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News

Paws for Celebration: CHP welcomes six new K9 teams

The California Highway Patrol’s latest class of K9 teams in November 2024. Photo courtesy of the CHP.

After several rigorous months of training, the California Highway Patrol is introducing six newly graduated K-9 officers into its force.

The ceremony at the CHP’s canine training facility in West Sacramento signifies the beginning of a noteworthy public safety collaboration for K-9 units and their respective handlers.

The CHP congratulates one Explosive Detection Canine team and five Patrol and Narcotics Detection Canine teams for the successful completion of the Commission on Peace Officer Standards and Training requirements.

The newest crime-fighting duos include one German Shepherd and five Belgian Malinois.

The CHP now has 49 K-9 teams deployed throughout the state.

“Our canine teams are critical to the CHP’s mission to protect and serve the public. The specialized training and strong bond between each handler and their canine partner allow us to detect threats better and apprehend suspects safely,” said CHP Commissioner Sean Duryee. “Today’s graduation celebrates the dedication of these teams and their vital role in enhancing our department’s capabilities. We proudly welcome them as part of our commitment to keeping California’s communities safe.”

A K-9 handler plays a crucial role in the training and development of a K-9 dog, as they are responsible for guiding the dog's learning process.

Both the handler and the dog must establish a strong bond built on trust and communication. The handler must learn to interpret the dog's behavior and signals, ensuring effective training techniques are applied.

Additionally, the handler is responsible for reinforcing commands and behaviors through consistent practice and patience.

Ultimately, the success of a K-9 in learning new skills heavily depends on the handler's ability to adapt to their dog's unique needs.

Once deployed, the K-9 teams receive ongoing training to prepare for evolving threats and challenges.
Monthly, the canine team completes at least eight hours of maintenance training, including odor detection, obedience, and master protection/apprehension.

The CHP has 36 patrol and narcotics detection canine teams, eight patrol and explosive canine teams, and five explosive detection canine teams deployed throughout the state.

Within these teams, CHP K-9s often participate in public demonstrations and community events to promote safety and foster positive relationships.

All K-9s are paired with a seasoned CHP officer with at least three years of professional experience. K-9s aid the CHP by performing various functions, including detecting human scent, contraband, and explosives.

The officers represent the CHP’s geographic regions of Protective Services Division, Northern, Valley, Golden Gate, Southern, and Border Division.

Join the CHP and pursue your career as a K-9 handler. You will experience a rewarding career that combines teamwork, service, and the opportunity to work with highly trained K-9 partners. If you are passionate about law enforcement and want to make a difference, we invite you to visit www.CHPMadeForMore.com to apply and become part of our dedicated team.
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Written by: LAKE COUNTY NEWS REPORTS
Published: 09 November 2024

Estate Planning: The need to review estate planning before someone dies

Dennis Fordham. Courtesy photo.

The need to periodically review and update one’s estate planning can go neglected for years. In the end, it may be too late because the person involved has either become incapacitated or is deceased.

The last thing the decedent’s surviving loved one (beneficiary) needs is an unwelcome surprise — an unforeseen gotcha — in the decedent’s estate planning that was assumed to be good but unfortunately was not reviewed.

For example, there are many joint living trusts created by spouses as so-called “AB” or “ABC” trusts where the joint trust assets are divided into two or more subtrusts at the death of the first spouse (deceased spouse).

At the deceased spouses’ death, these AB and ABC trusts allocate the decedent’s share of the joint trust to one or more irrevocable subtrusts where the surviving spouse has limited lifetime benefits in the decedent’s assets.

These irrevocable subtrusts are more complicated and expensive to administer than if the deceased spouse leaves all to the surviving spouse.

They also impose serious limitations on the surviving spouse’s use of the deceased spouse’s assets.

To be sure, AB and ABC trusts do have their place – such as in blended families and in very wealthy estates — but for years they were overused. Many old and unexamined estate planning documents still have unnecessary AB and ABC trusts.

Another example is a surviving spouse in a second marriage who expects to live in the residence that she co-owned with the deceased spouse.

However, as drafted, their joint trust left the deceased spouse’s half of the residence outright to the deceased spouse’s own child at the deceased spouse’s death. Thus, the surviving spouse and step child co-own the residence.

This situation may or may not work out to the surviving spouse’s satisfaction as it opens the possibility that the step child will force the sale of the residence or otherwise argue about the residence.

Had the couple seen an attorney while both were alive, the attorney might have recommended that the surviving spouse have a life estate in the decedent’s one-half share of the residence.

The life estate typically involves the deceased spouse’s interest being held in further trust which can sell the residence and purchase a replacement residence (if the surviving spouse wants to relocate).

Alternatively transferring title to the child subject to a life estate for the surviving spouse might work. While a life estate is simpler in the short term it might not work out in the term if the surviving spouse needs to relocate.

Another example is a parent who leaves an inheritance outright to a special needs child who receives SSI or food stamps needs based government benefits and so jeopardizes the child’s government benefits.

Had the parent discussed the estate planning with an attorney a special needs trust to preserve the child’s benefits might have been used.

Next, consider a “do it yourself” will that does not meet the requirements to be either a standard will or a handwritten will.

For example, consider a person who types up a “will” and has it notarized (but not witnessed).

This typed and notarized “will” is not an acceptable will because it was not witnessed by two disinterested witnesses — and it also is not a handwritten will. Additional evidence is needed to satisfy the court to accept the will and such wills invite litigation.

In addition, such a will is unlikely to address issues including whether a bond is required of the executor, naming alternative death beneficiaries, and providing adequate powers to the executor. The likely deficiencies alone justify taking it to an attorney and getting it redone correctly.

The foregoing is not legal advice. Anyone confronting the issues addressed should consult with a qualified attorney.

Dennis A. Fordham, attorney, is a State Bar-Certified Specialist in estate planning, probate and trust law. His office is at 870 S. Main St., Lakeport, Calif. He can be reached at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. and 707-263-3235.
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Written by: DENNIS FORDHAM
Published: 09 November 2024

Microplastics promote cloud formation, with likely effects on weather and climate

 

Giant cumulonimbus clouds in Australia. Steve Christo - Corbis/Corbis via Getty Images

Clouds form when water vapor – an invisible gas in the atmosphere – sticks to tiny floating particles, such as dust, and turns into liquid water droplets or ice crystals. In a newly published study, we show that microplastic particles can have the same effects, producing ice crystals at temperatures 5 to 10 degrees Celsius (9 to 18 degrees Fahrenheit) warmer than droplets without microplastics.

This suggests that microplastics in the air may affect weather and climate by producing clouds in conditions where they would not form otherwise.

We are atmospheric chemists who study how different types of particles form ice when they come into contact with liquid water. This process, which occurs constantly in the atmosphere, is called nucleation.

Clouds in the atmosphere can be made up of liquid water droplets, ice particles or a mixture of the two. In clouds in the mid- to upper atmosphere where temperatures are between 32 and minus 36 F (0 to minus 38 C), ice crystals normally form around mineral dust particles from dry soils or biological particles, such as pollen or bacteria.

Microplastics are less than 5 millimeters wide – about the size of a pencil eraser. Some are microscopic. Scientists have found them in Antarctic deep seas, the summit of Mount Everest and fresh Antarctic snow. Because these fragments are so small, they can be easily transported in the air.

Clouds are important parts of Earth’s complex weather system, with effects on precipitation, temperature and climate.

Why it matters

Ice in clouds has important effects on weather and climate because most precipitation typically starts as ice particles.

Many cloud tops in nontropical zones around the world extend high enough into the atmosphere that cold air causes some of their moisture to freeze. Then, once ice forms, it draws water vapor from the liquid droplets around it, and the crystals grow heavy enough to fall. If ice doesn’t develop, clouds tend to evaporate rather than causing rain or snowfall.

While children learn in grade school that water freezes at 32 F (0 C), that’s not always true. Without something to nucleate onto, such as dust particles, water can be supercooled to temperatures as low as minus 36 F (minus 38 C) before it freezes.

For freezing to occur at warmer temperatures, some kind of material that won’t dissolve in water needs to be present in the droplet. This particle provides a surface where the first ice crystal can form. If microplastics are present, they could cause ice crystals to form, potentially increasing rain or snowfall.

Clouds also affect weather and climate in several ways. They reflect incoming sunlight away from Earth’s surface, which has a cooling effect, and absorb some radiation that is emitted from Earth’s surface, which has a warming effect.

The amount of sunlight reflected depends on how much liquid water vs. ice a cloud contains. If microplastics increase the presence of ice particles in clouds compared with liquid water droplets, this shifting ratio could change clouds’ effect on Earth’s energy balance.

Diagram showing incoming energy to Earth from the Sun and how much is absorbed or reflected by various parts of the climate system.
The Earth constantly receives energy from the Sun and reflects it back into space. Clouds have both warming and cooling effects in this process. NOAA

How we did our work

To see whether microplastic fragments could serve as nuclei for water droplets, we used four of the most prevalent types of plastics in the atmosphere: low density polyethylene, polypropylene, polyvinyl chloride and polyethylene terephthalate. Each was tested both in a pristine state and after exposure to ultraviolet light, ozone and acids. All of these are present in the atmosphere and could affect the composition of the microplastics.

We suspended the microplastics in small water droplets and slowly cooled the droplets to observe when they froze. We also analyzed the plastic fragments’ surfaces to determine their molecular structure, since ice nucleation could depend on the microplastics’ surface chemistry.

For most of the plastics we studied, 50% of the droplets were frozen by the time they cooled to minus 8 F (minus 22 C). These results parallel those from another recent study by Canadian scientists, who also found that some types of microplastics nucleate ice at warmer temperatures than droplets without microplastics.

Exposure to ultraviolet radiation, ozone and acids tended to decrease ice nucleation activity on the particles. This suggests that ice nucleation is sensitive to small chemical changes on the surface of microplastic particles. However, these plastics still nucleated ice, so they could still affect the amount of ice in clouds.

What still isn’t known

To understand how microplastics affect weather and climate, we need to know their concentrations at the altitudes where clouds form. We also need to understand the concentration of microplastics compared with other particles that could nucleate ice, such as mineral dust and biological particles, to see whether microplastics are present at comparable levels. These measurements would allow us to model the impact of microplastics on cloud formation.

Plastic fragments come in many sizes and compositions. In future research, we plan to work with plastics that contain additives, such as plasticizers and colorants, as well as with smaller plastic particles.

The Research Brief is a short take about interesting academic work.The Conversation

Miriam Freedman, Professor of Chemistry, Penn State and Heidi Busse, PhD Student in Chemistry, Penn State

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

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Written by: Miriam Freedman, Penn State and Heidi Busse, Penn State
Published: 09 November 2024

Space News: How can Jupiter have no surface? A dive into a planet so big, it could swallow 1,000 Earths

 

A photo of Jupiter taken by NASA’s Juno spacecraft in September 2023. NASA/JPL-Caltech/SwRI/MSSS, image processing by Tanya Oleksuik

Curious Kids is a series for children of all ages. If you have a question you’d like an expert to answer, send it to This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it..


Why does Jupiter look like it has a surface – even though it doesn’t have one? – Sejal, age 7, Bangalore, India


The planet Jupiter has no solid ground – no surface, like the grass or dirt you tread here on Earth. There’s nothing to walk on, and no place to land a spaceship.

But how can that be? If Jupiter doesn’t have a surface, what does it have? How can it hold together?

Even as a professor of physics who studies all kinds of unusual phenomena, I realize the concept of a world without a surface is difficult to fathom. Yet much about Jupiter remains a mystery, even as NASA’s robotic probe Juno begins its ninth year orbiting this strange planet.

Jupiter’s mass is two-and-a-half times that of all the other planets in the solar system combined.

First, some facts

Jupiter, the fifth planet from the Sun, is between Mars and Saturn. It’s the largest planet in the solar system, big enough for more than 1,000 Earths to fit inside, with room to spare.

While the four inner planets of the solar system – Mercury, Venus, Earth and Mars – are all made of solid, rocky material, Jupiter is a gas giant with a composition similar to the Sun; it’s a roiling, stormy, wildly turbulent ball of gas. Some places on Jupiter have winds of more than 400 mph (about 640 kilometers per hour), about three times faster than a Category 5 hurricane on Earth.

A photograph of the planet Jupiter swathed in blue, brown and gold bands.
A photo of the southern hemisphere of Jupiter, taken by NASA’s Juno spacecraft in 2017. NASA/JPL-Caltech/SwRI/MSSS/Gerald Eichstadt/Sean Doran

Searching for solid ground

Start from the top of Earth’s atmosphere, go down about 60 miles (roughly 100 kilometers), and the air pressure continuously increases. Ultimately you hit Earth’s surface, either land or water.

Compare that with Jupiter: Start near the top of its mostly hydrogen and helium atmosphere, and like on Earth, the pressure increases the deeper you go. But on Jupiter, the pressure is immense.

As the layers of gas above you push down more and more, it’s like being at the bottom of the ocean – but instead of water, you’re surrounded by gas. The pressure becomes so intense that the human body would implode; you would be squashed.

Go down 1,000 miles (1,600 kilometers), and the hot, dense gas begins to behave strangely. Eventually, the gas turns into a form of liquid hydrogen, creating what can be thought of as the largest ocean in the solar system, albeit an ocean without water.

Go down another 20,000 miles (about 32,000 kilometers), and the hydrogen becomes more like flowing liquid metal, a material so exotic that only recently, and with great difficulty, have scientists reproduced it in the laboratory. The atoms in this liquid metallic hydrogen are squeezed so tightly that its electrons are free to roam.

Keep in mind that these layer transitions are gradual, not abrupt; the transition from normal hydrogen gas to liquid hydrogen and then to metallic hydrogen happens slowly and smoothly. At no point is there a sharp boundary, solid material or surface.

An illustration that shows the interior layers of Jupiter, including its core.
An illustration of Jupiter’s interior layers. One bar is approximately equal to the air pressure at sea level on Earth. NASA/JPL-Caltech

Scary to the core

Ultimately, you’d reach the core of Jupiter. This is the central region of Jupiter’s interior, and not to be confused with a surface.

Scientists are still debating the exact nature of the core’s material. The most favored model: It’s not solid, like rock, but more like a hot, dense and possibly metallic mixture of liquid and solid.

The pressure at Jupiter’s core is so immense that it would be like 100 million Earth atmospheres pressing down on you – or two Empire State buildings on top of each square inch of your body.

But pressure wouldn’t be your only problem. A spacecraft trying to reach Jupiter’s core would be melted by the extreme heat – 35,000 degrees Fahrenheit (20,000 degrees Celsius). That’s three times hotter than the surface of the Sun.

An image of Jupiter featuring brown, beige and orange belts along with the Great Red Spot.
An image taken of Jupiter by Voyager 1. Note the Great Red Spot, a storm large enough to hold three Earths. NASA/JPL

Jupiter helps Earth

Jupiter is a weird and forbidding place. But if Jupiter weren’t around, it’s possible human beings might not exist.

That’s because Jupiter acts as a shield for the inner planets of the solar system, including Earth. With its massive gravitational pull, Jupiter has altered the orbit of asteroids and comets for billions of years.

Without Jupiter’s intervention, some of that space debris could have crashed into Earth; if one had been a cataclysmic collision, it could have caused an extinction-level event. Just look at what happened to the dinosaurs.

Maybe Jupiter gave an assist to our existence, but the planet itself is extraordinarily inhospitable to life – at least, life as we know it.

The same is not the case with a Jupiter moon, Europa, perhaps our best chance to find life elsewhere in the solar system.

NASA’s Europa Clipper, a robotic probe launching in October 2024, is scheduled to do about 50 fly-bys over that moon to study its enormous underground ocean.

Could something be living in Europa’s water? Scientists won’t know for a while. Because of Jupiter’s distance from Earth, the probe won’t arrive until April 2030.


Hello, curious kids! Do you have a question you’d like an expert to answer? Ask an adult to send your question to This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.. Please tell us your name, age and the city where you live.

And since curiosity has no age limit – adults, let us know what you’re wondering, too. We won’t be able to answer every question, but we will do our best.The Conversation

Benjamin Roulston, Assistant Professor of Physics, Clarkson University

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

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Written by: Benjamin Roulston, Clarkson University
Published: 09 November 2024
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