last forty years or so, a passion for multilingualism and cultural exchange with a fascination with the singular plant life they discover at home and abroad. Both use both French and Arabic, though most of their work is in French, and write against the forces of oppression left by the legacies of colonialism in part by celebrating transculturality. Both also evoke a form of intimate communion with the ecological environment, and portray it as a force with agency in order to condemn the history of ecological destruction. Their ‘ecocosmopolitan’ poetry in this way proposes a salutary communality that responds in far-reaching ways to human mastery and oppression as it acts both on cultural difference and on the delicate ecology of planet.
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- 2024
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8. Energy dependence of x‐ray beam size produced by polycapillary x‐ray optics.
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Das, Anusheela, Heirwegh, Chris M., Gao, Ning, Elam, William T., Wade, Lawrence A., Clark, Benton C. III, Hurowitz, Joel A., VanBommel, Scott J., Jones, Michael W. M., and Allwood, Abigail C.
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MONTE Carlo method , *FOCUS (Optics) , *STEPPING motors , *COPPER , *TRACE elements , *SOIL testing - Abstract
In this work, we studied the x‐ray energy dependence of x‐ray beam diameter focused by polycapillary optics. A quantitative beam diameter–energy relation enables more accurate estimation of the element‐specific interrogation area of a sample using the compositional maps produced by a micro‐XRF system. This improves upon our ability to visualize individual beam‐diameter sized mineral grains and in turn directly benefits Planetary Instrument for X‐ray Lithochemistry (PIXL) analyses of martian soil in addition to benefitting other micro‐focused x‐ray fluorescence (XRF) systems. The spatial distribution of an array of characteristic XRF emission lines was measured by sampling via a knife‐edge approach with small motor stepping of the beam across target edges. Data taken as part of this effort, from the Planetary Flight Model (PFM), were limited to only seven beam energies corresponding to the elements Ni, Cu, Se, Ta, Au, Ti and Ba. Hence, we conducted additional analysis using JPL's lab‐based breadboard (LBB) micro‐XRF system, a system that emulates PIXL's functionality where we measured beam diameter corresponding to 18 elements: Na, Mg, Al, Si, Cl, Ca, Ti, Cr, Mn, Fe, Ni, Cu, Zn, Ga, Ge, Se, Sr and Mo. The experimental results were also compared with Monte Carlo simulations. The beam diameter (y)–energy (x) relation that we obtained for LBB was y = 185.79 exp(−0.078x) whose exponential component was then used to get a more accurate relation for the PFM even with the limited data set: y = 227.53 exp(−0.078x). The difference in the two coefficients for the PFM and LBB stems mainly from the difference in the polycapillary optic design, and this work establishes x‐ray beam diameter versus energy relation quantitatively for both the systems. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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9. The Venus Global Ionosphere‐Thermosphere Model (V‐GITM): A Coupled Thermosphere and Ionosphere Formulation.
- Author
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Ponder, Brandon M., Ridley, Aaron J., Bougher, Stephen W., Pawlowski, David, and Brecht, Amanda
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VENUSIAN atmosphere ,GENERAL circulation model ,UPPER atmosphere ,WIND speed ,VENUS (Planet) ,THERMOSPHERE - Abstract
This paper introduces the new Venus global ionosphere‐thermosphere model (V‐GITM) which incorporates the terrestrial GITM framework with Venus‐specific parameters, ion‐neutral chemistry, and radiative processes in order to simulate some of the observable features regarding the temperatures, composition, and dynamical structure of the Venus atmosphere from 70 to 170 km. Atmospheric processes are included based upon formulations used in previous Venus GCMs, several augmentations exist, such as improved horizontal and vertical momentum equations and tracking exothermic chemistry. Explicitly solving the momentum equations allows for the exploration of its dynamical effects on the day‐night structure. In addition, V‐GITM's use of exothermic chemistry instead of a strong heating efficiency accounts for the heating due to the solar EUV while producing comparable temperatures to empirical models. V‐GITM neutral temperatures and neutral‐ion densities are compared to upper atmosphere measurements obtained from Pioneer Venus and Venus Express. V‐GITM demonstrates asymmetric horizontal wind velocities through the cloud tops to the middle thermosphere and explains the mechanisms for sustaining the wind structure. In addition, V‐GITM produces reasonable dayside ion densities and shows that the neutral winds can carry the ions to the nightside via an experiment advecting O2+ ${\mathrm{O}}_{2}^{+}$. Plain Language Summary: We present a new, state‐of‐the‐art Venus global circulation model, the Venus global ionosphere thermosphere model. The new model will be useful for answering unknown questions about Venus' atmosphere, the physics of CO2 rich planets, and Venus missions utilizing the aerobraking maneuver. We performed many model simulations and compared the results to some of the existing Venus data sets to assess the accuracy of the model. The results showed that the dayside extreme ultraviolet heating can be captured using the dominant ion‐neutral chemistry rather than relying on simplified legacy methods. Furthermore, the cloud layer below the thermosphere has a unique wind pattern and its impact on the thermospheric temperatures and winds were explored. This work also revealed that the thin nightside ionosphere forms as a result of the transport of a single ion species. Key Points: A new, non‐hydrostatic Venus ionosphere‐thermosphere model is introduced with new physics not previously included in Venus GCMsSimulations during solar minimum conditions are used for data‐model comparisons of the temperatures, plasma, and neutral densitiesThe influence of the retrograde superrotating zonal flow is explored in relation to how it affects the neutral temperature and velocities [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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10. Incorporating Existential Risks into Sustainable Development Research
- Author
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Guillaume, Bertrand G., Leal Filho, Walter, Series Editor, Salvia, Amanda Lange, editor, and Portela de Vasconcelos, Claudio Ruy, editor
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- 2024
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11. Nonknowledge in Computation. Reflecting on Irrevocable Uncertainty
- Author
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Betti Marenko
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uncertainty ,nonknowledge ,incomputable ,planetary ,wu wei ,Philosophy (General) ,B1-5802 ,Technology - Abstract
Abstract My paper approaches the theme of computational creativity by looking at uncertainty as an epistemic and aesthetic tool that must be examined to address the challenges brought to critical practice by planetary computation. It positions uncertainty as central to how the encounter of the human practitioner with non-human machines is conceptualized, and as a resource for building speculative-pragmatic paths of resistance against algorithmic capture. It proposes ways to cultivate uncertainty and use it as a design material to produce new types of knowledge that question machines’ pre-emptying manoeuvres and resist their capture of potential. The argument proposed is that uncertainty affords the production of new imaginaries of the human-machine encounter that can resist the foreclosure of futures (what will be) and are sustained instead by the uncertainty of potential (what might be) (Munster 2013). Dwelling in a space of potential – Deleuze’s virtual, or what I call a space of ‘maybes’, requires of the practitioner a repositioning of their epistemic perspective and reflecting on the following questions: how can material knowledge be made by engaging with modes of un-knowing and not-knowing in machine interaction? How can these modes of un-knowing and not-knowing be fostered as a critical and political onto-epistemological project of reinventing critical practice for the algorithmic age? (Horl et al. 2021; Hansen 2021, 2015, Pasquinelli and Joler 2020). The paper argues that the machinic unknown should be engaged with - not through the conventional paradigm that pitches human vs machine creativity and attempts to rank and score them through similarities, but rather through a (paradoxical) deepening of the unknowability at the core of the machine (Parisi) and machine’s own incommensurability (Fazi 2020). It then proposes the Chinese notion of wu wei (active non action) (Jullien 2011, 2004, 2000, 1995; Allen 2015, 2011) as a stratagem to experiment with to craft speculative-pragmatic interventions, and to augment the ‘power of maybes’ as a space of anti-production, and resisting reduction (Ito 2019).
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- 2024
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12. A speculative fjord: The global and the planetary in the depiction of Killary Harbour in Notes from a Coma (2005) by Mike McCormack and The Fjord of Killary (2012) by Kevin Barry
- Author
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Beatrice Masi
- Subjects
irish literature ,speculative fiction ,global ,planetary ,capitalist world-ecology ,Social Sciences ,Language and Literature - Abstract
The present paper aims at analyzing two works of contemporary Irish fiction, namely, Notes from a Coma (2005) by Mike McCormack and The Fjord of Killary (2012) by Kevin Barry. I argue that both works not only mirror what Dipesh Chakrabarty calls the ‘global’ and the ‘planetary’, but also reflect the non-human space and time scales that Timothy Morton identifies as one of the properties of hyperobjects. Moreover, the two novels are deeply rooted in the history of Ireland, and especially in the semi-peripheral position occupied by the country within the capitalist world system. The intermingling of various narrative layers together with speculative and realistic tropes conveys the epiphenomenality of our lived experience, characterized by the not-yet predictable consequences of planetary climate crisis and the ever-shifting demands of global capitalism.
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- 2024
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13. Probable, Improbable, and Catastrophic Realisms in Amitav Ghosh’s Fiction
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Ray, Sangeeta, Anjaria, Ulka, book editor, and Nerlekar, Anjali, book editor
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- 2024
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14. Comment on: “Solar system planetary alignment triggers tides and earthquakes” by Salih Muhammad Awadh [Journal of Coastal Conservation (2021) 25: 30].
- Author
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Othman, Arsalan Ahmed and Obaid, Ahmed K.
- Abstract
In this piece of work, we provide comments on the paper: “Solar system planetary alignment triggers tides and earthquakes” by Awadh (2021). The paper claimed to undertake quantitative statistical analysis of earthquakes and planetary alignment across the world and, particularly, in the Zagros Region. As a result of his statistical analysis, he claimed that the alignment of the Earth with two planets in a straight line would generate earthquakes. However, after a careful review of the paper, we found that the analysis was qualitative in its major part. It is suffering from a lack of clarity for planetary alignment data and methods, in addition to a deficiency in earthquake data. We found that the major two tables (i.e., Tables 2 and 5) used by Awadh (2021) to demonstrate the relationship and the planetary alignment were not accurate. Our work demonstrates the problems of relying on inadequate and inappropriate datasets of Awadh’s (2021) paper. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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15. Buddhism in the Anthropocene: Opening the Global to the Planetary
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Saskia Abrahms-Kavunenko and Jovan Maud
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Buddhism ,Anthropocene ,global Buddhism ,planetary ,Philosophy. Psychology. Religion - Abstract
Introduction to the Special Focus section: Buddhism in the Anthropocene.
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- 2024
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16. Urability: A Property of Planetary Bodies That Can Support an Origin of Life
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Deamer, David, Cary, Francesca, and Damer, Bruce
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Astronomical Sciences ,Physical Sciences ,Evolution ,Planetary ,Exobiology ,Extraterrestrial Environment ,Origin of Life ,Planets ,Solar System ,Water ,Habitability ,Origin of life ,Early Earth ,Astronomical and Space Sciences ,Geochemistry ,Geology ,Astronomy & Astrophysics ,Astronomical sciences - Abstract
The concept of habitability is now widely used to describe zones in a solar system in which planets with liquid water can sustain life. Because habitability does not explicitly incorporate the origin of life, this article proposes a new word-urability-which refers to the conditions that allow life to begin. The utility of the word is tested by applying it to combinations of multiple geophysical and geochemical factors that support plausible localized zones that are conducive to the chemical reactions and molecular assembly processes required for the origin of life. The concept of urable worlds, planetary bodies that can sustain an arising of life, is considered for bodies in our own solar system and exoplanets beyond.
- Published
- 2022
17. Pressure-driven instability in planetary stagnant lids
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Watson, Callum and Neufeld, Jerome
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Fluid dynamics ,geomagnetism ,Geophysics ,magma oceans ,planetary ,stagnant lid - Abstract
Rocky planets and large rocky satellites begin their evolution as relatively hot planetary bodies, both in the interior and on the surface. Heat released during planetary accretion is thought to have resulted in temperatures well in excess of the solidus of silicates, with radiogenic heating also playing a major role. In many cases this results in a partially molten mantle, known as a magma ocean. Both fully solid mantles and magma oceans are noted for their complex fluid dynamics, in particular involving the convection of fluids with strongly temperature-dependent viscosities. Because of the dominant surface cooling of planets, typical mantle modelling involves a mode of convection featuring a thick surface boundary layer known as the stagnant lid - a cool region with a correspondingly high viscosity. Recently the stagnant-lid model of mantle convection has been extended to the cooling of magma oceans. The viscosity of partially molten magma is most sensitive to temperature, pressure and solid fraction, which are in turn controlled by the phase diagram. However, in a well-mixed partial melt the solid fraction is itself a function of density and pressure. As the viscosity of a pure solid silicate is generally over 20 orders of magnitude in excess of that of a pure melt, it is the solid fraction that plays the most important role in the viscosity of a partial melt. The main effects of temperature and pressure on viscosity are through their control of melt fraction via the phase diagram. In turn, this large contrast in viscosity controls the convective heat flux that drives much of the development of planetary structure. In this thesis we investigate the evolution of the thickness of stagnant lids while taking the resulting pressure dependence of viscosity into account, and research the effects on other variables over the course of the early evolution of rocky planets. In the introduction, Chapter 1, we review the modelling of planetary lithospheres from a fluid-dynamical perspective, the observations of dichotomies in planetary crusts, and those of planetary magnetic fields. Then in Chapter 2 we investigate both the symmetric evolution and the subsequent stability of a pressure-dependent planetary stagnant lid to spherically asymmetric perturbations to its thickness. The close link between the thickness of the early stagnant lid of a small rocky planet and the thickness of its later crust suggests that this instability may play an important role in amplifying small initial perturbations to produce the large crustal dichotomy seen in some planetary bodies. The wider implications of this instability for the evolution of planets is then examined in Chapter 3. We find that our asymmetric instability is most relevant to Earth's Moon, while also comparing to Mars and Mercury, and we compare numerical growth rates and temperature profiles to the quasi-steady examples from our theory. In Chapter 4 we focus on a symmetric form of this instability together with the effects of changes to interior temperature on the core-mantle-boundary heat flux. Given the close relationship between the latter and the strength of the core dynamo, we deduce that under some circumstances a planet may undergo late increases to its magnetic field intensity, offering a potential explanation for the longevity of the Lunar core dynamo seen in the palaeomagnetic record. Finally, in Chapter 5, we conclude with some summary remarks on the implications of this work for the formation and evolution of planetary bodies, and describe some potential future directions.
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- 2022
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18. Laboratory Emissivity Spectra of Sulphide-Bearing Samples, New Constraints for the Surface of Mercury: Oldhamite in Mafic Aggregates.
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Carli, Cristian, Ferrari, Sabrina, Maturilli, Alessandro, Serventi, Giovanna, Sgavetti, Maria, Secchiari, Arianna, Montanini, Alessandra, and Helbert, Jörn
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EMISSIVITY , *MERCURY , *BINARY mixtures , *GEOCHEMISTRY , *MINERALOGY - Abstract
Exploration of Mercury will continue in the near future with ESA/JAXA's BepiColombo mission, which will increase the number and the type of datasets, and it will take advantage of the results from NASA's MESSENGER (MErcury Surface, Space ENviroment, GEochemistry and Ranging) mission. One of the main discoveries from MESSENGER was the finding of a relatively high abundance of volatiles, and in particular of sulphur, on the surface. This discovery correlates well with the morphological evidence of pyroclastic activity and with features attributable to degassing processes like the hollows. BepiColombo will return compositional results from different spectral ranges and instruments, and, in particular, among them the first results from the orbit of emissivity in the thermal infrared. Here, we investigate the results from the emissivity spectra of different samples between a binary mixture of a volcanic regolith-like for Mercury and oldhamite (CaS). The acquisitions are taken at different temperatures in order to highlight potential shifts due to both mineral variation and temperature dependence on these materials that potentially could be present in hollows. Different absorption features are present for the two endmembers, making it possible to distinguish the oldhamite with respect to the regolith bulk analogue. We show how, in the mixtures, the Christiansen feature is strongly driven by the oldhamite, whereas the Reststrahlen minima are mainly dominated by mafic composition. The spectral contrast is strongly reduced in the mixtures with respect to the endmembers. The variations of spectral features are strong enough to be measured via MERTIS, and the spectral variations are stronger in relation to the mineralogy with respect to temperature dependence. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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19. The fault in our TARs: A critical review of research paradigms for intermediate‐scale bedforms on Mars.
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Gough, Tyler, Barchyn, Thomas, and Hugenholtz, Chris
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LITERATURE reviews ,GALE Crater (Mars) ,MARS (Planet) ,TAR ,INDUCTION (Logic) ,MARTIAN atmosphere ,GEOLOGICAL research ,SAND dunes - Abstract
We provide a critical review of research paradigms for classifying intermediate‐scale aeolian bedforms on Mars and the new terminology that has emerged. The systematic classification of bedforms has always been challenging and debated, and no paradigmatic knowledge organization system exists beyond general agreement on the importance of a distinction between ripples and dunes. The diverse aeolian landscapes of Mars have introduced further topics and challenges to these debates. We argue that Martian aeolian geomorphology's knowledge organization system for intermediate‐scale bedforms is preparadigmatic and that consensus over terminology and their definitions has not been established in the literature. A preparadigmatic science can be functional only if scientists operating in the discipline provide precise, falsifiable definitions or use abductive logic. Drawing on evidence and examples from the literature, we argue that the replacement of the conventional abductive paradigm used in bedform classification with inductive logic has created an emerging disciplinary paradigm based on scientific hesitancy and a dependence on complex inductive research structures, epitomized by the concepts of 'transverse aeolian ridges' (TARs) and 'large Martian ripples' (LMRs). We show that TAR and, increasingly, LMR are inductive constructs that have been popularized despite them causing significant confusion. Notably, we highlight how the terms are irreconcilably used as both a class of bedform and as a non‐genetic placeholder term for bedforms. Suggestions for moving beyond the need for TAR and LMR are provided, focusing on a return to more direct and local hypothesis‐driven research inspired by W.M. Davis's notion of outrageous geological hypotheses. Recent debate surrounding bedforms in Gale crater is presented as an example of the productivity of such an approach, and it is recommended that TAR and LMR no longer be used. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
- Full Text
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20. Tunable Laser Spectrometers for Planetary Science.
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Webster, Christopher R., Hofmann, Amy E., Mahaffy, Paul R., Atreya, Sushil K., House, Christopher H., Simon, Amy A., and Garvin, James B.
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PLANETARY science , *MARS rovers , *SPECTROMETERS , *PLANETARY mass , *OUTER planets , *TUNABLE lasers , *INFRARED absorption - Abstract
Distinguishing planetary formation and evolution pathways and understanding the origins of volatiles on planetary bodies requires determination of relative abundances and isotope ratios in the noble gases, and also of the isotope ratios in C, H, N, O and S at high precisions. Traditional planetary mass spectrometers uniquely provide excellent survey capability including the noble gas relative abundances and their isotope ratios. However, to distinguish planetary evolution models for the outer planets, stable isotope ratios in C and O require precisions of ∼10‰ or better, readily achievable with a tunable laser spectrometer (TLS). As demonstrated on the Mars Curiosity rover, and as planned for a now-selected NASA Venus mission, tunable laser spectrometers play a unique role synergistic with the capabilities of planetary mass spectrometers. The TLS technique of recording infrared absorption spectra at ultrahigh resolution (resolving power λ / δ λ ∼ 5 million) provides unambiguous detection of a wide variety of gases such as H2O, H2O2, H2CO, HOCl, NO, NO2, HNO3, N2O, O3, CO, CO2, NH3, N2H4, PH3, H2S, SO2, OCS, HCl, HF, O2, HCN, and CH4, C2H2, C2H4, C2H6 at parts-per-billion levels. Through line-depth or line-area ratio comparisons of adjacent spectral lines, planetary TLS instruments can achieve isotope ratio measurements in C, H, N, O, and S molecules at precisions of ∼1–2‰, including for the triple isotope components of O and S. Expected performance of TLS instruments for Venus, Saturn, Enceladus and Uranus will be described as constrained by actual measurements reported at Mars on the Curiosity rover. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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21. Performing a Planetary Exploration Mission from the Classroom
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Sanchez, Elsa Maria Alfonso, Mavridis, Anestis, Talevi, Monica, Maree, Hugo, Kacprzyk, Janusz, Series Editor, Gomide, Fernando, Advisory Editor, Kaynak, Okyay, Advisory Editor, Liu, Derong, Advisory Editor, Pedrycz, Witold, Advisory Editor, Polycarpou, Marios M., Advisory Editor, Rudas, Imre J., Advisory Editor, Wang, Jun, Advisory Editor, Cascalho, José M., editor, Tokhi, Mohammad Osman, editor, Silva, Manuel F., editor, Mendes, Armando, editor, Goher, Khaled, editor, and Funk, Matthias, editor
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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22. Planetary period modulations of dynamics in Saturn's nightside magnetosphere
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Bradley, Thomas J.
- Subjects
planetary ,modulations ,dynamics ,saturn ,nightside ,magnetosphere ,thesis ,astronomy - Abstract
This thesis principally studies the effects of magnetic field perturbations, and their associated large scale current systems, that modulate Saturn's magnetosphere near to the planet's rotation period. These planetary period oscillations (PPOs) consist of two current systems, one associated with the northern hemisphere, and one associated with the southern hemisphere. Within the thesis are three detailed studies pertaining to the PPOs. Firstly, we newly examine Cassini magnetic field data from highly inclined orbits in 2012/2013 for signatures of field-aligned currents during Saturn's northern spring, and compare these with a similar prior study of data from 2008 during late southern summer conditions to investigate for seasonal modulation. This study confirms a north/south seasonal asymmetry of the subcorotation currents across the polar regions, and newly reveals dual-modulation of the PPO current systems in both hemispheres. The second study consists of a statistical analysis of reconnection events in Saturn's magnetotail observed by Smith et al. (2016), which are organised here by three different PPO phase systems. Clear modulation is found by all phase systems, however, best organisation is found for a phase system that considers the local time of the observations, indicating that the events are localised in azimuth rather than simultaneously affecting much of the tail width. Finally, in the third study reactions to solar wind compressions are investigated in Saturn's magnetotail, for which clear responses are found using a variety of Cassini instrument observations. The response to compressions is newly found to be modulated by the concurrent relative phasing of the PPO systems, with evidence for the closure of magnetic flux being favoured when the two PPO systems act together to thin and thicken the tail plasma sheet during each PPO cycle. Overall, these studies emphasize how strongly activity in Saturn's magnetosphere is modulated by the PPOs and heliospheric conditions.
- Published
- 2021
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23. From globalisation to the planetary: Towards a critical framework of planetary thinking in geography.
- Author
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Mould, Oli
- Subjects
- *
GLOBALIZATION , *PRAXIS (Process) , *CLIMATE change , *PANDEMICS , *GEOGRAPHY - Abstract
With climate change and pandemics, the last few years has ushered in a planetary age. Moreover, the concept of the 'globalisation'—a totalising and capitalist‐centric concept that homogenises the entire planet into a territory to conquer—has become incapable of adequately accounting for the planetary events taking place. To date, geographical literature has used the term 'planetary' in important, but disparate ways; and in so doing, underplaying the emancipatory potential the concept has in resisting the totalising concept of the 'globalisation'. This paper looks to the wider humanities and social science to offer four propositions—materiality, human as praxis, antinational and safeguarding—the planetary can be more coherently conceptualised geographically. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Observational Constraints on the Great Filter
- Author
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Haqq-Misra, Jacob, Kopparapu, Ravi Kumar, and Schwieterman, Edward
- Subjects
Evolution ,Planetary ,Exobiology ,Extraterrestrial Environment ,Planets ,Biosignatures ,Technosignatures ,Exoplanets ,Fermi paradox ,Great Filter ,Astronomical and Space Sciences ,Geochemistry ,Geology ,Astronomy & Astrophysics - Abstract
The search for spectroscopic biosignatures with the next generation of space telescopes could provide observational constraints on the abundance of exoplanets with signs of life. An extension of this spectroscopic characterization of exoplanets is the search for observational evidence of technology, known as technosignatures. Current mission concepts that would observe biosignatures from ultraviolet to near-infrared wavelengths could place upper limits on the fraction of planets in the Galaxy that host life, although such missions tend to have relatively limited capabilities of constraining the prevalence of technosignatures at mid-infrared wavelengths. Yet searching for technosignatures alongside biosignatures would provide important knowledge about the future of our civilization. If planets with technosignatures are abundant, then we can increase our confidence that the hardest step in planetary evolution-the Great Filter-is probably in our past. But if we find that life is commonplace while technosignatures are absent, then this would increase the likelihood that the Great Filter awaits to challenge us in the future.
- Published
- 2020
25. A New Taste for Life? Value Ecologies and the Aesthetics of the Outside
- Author
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Savransky, Martin, author
- Published
- 2024
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26. The continuum of care as a unifying framework for intergenerational and interspecies health equity
- Author
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Craig Stephen and Chris Walzer
- Subjects
socio-ecologic ,health ,equity ,interspecies ,intergenerational ,planetary ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
IntroductionUnlocking the full potential of different people and organizations to address existential health threats requires shared goals and frameworks that allow people to see themselves contributing to a common and shared continuum of care. A new narrative to help people implement collective action for collective problems is needed.MethodsThis paper is draw from the co-authors experience working from the local to international level on planetary health problems.ResultsThe proposed conceptual framework expands the socioecological model of health to help formulate multilevel approaches that foster healthier circumstances for all by revealing the mutual benefits that emerge from pooling expertise, funding, and political will to solve multiple problems with coordinated investment of resources and effort. It is intended to support program planning and communication. This framework is a response to the absence of systematic attempts to concurrently counteract the social and environmental conditions leading to disease, dysfunction and deficits which is increasingly seen as being problematic, especially as the root causes of health problems and solutions converge across species, sectors, and generations. The framework is embedded in the idea of interspecies and intergenerational health equity.DiscussionEnsuring interspecies and intergenerational health equity requires each actor to fulfill their roles along the continuum while supporting the needs of others. A socio-ecological continuum of care provides bundled options that combine knowledge from different sectors, disciplines and perspectives to guide interventions over time across a comprehensive array of services and support spanning all levels of needs, species and generations.
- Published
- 2023
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27. Lurking in the Gap between Philosophy of Mind and the Planetary
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Alasdair Milne
- Subjects
planetary ,mind ,interpersonal ,leverage point ,advanced technologies ,Visual arts ,N1-9211 - Abstract
This article outlines an emerging tendency prominent in the theory and practice of the art & technology domain to ‘horseshoe’ the urgencies of planetary-scale technology with questions traditionally associated with the philosophy of mind, conventionally placed at a much lower level-of-analysis. It delineates and problematises this trend in the theoretical plane, before considering the ‘interpersonal’, stemming from the work of Hannah Arendt, as a mediatory level of analysis, and ground from which to reconcile these contemporary concerns. This intervention acts as a methodological clarification. The implications of this shift are explored for the theorisation of ‘minor tech’ projects as scalable systems which originate at the interpersonal, but can leverage change upscale.
- Published
- 2023
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28. Introduction: On Politics of Urban Planning
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Pattaroni, Luca, Bhide, Amita, Lutringer, Christine, Zérah, Marie-Hélène, Series Editor, Pattaroni, Luca, editor, Bhide, Amita, editor, and Lutringer, Christine, editor
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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29. An Expression Method of Kinematic and Structure Diagrams for Planetary Gear Systems
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Huy, Vu Le, Nam, Do Duc, Ceccarelli, Marco, Series Editor, Agrawal, Sunil K., Advisory Editor, Corves, Burkhard, Advisory Editor, Glazunov, Victor, Advisory Editor, Hernández, Alfonso, Advisory Editor, Huang, Tian, Advisory Editor, Jauregui Correa, Juan Carlos, Advisory Editor, Takeda, Yukio, Advisory Editor, Khang, Nguyen Van, editor, and Hoang, Nguyen Quang, editor
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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30. Urban Bites and Agrarian Bytes: Digital Agriculture and Extended Urbanization
- Author
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Ravis, Timothy and Notkin, Benjamin
- Subjects
Digital Agriculture ,Precision Agriculture ,Extended Urbanization ,Planetary - Abstract
Capitalist agriculture faces a crisis. Plateauing yields and profits are driving up food prices, and the ability to continue the traditional practice of expanding into new, un-commodified territories appears to be waning. This crisis is due in large part to the accelerating biophysical contradictions of industrial agriculture, which systematically undermine the ecological conditions for its own success in pursuit of profit. We investigate how digital technologies are deployed as a potential data fix that does not solve the crisis but merely staves it off. We situate these technologies within the material context of capitalist urbanization, along the way arguing for bringing information back into the neo-Lefebvrian framework of “extended” or “planetary” urbanization. Digital agriculture technologies continue the centralization of economic knowledge and power as they facilitate the transformation of vast territories into “operational landscapes” that provide the material, energy, and labor for a rapidly expanding urban system.
- Published
- 2020
31. Intermediate Infrared Spectroscopy of Pyroxene: Determination of Ca‐Mg‐Fe Composition in the 4–8 Micron Wavelength Range.
- Author
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Kremer, Christopher H., Mustard, John. F., and Pieters, Carlé M.
- Subjects
- *
PYROXENE , *INFRARED spectroscopy , *ASTEROIDS , *NEAR infrared spectroscopy , *SOLAR system , *REMOTE sensing , *WAVELENGTHS , *MOSSBAUER spectroscopy - Abstract
Although pyroxene has been detected remotely across the Solar System, limited information is available from infrared remote sensing about the Mg‐Fe composition of pyroxene, and distinguishing between augite (20 < CaSiO3 < 45) and diopside‐hedenbergite (CaSiO3 > 45) remains challenging. The characteristics of pyroxene in the intermediate infrared range (4–8 μm), meanwhile, have not been documented. Using reflectance spectra of 72 samples ranging across the pyroxene quadrilateral, we investigate the effect of variations in Mg# (Mg/[Mg + Fe] × 100) and Ca‐content on the positions of strong and well‐defined spectral bands at ∼5.1 and ∼5.3 μm in high‐Ca pyroxene and ∼5.2 in low‐Ca pyroxene. We find that the 5.1, 5.2, and 5.3 μm bands move to shorter wavelengths as Mg# increases, whereas Ca‐content does not significantly affect the positions of these bands, enabling the determination of pyroxene Mg# directly from band positions alone. We also find that the ∼5.1 μm band is significantly more distinctive in diopside‐hedenbergite and the ∼5.3 μm band significantly more so in augite. Therefore, the 5.1, 5.2, and 5.3 μm spectral bands enable discrimination among diopside‐hedenbergite, low‐Ca pyroxene, and augite. Additionally, the 5.1, 5.2, and 5.3 μm bands enable direct determination of Mg# of diopside‐hedenbergite, low‐Ca pyroxene, and augite within ±23, ±10, and ±29 mol% Mg‐Fe, respectively. Plain Language Summary: Pyroxene is one of the most common minerals in the solar system. Although infrared remote sensing has allowed spacecraft to remotely detect pyroxene on planetary bodies (including Mars, the Moon, and numerous asteroids), the Mg‐Fe composition of this mineral remains challenging to determine remotely, leaving much unknown about the crustal evolution of these bodies. We describe a new tool for remotely determining the Mg‐Fe composition of pyroxene using spectra measured in the 4–8 μm intermediate infrared range, between the wavelength ranges of the more thoroughly characterized visible‐near infrared (0.5–3 μm) and mid‐infrared (8–15 μm) ranges. Using the positions of spectral bands in the 4–8 μm range, it is possible to determine the Mg‐Fe composition of pyroxene within ±23, ±10, and ±29 mol% for diopside‐hedenbergite, low‐Ca pyroxene, and augite, remaking intermediate infrared spectroscopy an additional valuable remote sensing tool. Key Points: High‐Ca and low‐Ca pyroxene spectra have strong, distinctive bands in the intermediate infrared (4–8 μm) rangeBand positions change systematically with respect to Mg‐Fe composition across a suite of pyroxene spanning the Ca‐Fe‐Mg quadrilateralSpectra in the intermediate infrared range are valuable for remotely determining pyroxene composition [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Inverting resolution: accounting for the planetary cost of earth observation.
- Author
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Cornford, Stephen
- Subjects
- *
VISUAL culture , *NATURAL satellites , *REMOTE sensing , *GEOPHYSICAL prospecting , *NEW Year's resolutions , *REMOTE-sensing images , *SHAPE of the earth - Abstract
This article uses the resolutional relationship between digital image and planetary surface in satellite remote sensing as a lens through which to view the reliance of visual culture on mineral resources. While most studies of resolution in satellite imaging have focused on visibility and invisibility, the author argues that the equivalence between pictorial and geographic space in its cm/pixel specification offers an opportunity to consider the physical relationship between the two. The proposed inversion enables the satellite and its transmitted images to be understood as contingent upon an unsustainably extractive industrial model. The article then traces the material trajectory in geophysical prospecting applications of remote sensing, identifying a recursive loop in which images are used to produce minerals that are used to produce images. The potential geopolitical impact of this circularity is then assessed with regard to an example of future remote sensing emissions governance. In this, and many other climate-critical applications, remote sensing potentially plays a vital role, yet its instrumental gaze tends to shape the earth as an informational resource whose mineral reserves should be capitalized upon. Ultimately, the author's aim is not to denounce earth observation as ecologically untenable, but to propose that we find a measure with which to assess the planetary impact of the various aspects of industrialized visual culture. Conceiving of resolution not as a measure of pictorial space but of the terrestrial cost of producing, consuming, distributing and permanently storing digital images might enable a more relational understanding of image and ground, pixels and planet. Accounting for the inverse resolution of an image could bring the deep temporal costs of digital visual culture into focus. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Interspecies cosmopolitanism: Non-human power and the grounds of world order in the Anthropocene.
- Author
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Burke, Anthony
- Subjects
- *
INTERNATIONAL organization , *COSMOPOLITANISM , *CLIMATE change , *MASS extinctions , *EXISTENTIALISM , *COVID-19 pandemic - Abstract
Cosmopolitanism claims to be the most just and inclusive of mainstream approaches to the ethics and practice of world order, given its commitment to human interconnection, peace, equality, diversity, and rights, and its concern with the many globalised pathologies that entrench injustice and vulnerability across borders. Yet it has largely remained oblivious to the agency, power, and value of non-human life on a turbulent and active Earth. Without rejecting its commitments to justice for human beings, the article challenges its humanism as both morally and politically inadequate to the situation of the Anthropocene, exemplified by the simultaneous crises of climate change, mass extinction, and the COVID-19 pandemic. In answer, the article develops new grounds and principles for an interspecies cosmopolitanism, exploring how we can reimagine its ontological foundations by creating new grounding images of subjectivity, existential unity, institutional organisation, and ordering purpose. These, in turn, can support political and institutional projects to secure the rights of ecosystems and people to flourish and persist through an increasingly chaotic epoch of human dominance and multispecies vulnerability across the Anthropocene Earth. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. "Listening to the Multiple and Multispecies Voices of the Crisis": Climate Change in Two Cetacean Fictions by Vandana Singh.
- Author
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Baishya, Amit R.
- Subjects
CETACEA ,CLIMATE change ,SCIENCE fiction ,GLOBAL warming ,COMMUNITIES ,FANTASY fiction - Abstract
This article reads two cetacean tales—"Entanglement" and "Requiem"—by the prominent South Asian writer of science fiction, Vandana Singh, to evaluate her portrayal of ordinary dimensions of living and existing in situations impacted by climate change. While cetaceans often function as an exotic alien other in science fiction and in cultural fantasies, Singh places her cetacean tales among Indigenous communities in the North Arctic region. Communities like the Inuits and the Iñupiat share relationships of collaborative reciprocity with cetaceans like belugas and bowhead whales. Deploying the geographer's Chie Sakakibara's concept of "cetaceousness"—complex, co-constitutive and quotidian relationships among humans and cetaceans in the North Arctic—this article studies Singh's merger of realism and speculation in her representation of the impact of global warming on populations for whom climate change is not a catastrophe waiting in the future, but whose effects have seeped into the minutiae of the everyday and the ordinary. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Characterization of Foreshock Plasma Populations at Mercury.
- Author
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Glass, Austin N., Tracy, Patrick J., Raines, Jim M., Jia, Xianzhe, Romanelli, Norberto, and DiBraccio, Gina A.
- Subjects
MERCURY (Planet) ,SUPERSONIC flow ,MAGNETIC dipoles ,MAGNETIC fields - Abstract
Observations of foreshock plasma populations at Mercury are presented utilizing measurements from the Fast Imaging Plasma Spectrometer aboard the Mercury Surface, Space Environment, Geochemistry, and Ranging spacecraft. The magnetosphere and foreshock system at Mercury exists in a unique parameter space, due to the planet's relatively weak magnetic dipole and the proximity of its orbit to the Sun. Previous investigations have therefore questioned whether there is sufficient free energy at Mercury to generate foreshock populations, due to the small spatial scale of its bow shock. The observations presented in this work show that field‐aligned beam and diffuse populations similar to those seen in the terrestrial foreshock are able to form upstream of the Hermean bow shock. The observed populations are organized by the bow shock geometry, and are associated with magnetic wave activity previously detected in Mercury's foreshock with corollaries to the terrestrial foreshock. Plain Language Summary: Upstream of a magnetized planet sitting in supersonic flow, a region is formed called the "bow shock," which acts to slow down the flow before it impacts the obstacle. Because of the dynamic magnetic field environment, the bow shock can also act to speed up a fraction of the population, directing the ions back upstream. These processes have been described at Earth; here, we document observations of nearly 40 foreshock plasma populations observed at Mercury, and compare them to the populations at Earth. Despite Mercury's proximity to the Sun relative to Earth, we find that the two foreshock environments are very similar, with a few key differences worthy of future study. Key Points: Mercury's foreshock contains diffuse and field‐aligned beam (FAB) populations with similar characteristics to the same populations at EarthDiffuse and FAB populations in Mercury's foreshock are organized according to shock geometry in a manner very similar to EarthDiffuse and FAB populations are associated with simultaneous wave activity in the magnetic field [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Space farming: Horticulture systems on spacecraft and outlook to planetary space exploration.
- Author
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Nguyen, Melinda, Knowling, Matthew, Tran, Nam N., Burgess, Alexandra, Fisk, Ian, Watt, Michelle, Escribà-Gelonch, Marc, This, Herve, Culton, John, and Hessel, Volker
- Subjects
- *
PLANETARY exploration , *SPACE exploration , *HORTICULTURE , *AGRICULTURAL technology , *AGRICULTURAL development , *SPACE vehicles - Abstract
Successful human space exploration requires more products than can be taken as payload. There is a need, therefore, for in-space circular manufacturing. Requirements for this include limited resource inflow, from either Earth or other planets and the generation of minimal waste. The provision of nutritious food is a clear need for human survival on the Moon or Mars and is one of the most complex to solve. Demand in large quantities, constant and reliable provision of food requires the development of specialist agricultural technologies. Here, we first review the history of space farming over the past five decades. This survey assesses the technologies which have been tested under the harsh conditions of space, identifying which modern horticultural components are applicable for in-space plant growth. We then outline which plants have been grown and under what conditions, and speculate upon the types of plants that could be selected to best nourish astronauts. Current systems are focussed on experimentation and exploration, but do not yet provide turn-key solutions for efficient food production within a long-term space exploration scenario. With that take, this review aims to provide a perspective on how an engineered closed circular environmental life-support system (ECCLES) might be constructed. To exemplify the latter, nutrient auto accumulation by biofortification is proposed through the integration of space farming and space mining, which is uncharted on Earth. • Summing up the technological improvement of space horticulture over five decades. • Reporting plants that have been grown in space, how, and the key results obtained. • Identifying potential plants and technologies for future space farming. • Introducing the engineered closed circular environmental life-support system (ECCLES). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Pluralising the Planetary: The Radical Incompleteness of Machinic Envisioning.
- Author
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Richardson, Michael and Munster, Anna
- Subjects
COMPUTERS ,MASS media ,PLURALISM ,COMPUTER vision - Abstract
Automated techniques have driven new approaches to visualising and acting upon planetary crises, such as Microsoft's Planetary Computer and Amazon's partnership with the start-up Overstory (formerly 20tree.ai). However, "planetary" machine envisioning, together with its critical theorisation, tends toward scalar equivalence and the assumption of interoperability across media, infrastructure, and optics. The "planetary" becomes a mode for and platform of seeing Earth and beyond in which AI vision systems conjoin seamlessly with a predictive imaging of the planet and have the effect of becoming mutually dependent and self-reinforcing. In this article, we argue for a more pluralistic and nonhuman set of Earth images and imaginings. We argue that such modes of imaging are multiscalar and are indebted to what Paul Edwards calls "data friction." Here materialities of both media and Earth impede the seamless movement and exchange of data involved in machine vision; and disjunctive syntheses are instead constantly being generated. We examine eccentric modes of configuring the planetary via the artwork of Tega Brain, who deploys disjunctive and nonscalable relations of climate and environment in her use of data and AI imaging techniques. In spite of considerable financial, cognitive, and affective investment to entangle Earth with machine vision, we propose instead that imaging and imagining the planetary is a radically incomplete project. Drawing on Indigenous approaches to AI development via Country Centered Design and the process philosophy of William James and others, we propose that planetary "vision" operates within a pluralistic universe of seeing, in which ongoing and radical incompleteness is core to its imaging. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Viral Entanglements
- Author
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Arnab Dasgupta
- Subjects
agency ,agential realism ,conatus ,intra-action ,operator ,planetary ,symbiosis ,virus ,History of scholarship and learning. The humanities ,AZ20-999 ,Literature (General) ,PN1-6790 - Abstract
This paper seeks to investigate the current pandemic from a New Materialist perspective. New materialist philosophy through its radical understanding of agency and subjectivity provides the tools to grapple with the viral entity without placing it within the anthropocentric frame. At the same time, New Materialism can help understand the thick mesh of intra-action between the human and the non-human. The paper will study how the human body and the viral entity each and how such a relationship calls for an ethics of responsibility. Through a close reading of New Materialist philosophers like Jane Bennett, Karen Barad, Rosi Bradoti and through the employment of their ideas such as intra-action, agential realism and operator, the paper attempts to reach at an understanding of the pandemic which is accommodative by nature. The paper also provides a planetary understanding of health and illness and argues for a "more than human" approach to health care and medical knowledge. The paper derives perspectives from Spinoza’s philosophy to understand the cellular interactions between the human cell and the viral entity.
- Published
- 2021
39. The River Clyde Pageant: Inventing and Reinventing the Conditions for Planetary Performance.
- Author
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Lewis, Cole
- Subjects
- *
GLOBAL environmental change , *GLOBALIZATION , *PRAXIS (Process) , *OTHER (Philosophy) - Abstract
The practice that underpins Prince Edward Island's the River Clyde Pageant deserves attention because it is made possible only through relational ways of being with alterity—both the human and non-human—and a curiosity about the ineffable. The origins, organization, and forms of the River Clyde Pageant are traced to put them into dialogue with contemporary thinking about planetarity before concluding that planetary performance is its own mode of praxis in performance. Planetary performance holds attention to the irresolvable planet while simultaneously inventing and reinventing new conditions for performance on the periphery of globalization. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Foundational women in planetary geomorphology: Some contributions in fluvial, aeolian, and (cryo)volcanic subdisciplines.
- Author
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Burr, Devon M., Diniega, Serina, Quick, Lynnae C., Gardner‐Vandy, Kathryn, and Rivera‐Hernandez, Frances
- Subjects
GEOMORPHOLOGY ,WOMEN scientists ,PLANETARY science ,WOMEN of color ,ROLE models ,WOMEN employees - Abstract
Despite undeserved challenges to participation in the field of planetary geomorphology, women have made significant contributions in the fluvial, aeolian, and (cryo)volcanic subdisciplines. In this work, some women—in particular, women of color—are highlighted to show a part of these foundational contributions. We focused on women scientists who were working in the latter half of the 20th century, a revolutionary time for terrestrial geomorphology and the inception of the discipline of planetary geomorphology. We also focused on women working in our scientific subdisciplines so that we could provide proper context for their work. These contributions have occurred both as discoveries in terrestrial geomorphology leading to follow‐on discoveries in planetary geomorphology and through serving as educators and role models. With women increasingly achieving positions of influence both in the geo‐ and planetary sciences as in American society, this research allows us to celebrate these contributions of women and particularly women of color while looking forward to a more complete record of their past contributions and greater future achievements. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Jadeite and related species in shocked meteorites: Limitations on inference of shock conditions.
- Author
-
Baziotis, Ioannis, Xydous, Stamatios, Papoutsa, Angeliki, Hu, Jinping, Ma, Chi, Klemme, Stephan, Berndt, Jasper, Ferrière, Ludovic, Caracas, Razvan, and Asimow, Paul D.
- Subjects
- *
METEORITES , *RAMAN spectroscopy , *ANALYTICAL chemistry , *PYROXENE , *MELT crystallization - Abstract
Jadeite is frequently reported in shocked meteorites, displaying a variety of textures and grain sizes that suggest formation by either solid-state transformation or by crystallization from a melt. Sometimes, jadeite has been identified solely on the basis of Raman spectra. Here we argue that additional characterization is needed to confidently identify jadeite and distinguish it from related species. Based on chemical and spectral analysis of three new occurrences, complemented by first-principles calculations, we show that related pyroxenes in the chemical space (Na)M2(Al)M1(Si2)TO6–(Ca)M2(Al)M1(AlSi) TO6–(⎕)M2(Si)M1(Si2)TO6 with up to 2.25 atoms Si per formula unit have spectral features similar to jadeite. However, their distinct stability fields (if any) and synthesis pathways, considered together with textural constraints, have different implications for precursor phases and estimates of impactor size, encounter velocity, and crater diameter. A reassessment of reported jadeite occurrences casts a new light on many previous conclusions about the shock histories preserved in particular meteorites. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Other than "The City".
- Author
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Easterling, Keller
- Abstract
The article offers information about public culture which focuses on spaces beyond the city and challenges the dominant ways of thinking about urban phenomena. It discusses the term the city fails to capture the complexities of urban spaces. It is often associated with urbanists' knowledge and data-driven language, which is not accessible to a broad audience.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. The Habitability of Proxima Centauri b: Environmental States and Observational Discriminants
- Author
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Meadows, Victoria S, Arney, Giada N, Schwieterman, Edward W, Lustig-Yaeger, Jacob, Lincowski, Andrew P, Robinson, Tyler, Domagal-Goldman, Shawn D, Deitrick, Russell, Barnes, Rory K, Fleming, David P, Luger, Rodrigo, Driscoll, Peter E, Quinn, Thomas R, and Crisp, David
- Subjects
Space Sciences ,Astronomical Sciences ,Physical Sciences ,Climate Action ,Atmosphere ,Biological Evolution ,Carbon Dioxide ,Carbon Monoxide ,Climate ,Evolution ,Planetary ,Exobiology ,Extraterrestrial Environment ,Hot Temperature ,Models ,Biological ,Oceans and Seas ,Planets ,Radiation Effects ,Telescopes ,Water ,Planetary habitability and biosignatures ,Planetary atmospheres ,Exoplanets ,Spectroscopic biosignatures ,Planetary science ,Proxima Centauri b. Astrobiology 18 ,xxx-xxx ,Astronomical and Space Sciences ,Geochemistry ,Geology ,Astronomy & Astrophysics ,Astronomical sciences - Abstract
Proxima Centauri b provides an unprecedented opportunity to understand the evolution and nature of terrestrial planets orbiting M dwarfs. Although Proxima Cen b orbits within its star's habitable zone, multiple plausible evolutionary paths could have generated different environments that may or may not be habitable. Here, we use 1-D coupled climate-photochemical models to generate self-consistent atmospheres for several evolutionary scenarios, including high-O2, high-CO2, and more Earth-like atmospheres, with both oxic and anoxic compositions. We show that these modeled environments can be habitable or uninhabitable at Proxima Cen b's position in the habitable zone. We use radiative transfer models to generate synthetic spectra and thermal phase curves for these simulated environments, and use instrument models to explore our ability to discriminate between possible planetary states. These results are applicable not only to Proxima Cen b but to other terrestrial planets orbiting M dwarfs. Thermal phase curves may provide the first constraint on the existence of an atmosphere. We find that James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) observations longward of 10 μm could characterize atmospheric heat transport and molecular composition. Detection of ocean glint is unlikely with JWST but may be within the reach of larger-aperture telescopes. Direct imaging spectra may detect O4 absorption, which is diagnostic of massive water loss and O2 retention, rather than a photosynthetic biosphere. Similarly, strong CO2 and CO bands at wavelengths shortward of 2.5 μm would indicate a CO2-dominated atmosphere. If the planet is habitable and volatile-rich, direct imaging will be the best means of detecting habitability. Earth-like planets with microbial biospheres may be identified by the presence of CH4-which has a longer atmospheric lifetime under Proxima Centauri's incident UV-and either photosynthetically produced O2 or a hydrocarbon haze layer. Key Words: Planetary habitability and biosignatures-Planetary atmospheres-Exoplanets-Spectroscopic biosignatures-Planetary science-Proxima Centauri b. Astrobiology 18, 133-189.
- Published
- 2018
44. Planetary
- Author
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Gargaud, Muriel, editor, Irvine, William M., editor, Amils, Ricardo, editor, Claeys, Philippe, editor, Cleaves, Henderson James, editor, Gerin, Maryvonne, editor, Rouan, Daniel, editor, Spohn, Tilman, editor, Tirard, Stéphane, editor, and Viso, Michel, editor
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Applying planetary mapping methods to submarine environments: onshore-offshore geomorphology of Christiana-Santorini-Kolumbo Volcanic Group, Greece
- Author
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Alexandra E. Huff, Paraskevi Nomikou, Lisa A. Thompson, Emilie E. E. Hooft, and Ian J. Walker
- Subjects
mapping ,geomorphology ,submarine ,planetary ,methods ,santorini ,Maps ,G3180-9980 - Abstract
Geologic maps are foundational products for natural hazard assessments but developing them for submarine areas is challenging due to a lack of physical access to the study area. In response, submarine geomorphologic maps are used to provide geologic context and spatial information on landforms and related geo-hazards for risk management. These maps are generated from remotely sensed data, e.g. digital elevation models (DEMs), which introduce unique hurdles to submarine mapping. To address this issue, we produced a workflow for applying planetary geologic mapping methods to submarine data. Using this, we created an onshore-offshore geomorphologic map of the Christiana-Santorini-Kolumbo Volcanic Group, Greece. This product can be used to enhance hazard assessments on Santorini, which is a tourist hot-spot at high risk for volcanically- and seismically-induced hazards. We present this workflow as a tool for generating uniform geomorphologic map products that will aid natural hazard assessments of submarine environments.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Reframing climate security: The "planetary" as policy context.
- Author
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Dalby, Simon
- Subjects
CLIMATE change mitigation ,FOSSIL fuels ,DEVELOPING countries ,SECURITY sector ,NATIONAL security - Abstract
• Conventional climate security discussions fail to grapple with earth system science. • Climate security should be reformulated in terms of the current planetary context. • Adaptability, sustainable habitats and fossil fuel control are the key elements needed. • Major derailment risks loom if urgent climate change action isn't undertaken. Much of the discussion under the label of "climate security" focuses on potential conflicts and disruptions in peripheral locations in the global south putatively triggered by climate change. If, however the analysis starts with climate, and the earth system as the point of departure for analysis, then things look very different. The speed and scale of climate disruptions is accelerating. Earth system science suggests that urgent action is needed to deal with climate change; waiting too long may make the issue impossible to address. Framing matters in terms of a planetary condition and focusing on climate rather than national security as the starting point for analysis suggests very different policy priorities. Reframing climate security to grapple with the planetary condition requires policies that first, facilitate adaptation, second work to make sustainable habitats for humanity and third, work to drastically constrain the use of fossil fuels urgently. Here, proposals for fossil fuel non-proliferation treaties and similar measures analogous with earlier arms control agreements. This provides the security sector with a much-needed direct engagement with the causes of climate change and its resultant disruptions while simultaneously reframing climate as a matter of planetary rather than national security. Tackling climate change is a matter of urgency, and failure to so effectively in the short run my derail needed efforts later, simply because the resources to do so are no longer available. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Prelude to a New Epochality
- Author
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Simon, Zoltán Boldizsár, Fleming, James Rodger, Series Editor, Launius, Roger D., Series Editor, and Simon, Zoltán Boldizsár
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Citizenship struggles: 25th anniversary special issue.
- Author
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Bassel, Leah and Isin, Engin
- Subjects
- *
CITIZENSHIP , *POLITICAL science - Abstract
The 25th Anniversary Special Issue features forty articles that reflect on the study of citizenship in the last 25 years and highlight some cultural, economic, political, and social struggles over various forms and effects of citizenship. The authors include diverse disciplines, perspectives, and trajectories and address various struggles that shape citizenship as a concept and practice in the 21st century. This introduction provides an account of the aims of this special issue rather than a summary of these contributions, which we invite readers to explore and engage. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. REOPENING THE FUTURE: EMERGING WORLDS AND NOVEL HISTORICAL FUTURES.
- Subjects
- *
HISTORICITY , *MODERNITY , *PRESENTISM (Historiography) , *ANTHROPOCENE Epoch , *UTOPIAS , *FUTURE, The ,ZAPATISTA Rebellion, Mexico, 1994 - Abstract
Unlike those studies that conclude with a future collapsing under presentism, this article takes a fresh look at the issue of futures. To that end, the first part of the article offers a review of presentism, which amounts not to the erasure of any given future but to the proliferation of possible futures in the age of the Anthropocene. The second part sets out to identify novel futures that, while they may differ from those of presentism, do not seek to revive the future proposed by the defunct modern regime of historicity. By tracking the experience of "real utopias" bent on birthing other worlds, we can begin to map their preconditions. At the intersection of several extant regimes of historicity, the autonomous Zapatista zone that has, since 1994, arisen in southern Mexico has proven uniquely inventive; it may serve as a remarkable observatory for the appearance of unprecedented futures. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Desiderata de la Educación Decolonial Planetaria en re-ligajes complejos.
- Author
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ELENA RODRIGUEZ, MILAGROS, FORTUNATO, IVAN, and ALVES ARAÚJO, OSMAR HÉLIO
- Subjects
- *
DECOLONIZATION , *EDUCATION research , *PERIODICAL publishing - Abstract
The issue titled Planetary Decolonial Education: Complex Re-linkages, organized by Milagros Elena Rodríguez, Ivan Fortunato and Osmar Hélio Alves Araújo, is hereby presented. In this sense, the complex objective of this article is to present generalities about the issue and the most outstanding aspects of each author and their contributions. The article proposals are linked to the axes that appear in the thematic call, as published by EduSer Journal, focusing on complex thinking in the planetary decoloniality of education; planetary decoloniality and complex pedagogies; planetary education and planetary decolonial projects; the contributions of planetary education to the safeguarding of the Earth as a homeland; knowledge as promoter of a decolonial and complex education and complex research in planetary education. It is quite wonderful that this immense convergence has been fulfilled in the proposed goals; and we are aware that many issues are missing on these major themes to assist the contributions of researchers on the planet. They are brave and warriors in the midst of planetary difficulties, thus growing in the service and searching for a Planetary Decolonial Education. Thanks to the editors of this wonderful journal and to all who answered the call. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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