Thứ Ba, 26 tháng 9, 2017

News on Youtube Sep 27 2017

Trump admitted he feared Ivanka looks down on me and even said he'd groped

Melania in public Donald Trump once revealed that he feared his daughter

Ivanka looks down on me and even said he'd groped First Lady Melania in public

during his regular and often shocking conversations with Howard Stern the

president was a regular guest on Stern's show during the 1990s and early 2000s

where the pier would often have misogynistic and lewd conversations

about women and sex in a recently released recording of the shock jocks

November 11th 1999 show Trump had called into the show to discuss an upcoming

prize fight at the Taj Mahal casino but it wasn't long before Stern steered the

chat to his favorite subjects women and sex the radio deejay proposed a few

sexual scenarios such as whether Trump's wife Melania wore panties during an

evening out before he asked the billionaire whether he had ever felt her

up in public yet the President of the United States replied before pausing and

adding mentally he has I know it Stern said I'm very well behaved

actually and almost always I'm very down the middle Trump responded Trump was a

regular guest on Stern's show during the 1990s and early 2000s where the pier

would have misogynistic and lewd conversations about sex and the

attractiveness and worth of women in fact Trump has been interviewed by Stern

more than any other journalist in another call Stern said Melania must be

great in the sack to which Trump responded saying he'd got her for the

right price referring to Melania on a New York City billboard at around 15

hours of recordings of their on-air discussions dating from 1993 to 2015

have now been rereleased Stern had previously refused to release

the tapes in 2016 during Trump's election campaign in another chat with

the host in September 2004 Trump and stern were discussing how Ivanka was

dating blueblood bingo COO bellman from Bedminster New Jersey

my daughter's becoming a blueblood she's becoming very white shoe that's true

I think my daughter looks down on me she said oh my god

hi banca 34 began dating gubelman when she was in college back in 2001 but the

couple split in 2005 and shortly after she began dating her now husband Jared

Kushner gubelman 37 was later issued a citation in New York City in 2016 after

he was busted for cocaine Trump also discussed his compulsive hand-washing

with Stern you realize that's a psychological problem Stern told him to

which Trump conceded it was possible but said he didn't want to go to a

psychiatrist I like it I like cleanliness cleanliness is a nice thing

not only hands body everything he told him of course having avoided talking

about sex or bodily functions for at least a couple of minutes Stern quickly

rooted the discussion back to sex asking the real estate mogul if he made the

models he dated take HIV tests Trump replied I own 25% of Goodyear Tire and

Rubber you wear a rubber said Stern there you go there is something

interesting you don't hear every day on TV Trump has conceded that his

revelations on the Howard Stern Show often landed him in trouble once saying

in a 1993 recording I like Howard but I have to be crazy to be here and in

October last year Melania Trump told CNN she had warned her husband not to go on

Stern's show he was pushed on and many times I give him an advice and I didn't

agree to do all the tapes on Howard Stern with Billy Bush she said because I

know those people they hook him on they they try to get from him some some

inappropriate and dirty language but Trump kept coming back for more

meanwhile the president has brushed off criticism about his conversations with

the foul-mouthed radio host saying he'd never had to censure himself

before becoming a politician I never anticipated running for office or being

a politician so I could have fun with Howard on the radio and everyone would

love it people do love it Trump said I could say whatever I wanted

when I was an entrepreneur a business

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For more infomation >> Trump says he groped Melania in public and feared Ivanka 'looks down on me' - Duration: 10:20.

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Prince Harry & Meghan Markle Make First Public Appearance Together - Duration: 1:46.

For more infomation >> Prince Harry & Meghan Markle Make First Public Appearance Together - Duration: 1:46.

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Prince Harry, Meghan Markle Make First Public Appearance Together - Duration: 0:19.

For more infomation >> Prince Harry, Meghan Markle Make First Public Appearance Together - Duration: 0:19.

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Colorado Parks and Wildlife working to avoid budget shortfalls; public meeting being held - Duration: 1:40.

For more infomation >> Colorado Parks and Wildlife working to avoid budget shortfalls; public meeting being held - Duration: 1:40.

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5 Public Speaking Tips And Tricks - I Demonstrate What To Do - Duration: 16:11.

Today on Limitless TV, we get to talk about public speaking.

It is the number one fear in the world that people have.

So today I'm gonna share with you some of my most powerful tips and tricks to help you

learn how to speak powerfully and confidently.

So today we're covering our tips and tricks on how to present powerfully from stage.

And here I'm, just in my own private basement stage.

I've done presentations here, I've done them upstairs in my great room with a hundred people.

I've done them in front of a thousand people.

I've presented over a thousand times.

I've probably put on, who knows how many hundreds of events over the course of the last decade.

And what I'm gonna share with you today is I'm going to focus on two main set of tips

that will help you be a better, more confident and capable speaker.

So the first thing that I want to do today, is I just want to address this one, overcoming

nervousness.

To become an authority, you got to get really clear that it is just a game of confidence.

You might think I need a degree, I need a piece of paper that says I'm smart enough

and I'm good enough or I can't be able to do this.

That's old school society based thinking.

What makes you an expert is you choosing into being one based on your natural gifts and

passion where you are collecting natural organic experience that actually has you being that

expert.

For example, after I bought ten pieces of real estate and start putting on presentations

, I've felt that made me an expert enough in my home to sit in front of two people an

put together really my first little real estate club.

After I bought 25 homes, I took the stage and started teaching people how to do it.

After I bought a hundred homes, my stage has got bigger.

At what point did become an authority?

I became an authority the moment I chose into becoming an authority.

Well, what I am going to do today talking about body language is this is what's gonna

determine whether or not you're coming of like an authority figure or not.

Body language, lets first talk about the fact that we are trying to get our body language,

our hands, our voice, our message, our face, and our energy to all align.

We want them saying the exact same thing.

So let's run through some of the basic concepts here.

Is first of all, hands.

What does this communicate?

Sometimes we present doing these funny things with our hands.

Body language 101, I'm hiding something.

Body language, I'm closed.

Body language, I'm nervous.

Body language, I'm inexperienced, I don't know what to do with my hands.

You want to know what to do with your hands?

One of two things.

This is one of them.

When you're talking, you don't need to use your hands.

But if you are going to talk using your hands, I want you right now to stand up with me and

I want you to hold your two foot by two foot box.

You got your box?

This box, your hands are not allowed inside of it most of the time.

And for today's video, they're just not allowed in there ok?

Which means that when I'm talking with my hands, this is the most open body position,

this is a good body position, this, this, it's almost like there's this force field

with magnets attached and my hands cannot get no matter what I do they cannot get closer

than two feet to one another.

That is your hand body language.

So keep your hands apart.

Or keep them at your side.

And you can talk with your hands just make sure you got your magnetic field that is keeping

them apart.

Number two, your face.

Animate your face, you're not just having a boring conversation with someone else.

When you're actually sitting down and presenting information in a small group of people, animate.

Here's what it means, I need your face to match your emotion.

If you're excited, I don't want to see you frown.

I got this one lady that every time she has an emotional, tender part of a presentation,

She smiles.

That was the saddest day of my life.

That's a big disconnect.

What you want is for your expression on your face to match the energy, the message, and

the emotion of what you are feeling.

Ok number three of body language, it's called stage geography.

Now today as you are watching this video, this side of the stage represents the past.

It's the stage right.

Stage left, represents the future.

Why? because we read book starting on this page to this page.

The past, the future.

This is important because if I'm presenting and I'm sharing something sad in my life,

I'm sharing it right here.

If I'm talking about the future, where I'm going and my excitement, I'm standing over

here.

And then there's always the back of the stage, the front of the stage, and off the stage.

And here's how you use all three of those, the back of the stage is used for the authority

of teaching.

You'll often have a white board that's on this side of the stage, not this side.

Because this represents the future and the promise off possibility.

When you write things on that board, It means that it's important.

And so you're standing here, you're writing, you're taking notes and this is you as the

authority.

You are not suggesting ideas and concepts, you are telling them.

The very tip of the front of the stage, this is your strong authority position.

This is when you are talking directly to your people.

And most importantly, when you are connecting.

I don't want to be the man on the suit on the stage, first of all you should dress your

truth.

Which means that, you should dress in the way that honors you that is authentic.

And when I wanna really connect with my audience, I'm doing it right here.

I'm not the authority, I'm not on stage, I'm out in the audience, I'm putting my hand in

your shoulder, I'm saying I'm relating to you, I see you, I'm connecting with you.

So little trivia, if I'm telling a really sad part of a story where am I standing?

Right there!

If I am sharing the solution that changed my life, where am I standing?

Right here.

If I'm teaching and educating people, I'm staged back, I'm on the white board.

If I'm declaring powerfully, I'm right here front and center.

If I'm connecting with my audience, I'm doing that with him right here.

So friends that is some information that you have first of all on body language and ultimately,

I want them all to match.

So another part of body language actually does step into, what is your message and what

is the energy that you're projecting.

When you're out there communicating with your audience, you're teaching and educating and

being with them, what are they feeling from you?

I want your feeling and your energy to match your message.

If you are saying something exciting then I want your energy to be what?

If you are doing something enthusiastic, please don't share it like this.

You know, I was just so excited for me when I finally figure out the solution that changed

my life.

We don't want to hear that.

We got warning bells saying liar!

There's something wrong with you.

You check in.

I want everything to align in what you are doing.

Ok so this is the first part that is basically the concept of body languages, you want to

be watching your hands, you want to be watching your face, you want to be watching your stage,

your stage geography, you want to be checking on your energy, and one more thing that I

want to talk about now is posture.

Your shoulders just like an exercise are rolled up and back and you are standing tall.

What does this communicate?

What does slouching communicate?

What does slouching my facial muscles communicate?

Some of you are emotionally expressively challenged and I'm inviting you to get in front of a

mirror to kinda watch and take inventory and ask for feed back.

Feed back is breakfast of champions when you are learning how to present.

And so stand tall, and learn how to stand in confidently and move.

Now in a moment I'm gonna give you a really big bonus because the second tip that I want

to go into today is I want to talk about the four different personality types that you

can leverage from stage because know this, your audience is falling asleep every two

minutes.

You need a stick change.

It's not just where you're moving your body, it's not just having the right body language,

but it is how you are communicating.

Coming at you next, I'm gonna teach you the four different dominant personality types

on how you'll connect with everyone's myer and briggs, in the audience so you can form

meaningful connection.

Ok this is tip number 2 and I'm calling it a bonus because most people are not gonna

teach you what I'm about to right now.

There are four dominant personality types that you are leveraging and speaking from

when you are on stage.

Everyone you meet in life is going to come from one of these four.

We can take the 64 Myer Briggs combinations and break it down into the fact that inside

of people, you're gonna see this four personalities and the reason why this is important is because,

you need to know the audience.

When you are speaking to an audience, you need to be able to speak to as many people

as you can and only polarize the people that you are supposed to.

So the first personality type is called warrior.

What is it?

Warrior.

And here's what warrior is, this is your dominant type A personality that wants to take the

world by storm and crush it.

These are people on commission, they are in sales, these are movers and shakers.

These are the people in your team that make stuff happen now.

If anything, these are the individuals that are gonna go too fast, they are gonna light

up the fire and they are gonna burn the floors down on accident because they got so excited.

Those people on the audience and they want to hear from you.

Next, the opposite of that is you got your healer.

Your healer is your personality type that is calm, passive, not aggressive, they are

natural healers they want to give love, they want to nurture, they want to protect.

They are sensitive, and sometimes they suffer from a lot of that negative energy and pathecally

hiding them in a very difficult way.

Healers, there's more healers in the world than there are warriors.

Next you have oracle.

Your oracle, these are your blueprints.

These are your tax people, your engineers, these are your brainiacs, these are your rocket

scientists.

They understand their world based on numbers, statistics, percentages.

They are often disconnected from feelings not always.

But they pass everything through the ether of the mind and they are very logically oriented.

Very important people.

They are also probably as much of a minority as much as you have warriors.

And then number four, you have your Visionarys.

Your visionary is your personality type that could care less about the details.

They want to have fun and they want to have fun now.

So they want to, when you are speaking to them if you can't actually do something exciting

and enthusiastic every few minutes of your presentation, your visionarys are gonna die.

Help me!

I'm being lectured to death by an oracle.

These two are opposites and these two are opposites and some people have all four but

most have one dominant and a secondary or some type of tritionary trait.

All people that you meet are gonna fall into one of these categories . So how do you speak

to all of them?

I will show you.

Your warriors.

You need to have moment where you tap into your inner warrior.

Now by the way, if you are watching this and you are like, but Kris I don't have a warrior

in me.

Oh trust me you do.

And if speaking and presenting is important, you get to develop it and you get to learn

how to do it authentically.

Here how you tap into warrior, warrior is about fast where is healer is about slow.

And so the warrior is going to raise the volume, they gonna raise their energy.

I stomp when I'm on stage just like that.

I mean, my warrior shows itself with strong, hard, fast body movements and have my moments.

And guess what this is?

It's a state change if just was coming from a healer moment and all of a sudden I get

myself fired up and I'm in the stage and I'm making things happen, I'm talking to you guess

what's happening?

I'm connecting with the warriors they're like oh yeah! right on!

Now I'm finally hearing you, now I'm feeling you.

By the way when you go into that warrior mode if you have too much, you might shut down

the healers.

So you get to express the sensitive side.

You get the express the part of you that is calm.

And remember that a lot of where that happens is right here.

Often when I'm connecting with healers it's going to happen when I'm in the audience and

I'm off the stage.

Some might call that unprofessional.

But for me, if I can't connect with my audience, then why am I there at all?

Connecting means being willing to be vulnerable.

Connecting means, willing to share things that might have otherwise a privacy setting

where they're not sacred or inappropriate to share but they kinda feel almost inappropriate

because thy're precious.

They're your struggles, they're the hard moments in your life.

Healers are gonna stand at this side of the stage when they are talking about the difficulties

and the hardships they had and then as a healer, I'm gonna be in the audience with you which

might look like this.

Hey friend, I see you.

I'm connecting with you.

This is my hand on your shoulder.

Trust me it's your shoulder.

It's ok.

The safe touching kind ok?

Ok so this is wher I'm gonna connect with you.

Number three, oracles.

Oracles are taking place right here.

This is where they are laying out simple principles.

And as on oracle, you have to remember that you cannot oracle the people to death.

There's only so much information they can take before they lose it.

It's not how much content you have to present, it's how well you can quality wise present

very little information that will stick with with them.

And that will change from one venue to another.

If it's a lecture hall, there's gonna be more oracle.

If you're doing limitless with me, there's a three day transformational event.

In 45 minutes, I'm only gonna be sharing 6 minutes worth of power house ideas and the

rest of the time is gonna be spent actually displaying, practicing and experiencing them

right?So oracle, you got to make sure that this is not your dominant personality.

This is the fastest way.

No matter how good your information is, you will lose your audience if you oracle these

people to death.

And then finally, the visionarys.

You've got a group of people in the audience that are screaming for fun.

Alright everyone stand!

Go ahead and find a partner.

Go ahead and introduce yourself.

Put your hands in the air and turn to the person on your right.

Give them a back massage.

Hey put your arms around the person next to you left and right.

Give them a pat left and right.

Turn and say, thank you for being here, thank you for being there.

Turn on the person on front.

Give them a high five and say, you are limitless!

Your visionarys wanna have, they're gonna get physical, they wanna get active, they

want to stand up and they want to have fun.

And I'm gonna be honest with you, If I'm never gonna speak anywhere in the planet on any

topic, I'm gonna pray it doesn't have to be behind the lecture separating me from the

audience.

And then it's not a power point.

Slide 148, take notes about the things I'm about to tell you.

Your visionarys are dead.

You lost them a long time ago.

I want to spend time here here here and here not equally but taking my audience into account.

Know your audience.

Are you presenting to a group of healers?

Even they want to see you mix it up with these other energy.

If you are speaking to a group of doctors and engineers, mix it up a little bit.

If you can, get in to the habit of every 2 minutes having a patter interrupt by allowing

them to see these different sides of the personality that I promise that's inside of you, and you

combine them with the right kind of body language, you are gonna crush it.

Those are my tips for you today on public speaking.

Thanks for joining today and watching this video.

I hope you enjoyed it.

I've got more videos like this coming your way.

I even put on a regular course a few times a year.

It's called, mentor academy.

And if you're looking at becoming a mentor, if you want to become a professional speaker,

a professional facilitator, then drop that in the comment below and click the link so

that we can get you some information and do some hands on training for three days on how

to help you step into your full speaking power

For more infomation >> 5 Public Speaking Tips And Tricks - I Demonstrate What To Do - Duration: 16:11.

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Volcanologist's Paradise (live public talk) - Duration: 59:41.

>> Announcer: NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory presents

the von Karman Lecture, a series of talks

by scientists and engineers

who are exploring our planet, our solar system,

an all that lies beyond.

>> Hey, good evening, ladies and gentleman.

How is everyone tonight?

[audience cheers]

Excellent.

Well, anyway, thank you guys

all so much for coming out tonight.

Volcanoes have helped transform the surface of the earth,

the other terrestrial planets, and the moon.

However, the biggest volcanic eruptions in the solar system

are taking place not on Earth but on Io, a moon of Jupiter.

This wonder of the solar system is a fascinating laboratory

where powerful eruptions result from tidal heating.

Despite multiple spacecraft visits and spectacular

new observations with Earth-based telescopes,

some of the biggest questions about Io's volcanism

remain unanswered.

Getting the answers requires a few things:

understanding the difficulties

of remote sensing of volcanic activity,

innovating a new approach to instrument design,

and ultimately, returning to Io.

Our guest tonight will describe how studying volcanoes

on Earth leads to a clearer understanding

of how Io's volcanoes work and how best to study them.

Tonight's guest is a research scientist

at volcanologist here at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory.

He received a doctorate in volcanology

from Lancaster University in the UK in 1988

and has been at JPL for over 20 years.

He was a member of the Galileo NIMS team,

is a co-investigator on the Europa Clipper

mapping-imaging spectrometer for Europa,

has written over 100 papers

on observing and understanding volcanic processes,

and is the, pardon me,

and is the author of Volcanism on Io:

A Comparison with Earth,

published by the Cambridge University Press.

He continues to be engaged in research

into volcanic eruption processes,

spacecraft emission and instrumentation development,

and fieldwork on volcanoes around the world.

He was also a co-recipient of the NASA Software

of the Year Award for the Autonomous Science

Craft Experiment, which successfully demonstrated

science-driven full spacecraft autonomy.

His love of volcanoes is truly undeniable.

Every year, he sends his PhD advisor a birthday card

depicting a work of great art improved with a volcano.

Ladies and gentlemen,

please help me welcome tonight's guest, Dr. Ashley Davis.

[audience applauds]

>> Thank you all very much for coming.

The surface of the moon

and the surfaces of the terrestrial planets

have all been extensively modified

by extreme volcanic activity in their distant pasts,

and these large eruptions are mostly unknown in the manner

in which they emplaced large, vast fields of lava.

But there was one place in the solar system

where such voluminous, powerful, extensive flows,

volcanic eruptions are taking place,

and that is the Jovian moon Io.

Io holds some fascinating views

of how Earth might have erupted in its distance past,

is a key to understand the evolution

of the large Jovian satellites,

and is a great template

for looking for volcanically active exoplanets.

It's truly an amazing place to a volcanologist.

I think I have a pretty cool job,

because I study volcanoes for NASA.

And although this usually means that I spend

most of my time staring at the computer screen

and crunching data and looking at remote sensing

observations of volcanic eruptions,

occasionally, they let me out

to go and play on a real volcano somewhere.

And it's a great job.

It's very exciting, and it's taken me

to the ends of the earth.

This is in the background here we have Mount Erebus.

It is the world's most suddenly active volcano

in Antarctica.

The summit there is a crater with a lava lake in it.

This is in Ethiopia, and again, over on the right,

we see another lava lake on a volcano called Erta Ale.

Now, it's important to think about volcanoes

and what they mean for the evolution of a planet,

but apart from that,

volcanic eruptions are an agent for change

which can affect millions of people very quickly.

This is Mount St. Helens erupting in 1980,

and on Earth, over 250 million people live

within 20 kilometers of a volcano

that can erupt like this.

Apart from that,

moving away from the human element,

volcanoes are a window into the interior of the earth,

or any other planet.

They are an indication of internal heating

which has melted the upper mantle,

and they conveniently transport material

from the inside of a planet to the surface

where it can be observed with instruments on a spacecraft.

And there are many styles of volcanic activity on Earth,

and I've been spending most of my time looking

at low-viscosity basalt-type eruptions

at lava lakes.

A lava lake is the top of a column of magma

connected to a magma chamber.

It's an open system around which magma circulates,

and they're quite rare on Earth.

They tend to crop up in quite extreme environments,

although there is a big one in Hawaii now.

But they're very useful for studying basaltic processes.

I've been studying these on Earth

to better understand what's happening on Io.

Now, the Galilean satellites were discovered

by the great Italian astronomer, Galileo Galilei.

On the ninth of January 1610,

Galileo noted in his notebook

that using this new Dutch invention, the telescope,

he observed Jupiter

and noted these little stars close to Jupiter,

and noted that over the next few nights,

the position of these dots would change,

and came to the conclusion

that these were actually orbiting...

These were actually moons orbiting Jupiter.

So we can jump forward

400 years go the Voyager spacecraft.

There were two of these built here at JPL.

And Voyager flew through the Jupiter system,

and on Io,

made one of the greatest discoveries

of planetary science,

that Io had these large volcanic plumes.

And this was a real revolution in our understanding

of the outer solar system, because up to this point,

it was generally thought that the moons

of the outer solar system planets were small, dead worlds

where over geological time, the geological processes

that were changing them

had basically been damped down into nothing.

They were small, cold ice balls.

But here we have Io being a dynamic, evolving world.

A follow-up mission to Voyager was fittingly called Galileo,

and I was on the Near Infrared

Mapping Spectrometer team, NIMS.

And here we see in the lower right

an observation of Io with NIMS.

NIMS is an instrument that was particularly good

at detecting the heat given off from volcanic eruptions

and sent back a lot of data.

Now, the NIMS, the Galileo main antenna didn't open,

and so there was a restriction

on the amount of data that came back.

And so there are still some gaps on Io

that need to be filled in terms of coverage.

So, here we have the four large Galilean satellites

as imaged by the imaging system on the Galileo spacecraft:

Io, Europa, Ganymede, and Callisto.

Io is closest to Jupiter, and Callisto is furthest away.

And here we have Io, as seen by the camera system

on the Galileo spacecraft.

And the colors of Io's surface

are diagnostic of composition.

If it's yellow, it's rich in sulfur.

White areas are rich in sulfur dioxide.

What's of great interest to me are the black areas

and the red areas.

The black areas are areas of silicate volcanism.

This is where material like basalt

is being erupted onto the surface.

The red areas are thought to be

short-chain sulfur allotropes,

which are evidence of active or ongoing volcanic activity.

So every black or red area on this, in this image

is an active or very recently active volcano.

Now, the amazing thing about Io

is that it's actually volcanic at all.

Here we have Io next to the moon.

And the moon was once very volcanic.

These dark areas are the mare,

and these are layers of basalt many kilometers thick.

But the moon is, as far as we can tell, volcanically dead.

And this is because what drove volcanism on the moon

and what continues to drive volcanism on Earth

is internal heating by the decay of radioisotopes.

This is material that was incorporated

into the planets and moons when they formed.

Now, the laws of physics dictate

that a small body loses heat faster than a large body does.

So over billions of years,

the moon and Mercury and Mars

lost their internal heat to space.

The heat that was driving this vulcanological engine

within each planet slowed down,

and it eventually stopped, and large-scale volcanism

on these bodies was stilled forever.

So this is what happens

with a small body with an internal source of energy.

With Io, something very different is happening.

Io's source of energy

which drives its volcanism is external.

Io, Europa, and Ganymede are in an orbital resonance.

For every orbit that Ganymede makes around Jupiter,

Europa makes two orbits,

and Io makes four orbits.

So every time Io passes, for example, Europa,

Io gets a little kick, and it's taken Io's orbit

and changed it from a circular orbit

into a slightly elliptical orbit,

a bit more eccentric orbit.

And Io gets twisted each time it passes

one of the other two satellites,

and it's this tidal flexing that generates heat within Io

that manifests at the surface as active volcanism.

So it's an external source driving this extraordinary level

of volcanic activity on Io.

It's an elegant cosmic ballet, if you like,

choreographed by the immutable laws of physics.

Now, just to put the majestic scale

of Io's volcanism into some sort of context,

this is the amount of material

that is erupted from earth's volcanoes every year.

Most of this is erupted on the ocean floor

at the mid-ocean ridges.

On Io, this is the amount of material that's erupted

every year to erase any evidence of impact craters.

There are no impact craters on Io,

unlike any other solid body in the solar system.

So there really is a truly astonishing amount

of volcanic activity taking place.

Over the years, we've collected a lot of data

from spacecraft, and this is a mosaic compiled

from the best Voyager and Galileo spacecraft data,

and basically, we've covered most of Io at resolutions

good enough to identify volcanoes from their appearance

and their thermal emission.

And to this has been added a growing dataset,

an astonishing library of observations obtained

with large telescopes based here on Earth.

This is from the Keck telescope in Hawaii.

These are telescopes equipped with adaptive optics.

This is measuring the heat from a whole series of hotspots.

And so putting all of these datasets together,

we've been able to catalog all of the volcanoes on Io

and quantify their thermal emission.

This plot shows 250 volcanoes erupting on,

which have been recently or are currently erupting on Io.

And these range in size from areas of just a few

hundred square meters to vast multiple-kilometer areas

of incandescent material.

Rare thermal outbursts are actually marked here by squares.

These are rare and transient.

So, the size of these symbols,

the larger the symbol, the more energy is coming out.

This is actually on a logarithmic scale.

But the heat flow from Io is not even.

There are areas where we see a deficit of heat flow

and other areas where we see a lot of heat flow.

And this isn't really matched very well to the models

that we have of either shallow or deep heating.

So there's still a lot about the way in which tidal heating

is linked to the delivery of lava at the surface.

Well, let's take a look at some of these amazing volcanoes.

This is a great image obtained by Galileo

which shows a volcano here called Prometheus.

This is a volcano which generates a large plume

about 100 kilometers high

which lays down this circular deposit

which is rich in sulfur dioxide.

And in the middle of this plume deposit

is a lava flow field, which was emplaced

between the Voyager and the Galileo missions

in a period of about 16 years.

So we can go in and take a closer look at this.

Here, we have the flows at Prometheus,

and for scale, we have an image

of Earth's most active basalt volcano.

This is Kilauea in Hawaii.

And this is the area of flows

which was emplaced in about the same time.

So the area of flows here

is well over a thousand square kilometers,

and it's, I don't know, over 2,000 square kilometers.

It's about the area of Rhode Island.

And this was emplaced in just 16 years.

This is particularly interesting volcano,

because what we think is happening here

is that lava is coming up at a vent here

and then passing through a lava cube system

before erupting out at distal ends of the flows,

very much like what we see in Hawaii.

And a logical explanation is lava tube

transportation of new lava,

which is a great way of transporting lava

a great distance without it cooling and solidifying.

But along the way, we see these tantalizingly faint,

small, thermal sources, which could be breakouts

onto the surface or skylights,

which are holes in the roof of a lava tube.

And I'll certainly be coming back

and discussing those later.

Io's most powerful volcano

is in a feature called Loki Patera.

And the general consensus

is that this is actually a large lava lake,

but it's a lava lake 180 kilometers across.

So it's probably better to call it a lava sea.

It is Io's most persistent, powerful volcano.

And we think that it has

a very unique way of being resurfaced.

We think that what is happening at Loki Patera

is that crust on the lava lake forms with time,

and it thickens with time until it gets to a point

where the crust starts to sink,

and then basically the entire surface of the lava lake

is resurfaced by this crust sinking

and the sinking crust being replaced with new lava.

This is an analysis of a single Galileo NIMS observation

that was obtained in 2001, and it shows a temperature map

and age map of the surface from the analysis of the data.

And what this implies is that this resurfacing wave,

if you like, swept around the Patera

at a rate of about a kilometer a day.

So what happens is the Patera resurfaces itself,

and then it remains quiescent for a while

while the crust thickens, and then the crust sinks again.

And it's been doing this periodically for decades.

Well, in 2015, in 2015, the Large Binocular Telescope

Interferometer, which is on a mountaintop in Arizona,

collected this truly astonishing set of observations

which shows Europa passing across

and eclipsing or occulting Loki Patera.

So Loki Patera is here,

and this is Europa passing across in front of Io

between Io and the telescope on Earth.

And what this means is that as Europa's edge

passes across Loki Patera,

it covers up the Patera in one direction,

and we get this light curve here as light is cut off

and heat is cut off.

But as Europa uncovers Loki Patera,

we get this curve with the limb

going in a different direction.

And so by fitting these little squiggles in the dataset,

we created, and this was an effort led by Katherine de Kleer

who's now at Caltech.

We created the highest spatial resolution map

of Loki Patera's surface that's ever been obtained,

even including data from spacecraft.

We managed to create a map over the entire Patera floor.

And fitting this lava lake model to it,

looking at the distribution of temperatures on the surface

from which you can infer age,

'cause the older the surface, the cooler it is.

The explanation that we came up with

for this particular temperature distribution was this,

two resurfacing waves sweeping around the Patera

to form this resulting temperature distribution,

which was observed

by the Large Binocular Telescope Interferometer.

And this is something

which is consistent with previous observations.

It's a really nice vindication

of this lava lake resurfacing model.

A more active lava lake on Io is at Pele,

and Pele is at the center of this bright red deposit,

which is a plume deposit, a plume fallout.

It's a plume that's hundreds of kilometers high,

and it's led to this deposit on the surface,

rich in short-chain sulfur allotropes

about 1200 kilometers across.

And we think that Pele has every appearance of an active,

over-turning lava lake with the plume basically

forcing its way up through the middle of the lake

and disrupting the surface, yielding,

revealing high temperature lava.

And it's much larger, it's about 38 kilometers across

and much larger than its terrestrial equivalents.

This is the Kupaianaha lava lake in Hawaii.

Terrestrially, lava lakes

are maybe 10 or 20 up to 100 or 200 meters in diameter.

Io's volcanoes, Io's lava lakes seem to be hundreds

or even thousands of kilometers, square kilometers in size.

Loki Patera itself, Loki Patera has a surface area

of over 21,000 square kilometers,

which makes it even larger than West Virginia.

Io's most powerful eruptions, thermal outbursts,

are now known to be caused by large lava fountains

gushing forth from long fissures.

And these sort of events were actually seen,

a couple of them were seen by Galileo.

This is what's happening along this fissure here,

and this is the result of saturation.

Because so much energy was being received by the spacecraft,

the detector saturated.

And this is a problem

that we've come across time and time again

with trying to image these very powerful events.

We now see these things from Earth-based telescopes.

They were actually discovered by Earth-based telescopes

back in the 1990s.

But we're continuing to discover these.

They're quite rare, and they're quite short-lived,

but they're very powerful.

In 2013, we saw two of these at Rarog

and Heno Patera in the southern hemisphere of Io.

This is an interesting image,

because it does show that that's short wavelengths,

that Loki Patera does not emit a lot of energy.

Most of the energy being emitted from Loki

is at longer wavelengths.

And what that tells us is that generally speaking,

Loki is a relatively cool surface

compared with what we see at these outbursts.

So for the purposes of determining

eruption temperature of the lava,

Loki Patera may not be our best candidate,

whereas something like Pele,

where we have overturning lava lakes,

an overturning lava lake on a much shorter time scale

is a better candidate.

So by looking at all of this data

and doing a lot of modeling, we come up with,

we've come up with a classification schema

where we can identify the characteristic thermal

fingerprints of different styles of volcanic activity.

The most powerful eruptions are these outburst eruptions,

these large lava fountain events.

We have the Pele overturning lava lake right here,

and at the bottom,

we have the small but powerful lava tube skylights.

These are small but very high-temperature.

I'll be talking more about these later.

So, Io is a fascinating body

in terms of, it was the first body

where we really did see active resurfacing processes.

But the Voyager, Cassini,

and Galileo missions have shown

that there were many other satellites in the solar system

which have this dynamic, evolving structure.

For example, we have Enceladus,

which is one of the moons of Saturn,

which has water plumes erupting

from the south polar region, and we have Titan

and the Jovian satellite Europa,

which have geologically young surfaces.

But Io and all of these bodies are,

to some extent, tidally heated.

But Io is the most tidally heated body in the solar system,

and it's probably the best place to study

this extreme limits of this process.

So the big picture as it stands is that we know

that Io and Europa are tidally bound together,

but how much heating,

and where this heating is taking place

within the satellite is not really well constrained.

But as tidal heating is most pronounced at Io,

it's really knowing Io's interior condition

that gives us some insight into further constraining

how much heat is being input into Europa.

So, on Io, it's the eruption temperature of Io's lavas

which could be diagnostic of interior conditions.

And so, looking to Io's volcanoes to get this data

is what we need to do

as a way of constraining the interior state of Io.

So the big question in the wake of the Galileo mission

regarding volcanism and Io

is what is the composition of the silicate lavas on Io?

This reflects what's happening inside.

We know that Io's volcanism is dominated

by low-viscosity, quite fluid lava, like basalt.

Basalt erupts at about 1140 centrigrade,

and this is the most common

volcanic material in the solar system.

But it's also possible that with Io, on Io,

that we have a type of lava called ultramafic lava,

one of which is a Komatiite.

And this erupts

at hundreds of centigrade higher temperatures.

And this is interesting to us because ultramafic lavas

were once common on Earth in Earth's distance past,

and it might have been a time

when this reflected a hotter mantel in the earth.

So if ultramafic lavas are indeed erupting on Io,

Io would truly be

a window back into Earth's geological past.

Now, the hotter the lava, the more interior heating

is taking place, and the more liquid the interior.

But it's very difficult to tell the difference

between ultramafic and basaltic lavas by temperature alone.

Firstly, you have to look

at a very narrow part of the thermal emission spectrum,

and secondly, the problem here, and this is something

that has bedeviled efforts to do this with remote sensing

is that we're trying to tell the difference

between a lava that erupts at a very high temperature

and something that erupts at a very, very high temperature.

So, Komatiite, it really takes a couple of seconds

for a Komatiite erupting at this temperature of, say,

1850 Kelvin to cool down to the temperature

at which basalt erupts.

And so it's very difficult to tell

one from the other, and if you're going to go to Io

and look at styles of volcanic activity

to try and do this,

only certain styles of volcanic activity will do.

And the first is lava fountains.

And this is something we have to get pretty close to

and image, say, the base of a lava fountain

before the lava that's gushing out of the ground

can cool too much.

And the problem with this

is that these are relatively rare, and it's impossible

to predict where these are going to happen.

Lava tube skylights are a particularly good candidate

for doing this, because they're small,

you have a very high temperature gradient

between the lava tube skylight and the surrounding area,

so these things stick out very well,

and the temperatures inside

are very close to eruption temperature

because the lava tube itself is highly insulating.

And then we have lava, lava lakes.

And what we're interesting about in lava lakes

is the fountaining that takes place,

because it's the fountaining events

that reveal the lava at its highest temperatures.

So, I've been traveling around and looking at lava lakes

and taking models of volcanic activity

to understand how best to measure

lava eruption temperature.

So, a few years ago, I went to Erebus in Antarctica.

This is, these are observations obtained

by a satellite in Earth orbit, Earth Observing-1,

and this is a visible image,

and this is an infrared image.

And we can see the lava lake here with a smaller pit.

And I'm actually standing in a pixel about here

as this was taken.

And here I am at about 13,000 feet on Mount Erebus,

and it's a bright, sunny, summer day,

and the temperature, the ambient temperature

without wind chill is about -40 centigrade.

And at the summit...

Oh, this is our camp.

This is at about 11,000 feet.

This is the summit of Erebus.

At the summit, there's a crater about 600 meters across,

and it's about 250 meters deep.

And in that crater there is an active lava lake

of a lava called phonolite.

It's quite a rare composition.

And this is the lava lake itself.

It's about 38 meters across, and one of the most

extraordinary things I've ever seen.

And I took down a thermal imager,

a FLIR thermal imager with me, and this,

this is the data, some of the data that was collected.

And what we see here is that lava is welling up

at the center of the lake,

forming a crust, which then moves laterally,

and then the lava goes down at the edges.

And this has been circulating around between the surface

and the deep-seated magma chamber,

about three or four kilometers down.

So, this was a great test of a model that was created

to determine the temperature and area distribution.

This is just a cartoon of that model.

We have lava rising up, spreading and then sinking.

So there is a mathematically-defined

progression in cooling across the surface of the lake.

And if you integrate over that,

and then you can compare that with the data,

this is what we got.

And this was a great pleasure to me

to actually do this, because the model fit to the data.

We produced the thermal emission

as a function of wavelength, the total power emitted,

and the area of the lava lake just down to a few percent.

So this is very gratifying.

There was a slight discrepancy in the fit

between the model down here,

and that is just basically

because the model used a basaltic composition,

and it was only the lava eruption temperature

that was different.

And that's why there's a slight gap here.

So it looks like the model is actually very sensitive

to temperature, and this improves our confidence

of fitting data that we get from the spacecraft.

Now, the resurfacing mechanism at Erebus

was generally very quiescent,

but when I was there in 2005, every six to nine hours,

the lava lake would resurface itself like this.

[Ashley mimics explosion]

[audience laughs]

I have to do my own special effects.

But that's what it sounded like.

[audience applauds]

It was pretty impressive when this thing blew.

So, yeah, this is a Strombolian eruption,

and it basically throws out lava bombs

up to three-quarters of a kilometer.

So, you gotta be careful.

[audience laughs]

Okay, all the bad acting aside,

the guy under the rock, his name's Alexander Gurst.

And at the time, he was a graduate student

at the University of Hamburg,

and now, he's an astronaut

in the European Space Agency Astronaut Corps,

and he's already spent one tour

on the International Space Station,

and he's mission commander on a mission

that's going to be launched in 2018.

Well done, Alexander.

So, the results from the field trip to Erebus

and all the data analysis

is that we see that lava lake thermal signatures,

the characteristic thermal signature

of a lava lake on Earth

and its contemporaries on Io are actually pretty similar.

The model fits used to interpret the Io data,

the model was actually developed to interpret Io data

actually works really well on terrestrial data.

So that's a good test.

And the analysis appears to be sensitive

to eruption temperatures, which is important.

This is all very well to Erebus, but things,

how do things like with a better analog for Io?

And so a few years later, actually, I was asked

to go out to this volcano in Africa, the Erta Ale volcano

in the Danakil Depression in the Afar region of Ethiopia

by the BBC, who are filming a series

called Wonders of the Solar System.

Io is obviously a wonder of the solar system,

and so they wanted to talk to me about it out there.

I jumped at the chance.

Erta Ale is located at the northern end

of the East African rift system.

This is where Africa is pulling itself apart,

and it's a basalt lava lake.

And here it is.

In 2009, it was about 55 meters across.

There was a lot of vigorous churning around at the edges

and the occasional lava fountain in the middle,

and it's one of the most extraordinary things

that I've ever seen.

And so here I am on the summit

of Erta Ale on a bright, sunny, summer day,

and the ambient temperature is 133 Fahrenheit.

It's 56 centigrade.

Sorts of it's not surprising I look a little pink.

Again, with a thermal imager.

These lava lake tend to be in these really,

you know, extreme environments.

Here I am again with another thermal imager.

And this is an hour in the life of the lava lake

compressed down into about 10 seconds of time lapse.

And what I'd like to point out is a small lava fountain

just about here.

There it goes.

This is where the crust has been disrupted,

and areas of very high temperature are being revealed.

And that's what we're interested in.

So, I took a look at these data to determine

what the effect would be of any kind of delay

getting data at different wavelengths.

A traditional way for spacecraft, like the Voyager,

spacecraft images to work is,

you take an image of the surface

through one filter.

You move a filter wheel.

You take another image, do another filter wheel.

After another filter on the wheel,

you move the filter again.

You take another image.

Then you combine those images together,

and you get a color image.

That's fine for planetary surfaces,

but where we have something that is changing rapidly,

because it's actually cooling very fast,

what is the effect of that

when you try this experiment again?

And this is what we found,

that with even a second delay

in taking data at different wavelengths,

we got these massive...

Here we go.

These massive changes in derived temperature,

which really does make it very difficult to have

any confidence in an actual temperature derivation.

But when you cut the difference in time

down to a fraction of a second,

we get a much smaller amount of variation.

Of course, this would be, this would be a flat line

if the data were obtained simultaneously.

So, what we found from Erta Ale is that temperatures,

that areas of target temperatures change so rapidly

that observations have to be obtained very fast,

or ideally, simultaneously at different wavelengths.

Now, with Galileo data, we tried deriving temperatures

from Galileo data by combining different SSI frames

and combining NIMS data with SSI data,

and we found that with seconds and minutes

between observations,

it damages our confidence in the results,

because the target that we're looking at

was probably changing in that time.

Now, this is not a criticism of Galileo

by any means of the imagination,

because the instruments of Galileo were simply not designed

to do what we'd like to do with the next mission.

We see as far as we do

because we stand on the shoulders of giants.

So, this is not a criticism of Galileo at all.

The upshot of this is that observations

have to be obtained in a fraction of a second.

So, we're really getting close now

to what we need to overcome these problems.

We have a very good handle

on the derivation of the style of volcanic activity

from studying volcanoes on Earth

and studying volcanoes on Io.

On that note, there was a paper published just last year

where we quantified the thermal emission

that you would get from a lava tube skylight

for both basalt and ultramafic compositions.

So now we have the distinctive thermal fingerprints

for both of these compositions to help us analyze any

new spacecraft data that we might get on volcanism on Io,

or the style of volcanism on Io.

We have a very good handle on the rapid cooling of new lava.

We know how the process works,

and we know some of the problems

that have to be overcome with that.

And with lava fountains

and with fountaining in lava lakes,

there is still the problem

of the unpredictable magnitude of thermal emission.

Because if too much radiance is captured by the detector,

it will saturate, and then the data are no good

for deriving eruption temperature.

But there's a number of ways of doing it,

and here's one.

This is an effort being led by Alex Soibel here at JPL.

It uses something called a HOT-BIRD detector,

which was invented here at JPL,

and an integrated circuit

that was invented at MIT Lincoln Labs.

And it splits the signal coming in.

It obtains data simultaneously at multiple wavelengths.

For our purposes, the detector and the circuit

are non-saturating, so there's no saturation effect,

and it's got a fast integration time.

So this is just one approach that can be used

to get the data that we need

to measure lava eruption temperatures on Io accurately.

So, now, we really do have all of the pieces of the puzzle.

We can identify different eruption styles on Io.

We can understand...

We have a good understanding of how these

different eruptions behave thermally and temporally.

So we really do know what observations to make.

We have some designs

for instruments that collect the data,

and we have models that can be used

to interpret the data once obtained.

And now the only thing we're missing now are new data.

So, the unlocking of Io's secrets

has been an incremental process.

The Voyager spacecraft discovered

that Io was volcanically active,

and we did so with instruments that were not designed

for looking at any kind of silicate volcanism.

This was completely unthought-of

when the instruments were designed in the first place.

Galileo discovered that silicate volcanism

was the dominant from of volcanism on Io,

and now the question is,

what is the actual composition of the lavas?

Is it uniform across Io, or are there different compositions

being erupted in different places

which reflect the depth of origin of these lavas?

Are they hot, or are they very hot?

So, really, a new mission is needed to get back to Io,

and there've been different missions

proposed over the years.

This is one that was proposed a couple of years ago.

It may be proposed again by Alfred McEwen

at the University of Arizona.

It was called the Io Volcano Observer or IVO.

IVO and other missions like it would be the first mission

sent back to Io dedicated to study Io's volcanoes

and the interior processes

with instruments designed specifically to overcome

the problems, the problems that are inherent

in trying to understand what's happening on Io,

to finally nail down eruption temperatures,

constrain interior state,

and then this can be applied also to Europa.

So in conclusion,

we really truly are living in a new,

in a golden age of exploration.

We know the big Io questions can be answered,

and to a volcanologist,

Io is a truly amazing place.

It's a window into Earth's past.

It's key to understanding Jupiter's satellites.

It's a volcanologist's paradise.

Thank you very much.

[audience applauds]

If anyone has any questions, please use the microphone

set up in the middle of the room.

>> Hi, great presentation.

I had a quick question with regards

to potential for an atmosphere on Io.

Is there any indication there was an atmosphere,

or is there an atmosphere?

Will there be an atmosphere in the future?

>> There is a very, very thin atmosphere of sulfur dioxide

which appears to freeze out at night.

It's not as thick as Earth's atmosphere.

We're talking about something that is just a tiny fraction

of a bar, and it's basically sulfur dioxide

that's generated from the volcanoes themselves

by lava flow across the surface

and melting and remobilizing sulfur dioxide gas and sulfur

on the surface.

It's remobilizing ices.

>> Hi, I'm just wondering if you have any plans

to visit more volcanoes,

or if there's any specific ones you'd like to go to?

>> I try to visit as many volcanoes as I can.

I made my first trip to Etna this year,

which is very exciting.

That's where I encountered sort of the mantra

of the volcanologist, which was,

you should have stayed an extra couple of days.

Usually, it's you should have been here last week.

In this case, I left a couple of days

before it erupted quite spectacularly.

I would like to go back to Erta Ale

with new equipment.

I spend a lot of time at Kilauea,

'cause Kilauea is convenient, it's relatively close,

and it's a great analog for a lot of the styles

of volcanic activity that we see on Io.

So it's a great test bed,

and it's a great learning experience to go out and watch

the eruptions take place.

Yeah.

>> Hi.

I understand there are about 400 active volcanoes on Io

contributing to the ejecta and the plasma torus.

And my question is, are there any dormant volcanoes on Io

or do you know of any that are going dormant?

>> We've identified 250 locations

where there's been active or recent volcanism,

and there are, as you quite correctly say,

there are about 400 sites on Io which look like dormant...

There are 400 sites on Io which

have the appearance of past activity

as well as the current activity.

So yes, there are many sites on Io

which look as if they once were volcanic,

but don't appear to be volcanic now.

I don't think that there's been any correlation

between where the activity is taking place now

and where it seemed to have taken place at some other time.

So there may be something hidden in those data

which reflect a shift in maybe regional volcanism,

but no, I can't say anything definitive

about that right now.

>> Thank you.

>> Yeah.

You're welcome.

>> So, first of all,

thank you very much for your presentation.

It's been very eye-opening.

[audience laughs]

Pun not intended, I promise.

So my question is, have we been able

to detect a magnetic field around Io, and if not,

what's the theory for what's missing

in development for that magnetic field?

>> You know, I'm not sure of the answer.

The Galilean Magnetometer did some measurements

as it went past Io which did infer

that there was, through magnetic induction,

that there was a global magma ocean.

I'm not sure about the strength and size

of Io's magnetic field.

>> Thank you very much.

>> Hi.

My question is, do we have an understanding

of the mechanism from placement of the magma at the surface?

Is there some sort of tectonism going on

that is a mechanism for that?

>> Right.

We don't think there's any sort of global tectonics

the way we see global tectonics on Earth.

Instead, we have a heat pipe mechanism

where lava or magma works its way up from the top

of the lithosphere to the surface.

What helps it get there seems to be a trend

for large faults in the crust providing planes of weakness

and reducing stress, horizontal stress,

which provides pathways for lava to get the surface.

The problem with Io is it's being resurfaced so fast

that the crust is getting compressed down.

And so very large horizontal stresses build up,

and these stresses are relieved

by large crustal blocks tilting

and by faulting in other areas.

And these seem to provide pathways for lava

to get to the surface.

So the thick, the thick crust seems to be fractured

sufficiently to allow the passage of lava,

the passage of magma, to the surface in many locations.

But there are no plate tectonics like what we see on earth.

>> Audience Member: It's fracturing, but there's no...

>> It's fracturing, but there's no subduction,

and there's no sort of...

There don't seem to be any spreading centers.

>> Okay, thank you.

>> All right, you may not be able to answer this,

but I can't help but wondering if the Europa Clipper

might be carrying an instrument that perhaps

in an extended mission could collect

some of the data that you're looking for from Io.

>> Yep.

We're still trying to figure out what to look

at on Europa with the Europa Clipper,

and Europa Clipper is not going to make any close passes

to Io because Io is deep in Jupiter's radiation belt.

So I think the best chance for understanding Io's volcanism

is with a dedicated Io mission.

>> Two questions.

The second one I guess was already answered,

that we're not going to...

The Europa Clipper isn't going to help here.

So, if the energy for all this activity

is coming from the tidal forces

between different satellites,

is there enough energy in that orbital motion

to power the heat for the whole lifetime of the solar system

and for a billion years in the future?

>> It looks like Io...

One of the theories about Io and Europa and Ganymede

is that they move in and out of orbital resonance.

So what we see is a complicated byplay

between orbital dynamics and the interior structure of Io,

Europa, and Ganymede.

So it looks like, on a scale

of maybe hundreds of millions of years,

Io and the other satellites

may move in and out of the resonance,

which would actually cut off volcanism on Io.

So it might be that Io is going through at the moment

a very high level of volcanic activity,

'cause it's at a peak in this scale.

We don't really know,

but that's important because you get to the point

where Io's interior is so fluid that the tidal forces

end up moving, just basically moving the fluid around,

and volcanism will actually come to an end

once it moves out of the resonance.

Once it's out of the resonance and the tidal forces

can get a grip on a solid Io again,

it will move back into resonance,

and the volcanism will start again.

And this might happen so quickly

that we get total mixing or total melting of the interior

so that we go back to basalt,

we go back to possibly ultramafic material.

It's a conveyor belt of volcanic activity

that moves so fast

that we don't get highly-evolved melts on Io.

We don't get highly silicate, highly silicon-content lavas

like we see on earth.

We don't get a secondary crust forming

or tertiary crust forming.

So, it might be that Io is heated back to an extent

where it's a primitive interior composition,

which is why it's interesting,

because that would reflect the early earth.

>> Very interesting.

Thank you.

>> Great talk, Ashley.

I have a question and a comment.

The question is,

given all of the modeling that you've done

and now it looks like we also see cryovolcanism,

as you mentioned previously,

in places like Titan, Enceladus, and Triton.

To what extent can you apply the models

that you've developed for sort of magma to cryomagmas,

and then the comment is that today does happen

to be the 14th anniversary of when Galileo

did its plunge into Jupiter's atmosphere.

So it's quite appropriate, I think,

that you gave this talk tonight.

>> Right, yes.

The physics of the eruption and cooling and emplacement

of cryolavas, it's very similar to the modeling

that I've been doing, and basically

it's just the physical input values that are changing.

So, yes, I've looked at the emplacement of cryolavas

on Titan and some of the effects on Enceladus as well.

Okay, we have some questions,

questions from the internet.

So, FindingFreedom asks,

"Could debris and particles from Io's volcanic eruptions

"damage spacecraft orbiting or flying by the moon?"

The answer is yes, they could.

Galileo itself had its orbits,

its orbital trajectory changed to avoid a large plume

and ended up running into another plume.

[audience laughs]

That's just the way it is.

But it is possible to damage a spacecraft,

and that really depends on what kind of plume is erupting,

how thick it is,

how much material has been incorporated into it.

Your spacecraft is basically flying through this

at about six or seven kilometers a second,

so even small particles can do damage.

Alex asks, "Do the volcanoes act differently

"being directly exposed to the vacuum of space?"

And that's a good question.

On earth, Old Faithful goes up about 30 or 40 meters.

On Io, under the same eruption conditions,

because you are erupting into a vacuum

and because gravity is lower.

If it was just gravity lower,

the plume would be six times higher,

but because you're erupting into a vacuum,

you get much more expansion.

You get much more bang for the buck.

Old Faithful would be 38 kilometers high.

So erupting into a vacuum means that

if there's any gas exsolving from the lava,

you tend to erupt much higher velocities

than on Earth where things are a little controlled

by atmospheric pressure.

And finally, Paige asks,

"Is there topographical information

about Io's lava lakes?

"I'd be curious to see

"the heights and depths of Loki Patera."

We have a pretty sparse dataset where there's high enough

resolution to make any kinds of measurements

of lava flows and the lava lake.

The lava lake just seems to be completely flat.

We see specular reflection off the surface,

which kind of enhances the idea

that it is, in fact, a lava lake.

There is only one measurement, direct measurement,

of the thickness of a lava flow on Io,

and that is about 10 meters thick

at a location called Pillan Paterae

where there was a big eruption in 1997,

which emplaced really large lava flows,

which, in the space of a few months,

covered 5600 square kilometers.

And these flows ended up about 10 meters thick,

about 30 feet.

Okay, that's the last question.

Does anyone else have any questions?

Well, thank you very much for coming tonight.

[audience applauds]

Thank you.

[bright instrumental music]

For more infomation >> Volcanologist's Paradise (live public talk) - Duration: 59:41.

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Why Public Transportation Sucks in the US - Duration: 10:06.

This video was made possible by Skillshare.

Learn anything, including how I make these videos, for free for two months by going to

Skl.sh/wendover.

This is Indiana, and this is Scotland.

Both have a similar number of inhabitants, a similar size, and a similar population density.

But here's Indiana's public transportation system, and here's Scotland's.

You want to get to Cupar, a town of 9,000 30 miles from the capital?

That'll take you 55 minutes on a train that leaves every 30 minutes or an hour and 40

minutes on a bus that leaves every 40.

You want to get to Anderson, a town of 50,000 30 miles from Indiana's capital?

Well, you're out of luck.

The only option is the car.

Antiquated technology, safety concerns, crumbling infrastructure, and nonexistence—it's

not hard to argue that the US public transportation network is just not good.

Vast swaths of the US have no option but to drive because the alternative just is not

there.

This has consequences on the environment, on economic mobility, on where people live,

the consequences of America's lack of solid public transportation almost defines American

culture.

But it wasn't always like this.

The United States once had the best public transportation system in the world.

It was a the admiration of countries worldwide and an essential factor allowing for the successful

western expansion of the country.

It all started with this—the horsecar.

Now, there were urban transportation systems before these horse drawn trams came along,

but they weren't cheap and they weren't fast.

Roads generally weren't paved and there just wasn't the economic demand for high

frequency service because these carriages were rarely faster than walking.

But on rails, these horsecars were fast and one horse could pull a full load of passengers

thanks to the rails.

In its heyday, there were over 6,000 miles of horsecar lines in the US.

In comparison, the combined mileage of every tram, subway, light rail, and commuter rail

system in the US nowadays is 5,416.

In 1880, 50 million people lived in the US.

Today, over 320 million.

Around the turn of the century, many of those horsecar systems were electrified.

There were then 11,000 miles of streetcar track nationwide.

The systems were absolutely everywhere.

Even tiny towns like Bangor, Maine and Berlin, New Hampshire had streetcars.

So what happened?

How did the US go from having 11,000 miles of streetcar to 200?

How did the US go from having solid public transportation in towns big and small across

the country to how it is today?

The decline of the streetcar began just after the turn of the century.

That was when the automobile came around.

By 1920, the car was starting to get to an attainable price-point for the everyday individual.

That was the real threat for the streetcar—not cars, but economical cars.

The streetcar received another blow in 1929—the great depression.

There were fewer people with jobs which meant fewer people who needed to commute and fewer

people who had the money to pay for transport so many lines were just not profitable anymore

and closed.

But then the streetcar received a stay of execution—World War Two.

You see, during World War Two, the US had the lowest unemployment rate in history—as

low as 1.2%.

There were tons of factory jobs to support the war so practically everyone who wanted

a job had a job.

That meant there were tons more people now going to and from work, and, even better for

the streetcar, there were rations going on on rubber and gas which diminished the popularity

of the car.

But something else was going on through all of that.

Something more sinister.

Sometime in the 1920s, automobile technology became advanced enough that the bus became

cheaper to operate than the streetcar.

Streetcars cost very little to power, but they do require a lot of infrastructure from

overhead lines to track.

Buses were more flexible and required almost no infrastructure.

And the bus had some powerful friends, the automobile companies, or more specifically,

General Motors.

General Motors went and bought dozens of small streetcar companies across the nation and

turned them into bus companies.

They removed hundreds of miles of track across the US and supported other companies doing

the same, but its not like they didn't have a good reason to do this.

These streetcars were not economically advantageous.

Buses were faster, cheaper, and at the time, they were the modern and fresh transportation

method that the public wanted.

Nearly every streetcar system nationwide was replaced with a bus system.

In addition, the streetcar companies were almost all commercial so if and when they

failed, many local governments set up public, subsidized bus companies.

So that's how transportation got bad, but why did it stay bad?

Well, mostly because of the car.

America is the country of the car.

It grew up as the car grew up and so its cities were built for cars.

Think Dallas, Phoenix, Los Angeles—you can't survive in these cities without a car.

Remember, the United States is centered around the idea of personal freedom.

With a car, you can go anywhere at anytime, so politically, cars have historically been

associated with the idea of personal freedom.

Just like the Republican party votes to have strong national defense, allow gun ownership,

and preserve small government in order to promote personal freedom, they have always

worked to promote the usage and ownership of cars.

This means they often voted in favor of subsidies helping the auto industry, most often in the

form of indirect subsidies lowering the cost of gas.

Now, that was fine when cities were small, highways were new, gas was cheap, and climate

change wasn't even a concept, but that's not the case anymore.

Cities are just of a size where they literally cannot support their entire population driving.

You can't fit more road infrastructure in many cites, but you can fit more public transportation.

Cars were available to the common American much earlier than the common European, so

the US set road policies early that allowed for large, smooth, well-functioning roads.

While the US was building its magnificent roads, Europe was building their public transportation

systems.

The high car usage in the US even has to do with zoning.

You see, European cities tend to have less strict zoning laws which allow for businesses

and housing to intermingle.

The US zones its cities much more strictly.

Houses are next to houses and businesses are next to businesses which means that the distances

between houses and shops in the US is much greater.

Therefore, Americans have to go further more often.

The most demonstrative fact is how the two places approach parking.

In the US, zoning laws specify a minimum number of parking spaces per building.

In Europe, the laws specify a maximum number of parking spaces.

The three cities with the three lowest car-ownership rates in the US all have something in common.

Boston, New York, and DC, are all old, rather compact cities with decent public transportation

systems.

Since they were cities before the car, they're built much more like the European cities that

have such good public transportation systems today.

Simplified, public transportation gets worse as you go further west since western cities

are newer.

But here's the most important sentence of this entire video: access to transportation

is the single most important factor in an individual's ability to escape poverty.

That is not a subjective claim, that is a fact that emerged from a Harvard study.

Someone who lives right by a subway stop is astronomically more likely to find a high-paying

job than someone who doesn't have a way to get around.

Individuals in poverty generally live in poor neighborhoods with few job opportunities,

but with reliable, accessible, and inexpensive public transportation these individuals can

get all across their city to where the jobs are.

So, a good way to evaluate the effectiveness of a public transportation system is by how

well it serves the poor.

DC, for example, does a good job of this.

The poorest neighborhoods have the greatest proportion of their residents within a 10-minute

walk of a metro station while the richest neighborhoods have the smallest proportion.

Hand-in-hand with their move back into the cities, millennials are shunning cars.

Car ownership among young people is at historic lows and the urban youth is relying more and

more on public transport.

Some cities like, Portland, Kansas City, Detroit, and DC are turning back to streetcars.

Done right, streetcars can drive huge increases in economic development.

They're more of a symbol of modernization that entices residents, developers, and businesses

to areas.

Portland, for example, has had an estimated $5 billion in extra economic development thanks

to its streetcar.

New streetcar systems are being built all across the US in cities like Milwaukee and

Oklahoma city since they're finally making money again—not from their fares, but from

the jobs brought by their existence.

People didn't want them a century ago, but streetcars finally make sense again.

Public transportation is instrumentally important to the success of cities.

You can almost be sure that a good city will have good public transportation and a bad

city will have bad public transportation.

Public transportation increases economic mobility, decreases carbon footprints, and increases

economic development so the only question is, why not build more of it?

One of the most common requests I receive is for a behind-the-scenes video and I've

finally made one.

I've partnered up with Skillshare to post it on their platform.

The course is mainly geared to people who already do or want to create their own videos

but it should be interesting for anyone.

If you're not interested in that in particular, Skillshare has over 16,000 classes about pretty

much anything and everything which you can watch from anywhere including when you're

offline by using their IOS or Android apps.

An annual membership gives you unlimited access to their classes for less than $10/month,

but the first 500 people to sign up over at Skl.sh/wendover can learn whatever they want

on Skillshare for free for their first two months including my behind-the-scenes course

which is also linked in the description.

For more infomation >> Why Public Transportation Sucks in the US - Duration: 10:06.

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'They s--t everywhere:' Man says RiNo neighborhood has become a public toilet - Duration: 1:45.

For more infomation >> 'They s--t everywhere:' Man says RiNo neighborhood has become a public toilet - Duration: 1:45.

-------------------------------------------

Crazy Police Dance On The Public Place || Funny Whatsapp Videos || Try Not To Laugh || - Duration: 3:48.

For More Funny Videos SUBSCRIBE now

For more infomation >> Crazy Police Dance On The Public Place || Funny Whatsapp Videos || Try Not To Laugh || - Duration: 3:48.

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After setback, Greenfield seeks to move forward with public Wi-Fi - Duration: 1:04.

For more infomation >> After setback, Greenfield seeks to move forward with public Wi-Fi - Duration: 1:04.

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Spokane Public School immerses kindergartners in Spanish language program - Duration: 2:25.

For more infomation >> Spokane Public School immerses kindergartners in Spanish language program - Duration: 2:25.

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Lawmakers hear from public on medical aid in dying bill - Duration: 2:17.

For more infomation >> Lawmakers hear from public on medical aid in dying bill - Duration: 2:17.

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Incident IQ™ District Spotlight: Rockdale County Public Schools - Duration: 6:26.

(light playful music)

- The day I got my computer, I was really excited

because expanded my knowledge for what I can really learn

and know and enhance my growth.

- But we recognized, about six or seven years ago,

that we had to transform

what classroom instruction looked like,

how they interacted with technology.

- So we started this new program, one to one,

every student has a laptop

and it was just a revolutionary move in the classroom.

- When school systems start going one to one,

all of a sudden there are thousands of computer systems

in the school district and it brings lots of challenges.

- Districts have to have a way to deal with the flood

of help requests that come with a big influx of technology

into a school district.

And Incident IQ is the solution or the tool

that we think is best suited to help district IT leaders

manage that challenge.

- Before Incident IQ, we would enter in a help desk

and then they'd come to us

and have to ask us a lot of questions,

like whose device is this

or what's specifically happening

or where's this happening or when is it happening?

- When a technology incident

or a technology disruption occurs

and teaching is interrupted and learning is interrupted,

we call the phenomenon technology disempowerment.

- I was asking some of our students about that.

And I said, "What if you didn't have a laptop?"

And they just had this dead stare like, "What?"

Like, "That's not possible."

Because to them, that's how school is now.

- And with my laptop, without it it would be very hard

for me to be able to learn quicker

because I'm used to the technology.

- So if you want this technology to be up and running

and to be real time and to be accepted by your teacher core,

then you're gonna have to make sure

that it does what you said it would do.

- It's easy to put out an RFP and say,

"I want to buy 13,000 pieces of equipment."

It's much more difficult to effectively use the laptops

to change the classroom and improve student achievement.

- What you never are going to have enough of

is enough staff to support those systems.

So it occurred to us that the staff that is available

have to be as effective and productive

and efficient as they can.

That's why we built Incident IQ from the ground up,

just for the K12 instructional technology support use case.

- Incident IQ is a web based tool

that assists us in getting our repairs done

on a daily basis, quickly.

- The way we do that from a feature standpoint

is we design a workflow that can be done

and executed in under a minute.

- It's really easy to use.

It's really easy to go in and just type in what you have

for your school and submit it.

I've had issues with the projector has gone out

and I need a new bulb.

And I can put that in there

and they come and replace it that day.

As a teacher and I need it now, that's great.

You know, I like that (laughs).

- As it kinda just starts breaking things down,

so that it gives the technician a real good description

of what they need to sit back and fix.

So from their side, it really is just a point and click.

- In other words, the teacher doesn't have to know

what the make, model, or config is for her educator laptop.

Instead, she just knows, "It's my laptop."

- I can just click through it very quickly

and so I intend to teach fifth graders next year

to enter Incident IQ tickets

because it's something easy that they can do.

- It gives me the detail I need

to be able to go into a classroom prepared for the repair.

I know what tools I need to take with me.

I know if it's something that I can repair myself

or am I gonna have to send it away?

And if I have to send it away,

I know to bring a loaner with me

so I'm not backtracking, I'm not wasting time.

- It makes us more efficient in the schools

and allows us to monitor what our support's doing

and to pinpoint critical areas that we have,

issues that we have.

- We need a robust infrastructure to help us track that

and manage that.

Otherwise, we're not only losing time in the classroom,

if the device is not working or a thing's not happening

for the teacher.

We're also losing time in trying to figure out

who's responsible for fixing this.

How do we get it to the right person

who's got the knowledge and expertise?

- That last group of people that care about Incident IQ

and need this solution to work for them are the leaders.

People at that level and with those sets of responsibilities

are data starved.

They're looking for information

on how operations are running,

how the technology's performing, how it's being utilized,

what's working, what isn't,

because they are tasked with constantly driving improvement.

- So Incident IQ has become our critical hub

for us in Rockdale County because without it,

we don't know what's happening to devices.

We don't know what's happening to that repair

so that we can minimize that downtime in instruction.

Because if we're not minimizing downtime,

we're losing that instructional time that we don't have.

- We're getting where technology is becoming a new way

or a new resource of learning

to help develop or minds in a sort of way.

But I think that is the new future for us,

for public schools.

- So you have to figure out,

"Okay, this is the technology now.

"It's most likely going to evolve

"so I have to keep going on with the technology.

- Technology is only the means, it's not the end.

You won't hear us talk about a technology initiative.

We wanna make sure that our goal

is classroom transformation,

not as a stand-alone computer lab,

but as a tool for learning, as a tool for researching,

as a tool for engaging, as a tool for collaborating.

That was the key element for us

and that's what we continue to try to do.

(light playful music)

For more infomation >> Incident IQ™ District Spotlight: Rockdale County Public Schools - Duration: 6:26.

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Prince Harry, Girlfriend Make 1st Public Appearance Together - Duration: 1:04.

For more infomation >> Prince Harry, Girlfriend Make 1st Public Appearance Together - Duration: 1:04.

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Bellevue Public Schools Foundation - Duration: 7:04.

For more infomation >> Bellevue Public Schools Foundation - Duration: 7:04.

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City Public Works Announces Weekend Parkway East Closure, Restrictions - Duration: 0:27.

For more infomation >> City Public Works Announces Weekend Parkway East Closure, Restrictions - Duration: 0:27.

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Newport News leaders asking public to attend community workshop - Duration: 2:15.

For more infomation >> Newport News leaders asking public to attend community workshop - Duration: 2:15.

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Celebrity New : Kevin Hart issues public apology to wife over his 'bad behaviour' - Duration: 2:49.

Kevin Hart issues public apology to wife over his 'bad behaviour'

The 38-year-old comedian looked solemn as he looked directly into the camera in the video he posted to his Instagram account on Saturday (16Sep17).

Im at a place in my life where I feel like I have a target on my back. I should make smart decisions and recently I didnt, he stated.

I made a bad error in judgment and put myself in an environment where only bad things can happen and they did.

And doing that I know that I am going to hurt the people closest to, whom I have talked to - my wife and my kids.

Kevin does not allude to the actual nature of the incident he is apologising for but he did confirm that someone was trying to obtain money from him and wanted to make financial gains over his mistake.

At the end of the day, I just have to do better, he promised.

Writing alongside the video, he added that he wanted to apologise to his wife Eniko Parrish, and his two children from a previous relationship, daughter Heaven, 12, and nine-year-old son Hendrix.

In May, Kevin and Eniro, 33, announced that they were expecting their first child together. I gotta do better and I will, he reiterated. Im not perfect and have never claimed to be .I love you all..

com have reported that someone had been trying to extort money from the Central Intelligence actor following the release of a steamy video of him and another woman in July.

It was alleged that because Kevin refused to pay, the grainy videos were leaked online, though police officers have now launched an investigation into the apparent blackmail attempt.

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