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Low-thrust transfers to halo orbits in different systems: Hybrid optimization and free-coast design

Publication date: 15 January 2026

Source: Advances in Space Research, Volume 77, Issue 2

Author(s): Zhaoyu Li, Tianyou Li, Hao Zeng, Rui Xu

How the polar vortex and warm ocean intensified a major US winter storm

Phys.org: Earth science - 3 hours 12 min ago
A severe winter storm that brought crippling freezing rain, sleet and snow to a large part of the U.S. in late January 2026 left a mess in states from New Mexico to New England. Hundreds of thousands of people lost power across the South as ice pulled down tree branches and power lines, more than a foot of snow fell in parts of the Midwest and Northeast, and many states faced bitter cold that was expected to linger for days.

Scientists reveal gold precipitation mechanism at pyrite-water interface

Phys.org: Earth science - 3 hours 20 min ago
Gold is generally associated with pyrite (iron disulfide, FeS2), and pyrite-induced gold precipitation is critical to the formation of high-grade gold deposits. However, the role of pyrite in precipitating gold from fluids has not been well understood. Now, using in situ liquid-phase transmission electron microscopy under conditions that excluded the influence of dissolved oxygen and electron beams, scientists have achieved the first nanoscale, real-time observation of the reaction between pyrite and gold-bearing solutions, providing critical insights into gold enrichment by pyrite.

New evidence reveals how Greenland's seaweed locks away carbon in the deep ocean

Phys.org: Earth science - 5 hours 11 min ago
An interdisciplinary study confirms, for the first time, the oceanographic pathways that transport floating macroalgae from the coastal waters of Southwest Greenland to deep-sea carbon reservoirs, potentially playing a previously underappreciated role in global carbon storage. The work is published in the journal Science of The Total Environment.

Rain, not snow: Extraordinary warmth leaves mountains less snowy across the West

Phys.org: Earth science - 6 hours 53 sec ago
At UC Berkeley's Central Sierra Snow Laboratory, located at 6,894 feet above sea level near Donner Pass, researchers collect detailed measurements of the snowpack each day. There is still some snow on the ground to measure, but less than they usually see in late January.

Report: 13 Great Lakes’ Worth of Water Underlies the Contiguous United States

EOS - 6 hours 26 min ago

It’s not easy to determine how much water there is across a landscape. A measly 1% of Earth’s freshwater is on the surface, where it can be seen and measured with relative ease. But beneath that, measurements vary massively depending on water table depth and ground porosity we can’t directly see.

“We’re operating in a situation where we don’t know how much is going into the savings account every month, and we don’t know how much is in our savings account.”

Reed Maxwell, a hydrologist at Princeton University, likes to think of rainfall, snow, and surface water as a checking account used for short-term water management needs and groundwater as a savings account, where a larger sum should, ideally, be building up over time.

“We’re operating in a situation where we don’t know how much is going into the savings account every month, and we don’t know how much is in our savings account,” he said.

But a new groundwater map by Maxwell and colleagues offers the highest-resolution estimate so far of the amount of groundwater in the contiguous United States: about 306,500 cubic kilometers. That’s 13 times the volume of all the Great Lakes combined, almost 7 times the amount of water discharged by all rivers on Earth in a year. This estimate, made at 30-meter resolution, includes all groundwater to a depth of 392 meters, the deepest for which reliable porosity data exist. Previous estimates using similar constraints have ranged from 159,000 to 570,000 cubic kilometers.

“It’s definitely a move forward from some of the previous [mapping] efforts,” said Grant Ferguson, a hydrogeologist at the University of Saskatchewan who was not involved in the research. “They’re looking at much better resolution than we have in the past and using some interesting techniques.”

Well, Well, Well

Past estimations of groundwater quantity have been based largely on well observations.

“That’s the really crazy thing about groundwater in general,” said Laura Condon, a hydrologist at the University of Arizona and a coauthor of the paper. “We have these pinpricks into the subsurface where there’s a well, they take a measurement of how deep down the water table depth is, and that’s what we have to work with.”

But not all wells are measured regularly. For obvious reasons, there tend to be more wells in places where more groundwater is present, making data on areas with less groundwater scarcer. And a well represents just one point, whereas water table depth can vary greatly over short distances.

Researchers have used these data points, as well as knowledge of the physics of how water flows underground, to model water table depth at a resolution of about 1 kilometer. They’ve also used satellite data to capture large-scale trends in water movement. But those data are of lower resolution: Data from NASA’s GRACE (Gravity Recovery and Climate Experiment) Tellus mission, for instance, have a resolution of about 300 kilometers, about 10,000 times coarser than the new map.

To demonstrate the value of high-resolution data, the team showed what happened when they decreased the resolution of their entire map from 30 meters to 100 kilometers—the spatial resolution of many global hydrologic models. The resulting more pixelated map estimated just above 252,000 cubic kilometers of water, an underestimation of 18% compared to the new map.

In addition to identifying groundwater quantities at high resolution, the new map reveals more nuanced information about known groundwater sources.

For instance, it shows that about 40% of the land in the contiguous United States has a water table depth shallower than 10 meters. “That 10-meter range is that range where you can have groundwater–plant–land surface interactions,” Condon said. “And so that’s just really pointing to how connected those systems are.”

Bias for Good

The new work used direct well measurements as well as satellite data—about a million measurements, made between 1895 and 2023—along with maps of precipitation, temperature, hydraulic conductivity, soil texture, elevation, and distance of streams. Then, the scientists used the data to train a machine learning model.

In addition to its being able to quickly sort through so many data points, Maxwell noted another benefit of the machine learning approach that might sound unexpected: its bias. Early groundwater estimates were relatively simplistic, not accounting for either hydrogeology or the fact that humans themselves pump water out of the ground. The team’s machine learning approach was able to incorporate that information because evidence of groundwater pumping was present in the data used to train it.

“When you hear about bias in machine learning all the time, it’s usually in a negative connotation, right?” Maxwell said. “As it turns out, when you can’t disentangle the signal of groundwater pumping and groundwater depletion from the almost 1 million observations that we used to train this machine learning approach, it implicitly learned that bias.… It’s learned the pumping signals, it’s learned the human depletion signal.”

“Wherever you’re standing, dig down, and there’s water down there somewhere.”

Maxwell and the other researchers hope the map can be a resource for regional water management decisionmakers, as well as for farmers making decisions about irrigation. Condon added that she hopes it raises awareness of groundwater in general.

“Groundwater is literally everywhere all the time,” she said. The map is “filled in everywhere, wherever you are. Some places it’s 300 meters deep, some places it’s 1 meter deep. But wherever you’re standing, dig down, and there’s water down there somewhere.”

—Emily Gardner (@emfurd.bsky.social), Associate Editor

Citation: Gardner, E. (2026), Report: 13 Great Lakes’ worth of water underlies the contiguous United States, Eos, 107, https://doi.org/10.1029/2026EO260036. Published on 26 January 2026. Text © 2026. AGU. CC BY-NC-ND 3.0
Except where otherwise noted, images are subject to copyright. Any reuse without express permission from the copyright owner is prohibited.

Shrubs curb carbon emissions in China's largest desert, decades-long experiment shows

Phys.org: Earth science - 6 hours 33 min ago
An experiment in western China over the past four decades shows that it is possible to tame the expansion of desert lands with greenery, and, in the process, pull excess carbon dioxide out of the sky.

Calibrating the Clocks: Reconciling Groundwater Age from Two Isotopes

EOS - 6 hours 40 min ago
Editors’ Highlights are summaries of recent papers by AGU’s journal editors. Source: Water Resources Research

A crucial source of freshwater, groundwater is vulnerable to contamination and overuse. Knowing how long groundwater has been under ground is critical for sustainable management of this resource. The Carbon-14 (14C) and Argon-39 (39Ar) isotopes are environmental tracers especially suited for dating groundwater aged between 50 and 30,000 years. However, ages obtained from previous analyses of these two tracers disagreed with each other.

Musy et al. [2025] use a quantitative framework to understand the effect of groundwater flow within the Earth’s subsurface on the age calculated from 14C and 39Ar measured in aquifers in Denmark. Reactions that affect 14C, the production of 39Ar in the subsurface, and the existence of slow and fast paths for groundwater flow, such as in fractured aquifers, explain the differences observed between age estimates. Accounting for these processes leads to more accurate estimate of groundwater residence times and supports better water resource management.

Citation: Musy, S. L., Hinsby, K., Wachs, D., Sültenfuss, J., Troldborg, L., Aeschbach, W., et al. (2025). Bridging the 39Ar–14C groundwater dating gap: A dual-permeability transport perspective based on numerical modeling and field data. Water Resources Research, 61, e2025WR040370. https://doi.org/10.1029/2025WR040370

—Sergi Molins, Associate Editor, Water Resources Research

Text © 2026. The authors. CC BY-NC-ND 3.0
Except where otherwise noted, images are subject to copyright. Any reuse without express permission from the copyright owner is prohibited.

Saltier seas in spring double the chance of extreme El Niño events, study finds

Phys.org: Earth science - 8 hours 10 min ago
Stronger El Niño events are more likely when springtime surface waters in the western Pacific Ocean become unusually salty, a new study in Geophysical Research Letters suggests. Traditionally, scientists have focused on temperature and wind patterns to understand El Niño—periodic shifts in the tropical Pacific between warmer and cooler conditions that influence weather patterns across the globe. But researchers now show that subtle variations in ocean salinity north of the equator during boreal spring (March to May) can substantially amplify El Niño's strength and nearly double the odds of an extreme event.

OceanXplorer: a 'one-stop shop' for marine research

Phys.org: Earth science - 13 hours 31 min ago
This month, AFP reported from OceanXplorer, a high-tech marine research vessel owned by billionaire-backed nonprofit OceanX, as it studied seamounts off Indonesia.

'So little we know': In submersibles revealing the deep sea

Phys.org: Earth science - 13 hours 32 min ago
A dome-fronted submersible sinks beneath the waves off Indonesia, heading down nearly 1,000 meters in search of new species, plastic-eating microbes and compounds that could one day make medicines.

A new look at trends in human deaths due to climate extremes

Phys.org: Earth science - Sun, 01/25/2026 - 14:30
A new study of climate extremes since 1988 finds that many regions have seen increases in deaths due to floods, storms and extreme temperatures. In human terms, the harm comes not just from deaths, but also from lost labor and property damage. (And this doesn't consider damage to species and ecosystems.) A new look at trends and outliers has been published in Geophysical Research Letters.

Anomalous Global and Seasonal Variations in the Equatorial Ionization Anomaly (EIA) Observed During the May and October 2024 Geomagnetic Storms

Publication date: Available online 21 January 2026

Source: Advances in Space Research

Author(s): Kshitiz Upadhyay, Duggirala Pallamraju, Kavutarapu Venkatesh

Repurposing planetary sunshade sailcraft from displaced Sun-Earth L1 for the deflection of asteroid 2024 YR4

Publication date: Available online 21 January 2026

Source: Advances in Space Research

Author(s): Fabienne Seibert, Jan Thimo Grundmann, Matteo Ceriotti, Bernd Dachwald

Microplastics in the atmosphere: Higher emissions come from land areas than from the ocean, study finds

Phys.org: Earth science - Sat, 01/24/2026 - 18:10
The atmosphere is an important transport medium that carries microplastics to even the most remote parts of the world. These microplastics can be inhaled and pose a health risk to humans and animals. They can also settle out of the atmosphere and contaminate oceans and soils worldwide.

Ancient Spanish trees reveal Mediterranean storms are intensifying

Phys.org: Earth science - Sat, 01/24/2026 - 15:00
Ancient pine trees growing in the Iberian mountains of eastern Spain have quietly recorded more than five centuries of Mediterranean weather. Now, by reading the annual growth rings preserved in their wood, scientists have uncovered a striking message: today's storms and droughts are becoming more intense and more frequent than almost anything the region has experienced since the early 1500s.

Why some Central Pacific El Niños die quickly while others linger for years

Phys.org: Earth science - Sat, 01/24/2026 - 14:40
Predicting the duration of a Central Pacific El Niño event has long frustrated climate scientists and forecasters. Now, a new study reveals that Central Pacific El Niños follow two fundamentally different life cycles—and the difference is determined months before they peak.

Full waveform inversion with CNN-based velocity representation extension

Geophysical Journal International - Sat, 01/24/2026 - 00:00
SummaryFull waveform inversion (FWI) updates the velocity model by minimizing the discrepancy between observed and simulated data. However, incomplete seismic acquisition can introduce errors that propagate through the adjoint operator, affecting the accuracy of the velocity gradient and reducing the convergence accuracy and speed. To mitigate the influence of acquisition-related noise on the gradient, we employ a convolutional neural network (CNN) to extend the velocity representation and refine the velocity model before forward simulation, thus reducing gradient noise and providing a more accurate velocity update direction. The same data misfit loss is used to update both the velocity and the network parameters, forming a self-supervised learning procedure. Here, the CNN acts as a dynamic velocity conditioner that is optimized to help fit the data. In this method, the velocity representation is extended (VRE) by combining a neural network with conventional grid-based velocities. Thus, we refer to this general approach as VRE-FWI. Synthetic and real data tests demonstrate that the proposed VRE-FWI achieves higher velocity inversion accuracy compared to traditional FWI, with only a marginal additional computational cost ∼1%.

Characterizing magnetic fabrics from ~116 Ma old Salma dike, India: Implication for magma flow direction

Geophysical Journal International - Sat, 01/24/2026 - 00:00
AbstractAnisotropy of magnetic susceptibility (AMS) analysis is widely used as an efficient petro-fabric tool to infer magma flow patterns within dikes. However, interpretations of magnetic fabric often get complicated by the occurrence of anomalous (intermediate/inverse) fabrics oriented normal to the dike plane, which may lead to uncertainty, unlike the straightforward normal fabrics along the intrusion plane. In this article, we present a detailed rock-magnetic and magnetic fabric study of India’s ~116 Ma old Salma dike, which is the most prominent and longest dike related to the early Cretaceous Rajmahal Trap (RT) volcanism. A joint analysis of in-phase and out-of-phase anisotropy of magnetic susceptibility (i.e. ipAMS and opAMS) and anhysteretic remanent magnetization (AARM) fabrics allowed us to identify the different sources of the observed fabric and subfabrics. Rock-magnetic analyses suggest that the magnetic mineralogy consists of at least two types of titanomagnetite with varying Ti-content. FORC suggests that the dike is dominated by PSD grains with varying influence from SD grains. The ipAMS fabric is primarily carried by SD grains of low-Ti titanomagnetite, while opAMS is governed by larger MD/PSD titanomagnetite with higher-Ti content. Results indicate that anomalous, intermediate-type ipAMS fabrics, particularly along the dike margins, are caused as a combined effect of SD grains, late-stage crystallization, and mild high-temperature oxidation. At the dike center, post-emplacement alteration, intense exsolution of the primary titanomagnetite, and magma backflow are responsible for anomalous fabrics. In contrast, the majority of normal ipAMS, opAMS, and AARM fabrics are coaxial, providing a reliable record of magma flow as confirmed from the long axes trend distribution of the plagioclase laths along the dike plane. These fabrics reveal a dominant subvertical magma flow direction during emplacement, indicating magma ascent from depth. Even though the magnetic fabrics do not unequivocally constrain the deeper processes underneath Moho, they are compatible with the idea of a subcrustal magmatic layer beneath the region, potentially originating from decompression melting or the influence of the Kerguelen plume, to be the feeder source.

Q&A: Achieving a carbon neutral society through freshwater carbon research

Phys.org: Earth science - Fri, 01/23/2026 - 22:50
CO2 that has been absorbed and accumulated in fresh water areas like lakes and reservoirs—is receiving attention for its potential contributions to achieving a carbon neutral society. Kobe University is a hub for freshwater carbon research, with Graduate School of Engineering Professor Nakayama Keisuke, an expert in aquatic and environmental engineering, at the forefront.

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