(The Minnesota Star Tribune)
Flash Flood Reminders. The Twin Cities National Weather Service has interesting nuggets and timely advice about how to avoid becoming a victim of flooding:
Over the last 30 years, on average, more people have died each year due to flooding than tornadoes.
(NOAA/The Minnesota Star Tribune)
Perceived vs. Actual Risk - Vaccine Lessons Meteorologists Understand. Dr. Marshall Shepherd has a relevant post focused on risk at Forbes.com: "...A 2016 study in the Journal of Risk Research looked at how political ideology, socio-demographic background and climate change "beliefs" shaped a person's perception of weather. The term "motivated reasoning" emerged in their analysis. Motivated reasoning is when people tend to consume or interpret evidence in a way that confirms what predispositions or what they already believe. By the way, you see this all of the time on social media. The study also found that people's perceptions of weather often take precedence over actual weather...
People overreact to intentional acts and under react to naturally-varying, generic, or accidental events. This probably explains why some people don't have the same concern about being struck by lightning but are screaming loudly about the vaccine pause..."
(YouGov/The Minnesota Star Tribune)
All US States, Ranked from Best to Worst, According to Americans. We are #24? I beg to differ. Here's an excerpt of a post at YouGov: "...Hawaii, which is well-known for its beautiful beaches and warm weather, took the top spot by winning 69% of its match-ups. With its scenic mountains, hiking paths, and recreational marijuana industry, Colorado took second place with 65% of matches won. The third-ranking state was Virginia (64%), a destination for American history and ocean coastlines. Nevada, the home of Las Vegas, landed in the fourth-favorite spot (61%), with North Carolina only marginally behind it (61%). Following the top five, Florida snagged the sixth spot with a 61% win-rate. Another retirement destination, Arizona, won 60% of its match-ups to take seventh. New York — the destination for Broadway, quality food, and the city's culture — landed in eighth place (59%)..."
Crab Nebula (NASA/ESA, J. Hester and A. Loll (Arizona State University)/The Minnesota Star Tribune)
Mysterious Radio Blasts from Space Just Got a Whole Lot Weirder, Somehow. A post at Vice.com caught my eye; here's a clip: "...For years, scientists have been baffled by extremely loud radio signals, known as giant radio pulses (GRPs), that can be traced to a special type of dead star known as a pulsar. Pulsars are compact, rapidly rotating remnants of supernovae that get their name from the clockwork pulses of radiation they emit from their poles, which have made them useful natural timepieces for astronomers who use their regular bursts to measure other celestial phenomena. For reasons that remain unexplained, some pulsars occasionally spew out GRPs that are hundreds to thousands of times brighter than regular pulsar radio signals. Now, scientists have discovered that GRPs are many times more energetic than previously thought..."