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News

Reduced boating speed within quarter mile of shore in effect on Clear Lake due to high water

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Written by: LAKE COUNTY NEWS REPORTS
Published: 09 February 2025
LAKE COUNTY, Calif. — With lake levels increasing in Clear Lake due to recent storm activity, motorboat users are reminded of local recreation Ordinance 3065, which requires idle speed when boating within one-quarter mile or less from the shore of Clear Lake.

“Idle speed” means operating a motorboat at a speed that does not produce a wake, protecting shoreline property and infrastructure from harmful wave action.

This ordinance goes into effect when the lake reaches 8.0 feet or higher on the Rumsey scale — the special measure for Clear Lake — for a 24 hour period.

The requirements are lifted when Clear Lake drops to 7.9 feet Rumsey, or lower, for a 24-hour period.

Clear Lake has retained over the 8.0 foot Rumsey mark since 8:45 a.m. Saturday and remained there early Sunday, according to the US Geological Survey’s gauge on the lake.

Clear Lake is considered “full” at the 7.56 foot Rumsey mark.

Boaters are responsible for checking the lake level before boating on Clear Lake. Violating this ordinance constitutes a misdemeanor and may result in a fine not to exceed $500, or up to six months imprisonment in the County Jail.

Additionally, all boaters are advised to use extra caution when operating motorboats throughout Clear Lake due to floating and submerged debris hazards resulting from recent storm events.

Floating and submerged debris such as trees, branches, full or partial floating docks, abandoned or detached boats, trash, and other objects can cause significant damage, particularly when coming into contact with boats operating at normal to significant speed.

Boaters should remain vigilant and aware of their surroundings and maintain a safe, slower speed when boating throughout all of Clear Lake this time of year.

For questions regarding this topic, or to report in-lake hazards such as debris, floating docks, or missing or found hazard buoys, contact the Water Resources Department at 707-263-2344 or email at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it..

Series of meetings planned on proposed Sonoma State budget reductions and holding CSU System accountable

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Written by: LAKE COUNTY NEWS REPORTS
Published: 09 February 2025
The legislative leaders of the North Bay will conduct in-person meetings with campus and community stakeholders and a legislative hearing on the proposed severe budgetary reductions and program eliminations announced by the California State University system at Sonoma State University.

Senate President pro Tempore Mike McGuire (D-North Coast), Senator Christopher Cabaldon (D-Yolo), Assembly Majority Leader Cecilia Aguiar-Curry (D-Winters), Assemblymember Chris Rogers (D-Santa Rosa), and Assemblymember Damon Connolly (D-San Rafael) will be seeking the community’s input on the CSU’s proposed budgetary reductions and the future of Sonoma State University.

Committed to strengthening SSU and disappointed in the university’s inadequate consultation, transparency and vision, the legislative leaders are moving quickly to convene public forums and bring all sides together, including the community, to focus on the future of Sonoma State. The hearing will include top leaders from the Assembly and Senate.

The public hearing will be held on Friday, Feb. 21, at 2 p.m. and will feature a wide variety of panelists, with an overarching goal of holding the CSU system accountable. Additional details will be released in the coming weeks.

The legislative leaders said in a statement that “Too many bright futures depend on a thriving Sonoma State, and the North Bay legislative delegation will be working with the campus community leaders from throughout the region and the CSU system on developing a long-term success plan to ensure the university’s longevity for decades to come.”

Helping Paws: Many young dogs

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Written by: Elizabeth Larson
Published: 09 February 2025
LAKE COUNTY, Calif. — Lake County Animal Care and Control is filled with a variety of dogs, many of them young, needing new homes.

The dogs available for adoption this week include mixes of border collie, Chihuahua, German shepherd, husky, Labrador Retriever, pit bull terrier, Rottweiler and terrier.

Dogs that are adopted from Lake County Animal Care and Control are either neutered or spayed, microchipped and, if old enough, given a rabies shot and county license before being released to their new owner. License fees do not apply to residents of the cities of Lakeport or Clearlake.

Those dogs and the others shown on this page at the Lake County Animal Care and Control shelter have been cleared for adoption.

Call Lake County Animal Care and Control at 707-263-0278 or visit the shelter online for information on visiting or adopting.

The shelter is located at 4949 Helbush in Lakeport.

Email Elizabeth Larson at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.. Follow her on Twitter, @ERLarson, and on Bluesky, @erlarson.bsky.social. Find Lake County News on the following platforms: Facebook, @LakeCoNews; X, @LakeCoNews; Threads, @lakeconews, and on Bluesky, @lakeconews.bsky.social.


 
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Space News: Lightning strikes link weather on Earth and weather in space

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Written by: Lauren Blum, University of Colorado Boulder
Published: 09 February 2025

 

Lightning, when coupled with solar flares, can knock electrons flying above the Earth out of place. AP Photo/David Zalubowski
Lauren Blum, University of Colorado Boulder

There are trillions of charged particles – protons and electrons, the basic building blocks of matter – whizzing around above your head at any given time. These high-energy particles, which can travel at close to the speed of light, typically remain thousands of kilometers away from Earth, trapped there by the shape of Earth’s magnetic field.

Occasionally, though, an event happens that can jostle them out of place, sending electrons raining down into Earth’s atmosphere. These high-energy particles in space make up what are known as the Van Allen radiation belts, and their discovery was one of the first of the space age. A new study from my research team has found that electromagnetic waves generated by lightning can trigger these electron showers.

A brief history lesson

At the start of the space race in the 1950s, professor James Van Allen and his research team at the University of Iowa were tasked with building an experiment to fly on the United States’ very first satellite, Explorer 1. They designed sensors to study cosmic radiation, which is caused by high-energy particles originating from the Sun, the Milky Way galaxy, or beyond.

A black and white photo of three men holding a model of a cylindrical spacecraft over their heads.
James Van Allen, middle, poses with a model of the Explorer 1 satellite. NASA

After Explorer 1 launched, though, they noticed that their instrument was detecting significantly higher levels of radiation than expected. Rather than measuring a distant source of radiation beyond our solar system, they appeared to be measuring a local and extremely intense source.

This measurement led to the discovery of the Van Allen radiation belts, two doughnut-shaped regions of high-energy electrons and ions encircling the planet.

Scientists believe that the inner radiation belt, peaking about 621 miles (1000 kilometers) from Earth, is composed of electrons and high-energy protons and is relatively stable over time.

The outer radiation belt, about three times farther away, is made up of high-energy electrons. This belt can be highly dynamic. Its location, density and energy content may vary significantly by the hour in response to solar activity.

Charged particles, with their trajectories shown as blue and yellow lines here, exist in the radiation belts around Earth, depicted here as the yellow, green and blue regions.

The discovery of these high-radiation regions is not only an interesting story about the early days of the space race; it also serves as a reminder that many scientific discoveries have come about by happy accident.

It is a lesson for experimental scientists, myself included, to keep an open mind when analyzing and evaluating data. If the data doesn’t match our theories or expectations, those theories may need to be revisited.

Our curious observations

While I teach the history of the space race in a space policy course at the University of Colorado, Boulder, I rarely connect it to my own experience as a scientist researching Earth’s radiation belts. Or, at least, I didn’t until recently.

In a study led by Max Feinland, an undergraduate student in my research group, we stumbled upon some of our own unexpected observations of Earth’s radiation belts. Our findings have made us rethink our understanding of Earth’s inner radiation belt and the processes affecting it.

Originally, we set out to look for very rapid – sub-second – bursts of high-energy electrons entering the atmosphere from the outer radiation belt, where they are typically observed.

Many scientists believe that a type of electromagnetic wave known as “chorus” can knock these electrons out of position and send them toward the atmosphere. They’re called chorus waves due to their distinct chirping sound when listened to on a radio receiver.

Feinland developed an algorithm to search for these events in decades of measurements from the SAMPEX satellite. When he showed me a plot with the location of all the events he’d detected, we noticed a number of them were not where we expected. Some events mapped to the inner radiation belt rather than the outer belt.

This finding was curious for two reasons. For one, chorus waves aren’t prevalent in this region, so something else had to be shaking these electrons loose.

The other surprise was finding electrons this energetic in the inner radiation belt at all. Measurements from NASA’s Van Allen Probes mission prompted renewed interest in the inner radiation belt. Observations from the Van Allen Probes suggested that high-energy electrons are often not present in this inner radiation belt, at least not during the first few years of that mission, from 2012 to 2014.

Our observations now showed that, in fact, there are times that the inner belt contains high-energy electrons. How often this is true and under what conditions remain open questions to explore. These high-energy particles can damage spacecraft and harm humans in space, so researchers need to know when and where in space they are present to better design spacecraft.

Determining the culprit

One of the ways to disturb electrons in the inner radiation belt and kick them into Earth’s atmosphere actually begins in the atmosphere itself.

Lightning, the large electromagnetic discharges that light up the sky during thunderstorms, can actually generate electromagnetic waves known as lightning-generated whistlers.

A bolt of lightning striking above a city skyline.
Lightning strikes generate electromagnetic waves, which can travel into the radiation belts above the Earth’s atmosphere. mdesigner125/iStock via Getty Images Plus

These waves can then travel through the atmosphere out into space, where they interact with electrons in the inner radiation belt – much as chorus waves interact with electrons in the outer radiation belt.

To test whether lightning was behind our inner radiation belt detections, we looked back at the electron bursts and compared them with thunderstorm data. Some lightning activity seemed correlated with our electron events, but much of it was not.

Specifically, only lightning that occurred right after so-called geomagnetic storms resulted in the bursts of electrons we detected.

Geomagnetic storms are disturbances in the near-Earth space environment often caused by large eruptions on the Sun’s surface. This solar activity, if directed toward Earth, can produce what researchers term space weather. Space weather can result in stunning auroras, but it can also disrupt satellite and power grid operations.

We discovered that a combination of weather on Earth and weather in space produces the unique electron signatures we observed in our study. The solar activity disturbs Earth’s radiation belts and populates the inner belt with very high-energy electrons, then the lightning interacts with these electrons and creates the rapid bursts that we observed.

These results provide a nice reminder of the interconnected nature of Earth and space. They were also a welcome reminder to me of the often nonlinear process of scientific discovery.The Conversation

Lauren Blum, Assistant Professor of Atmospheric and Space Physics, University of Colorado Boulder

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

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