Daily Archives: February 15, 2022

Web Space Telescope will create an age of astronomy where observation leads the theory : Dong-A Science – The Times Hub

Posted: February 15, 2022 at 6:09 am

Home Technology Web Space Telescope will create an age of astronomy where observation leads the theory : Dong-A Science February 15, 2022 Interview with Senior Researcher Sang-mo Som, at the US Space Telescope Research Center, If you send a robot to L2 within 10 to 20 years, the life of the telescope could be extended further

If robots are sent to L2 within 10 to 20 years, the lifespan of telescopes may be further extended

Until now, astronomy has been an era in which theory drives observation and advances observations. We are cautiously anticipating that in the future, the Webb Space Telescope will transform into an era in which observations drive theory.

Sangmo Som, a senior researcher at the US Space Telescope Research Institute (STScI), who participated in the James Webb Space Telescope (Web Space Telescope) development project, which went into space on December 25 last year, revealed this prospect in an email interview with Yonhap News on the 15th.

The Hubble Space Telescope (operated since 1990) has had a profound impact on the development of modern astronomy, said Sohn, senior researcher.

He emphasized, If an appearance or phenomenon in the universe that astronomers did not expect at all (via the Web Space Telescope) is observed, it can serve as an opportunity to establish a new theory to explain it.

After graduating from Yonsei Universitys Department of Astronomy and Space, he received his masters and doctoral degrees from the University of Virginia, USA.

Currently, he is responsible for the mirror alignment of the Webb Space Telescope.

(Seoul = Yonhap News) Web space telescope mirror made of 18 pieces [NASA/Chris Gunn ]

The Webb Space Telescopes mirror consists of 18 pieces glued together in a honeycomb shape. Mirror alignment refers to precisely moving these pieces to act like a single mirror with a diameter of 6.5m.

STScl, where he works, is a space telescope specialized research institute that is in charge of the operation of NASAs giant space telescope project. He has been responsible for the operation of the Hubble Space Telescope for the past 30 years, and all operations after the launch of the Webb Space Telescope are also managed by STScl.

It was the most memorable day of my life, said senior researcher Sohn, who worked on the Hubble Space Telescope team and joined the Webb Space Telescope project in 2019.

He recalled, It was Christmas morning, and I was more excited than my two children who received Christmas presents.

Senior Researcher Sohn said, When the Webb Space Telescope arrived at the target orbit of the 2nd Lagrange point (L2) on the 25th of last month, the researcher was engulfed in a very encouraging atmosphere. Were working hard on one, he said of STScls mood.

According to his explanation, the current Webb Space Telescope has successfully completed solar panels, sun shields, and mirror deployments, and has passed an important hurdle before stable observations can be made.

The Webb Space Telescope is very busy performing the mirror alignment process, he said. On the back of each sculpted mirror, a device that enables fine adjustment with precision in the order of 10 nanometers (nm) is installed, which requires a high degree of precision. It is a very complex task, so it takes place over a long period of three months.

He said that the Webb Space Telescope is going through a very smooth process after launch, but this is the result of overcoming numerous difficulties and obstacles several times.

He said he was very frustrated at the thought of having to start all over again whenever a launch was delayed, and mentally exhausted as all teams had to re-plan for that date when a new launch date was announced, he said.

(AFP = Yonhap News) The National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) announced on the 24th (local time) that the James Webb Telescope (JWST), which was launched on a rocket at the end of last year, successfully entered its target orbit 1.6 million km away from Earth. announced. This next-generation Webb telescope, which will provide the furthest and deepest look into space, is expected to play an important role in confirming the appearance of the universe immediately after the Big Bang and in finding exoplanets that may contain life. Pictured is an image of the James Webb Telescope placed in space observation orbit. [NASA ] 2022.1.25 [emailprotected]

After launch, there were 344 single points of failure (an element that stops the whole if one of the components does not work) while the Webb Space Telescope flew to the L2 point, including the launch, said senior researcher Sohn. There were a lot of team members who breathed a sigh of relief every time, he said.

He predicted that as the Webb Space Telescope went up to the sky after thorough preparation, its lifespan would be longer than expected, and it could produce results beyond imagination.

The Webb Space Telescopes near-perfect entry into its target orbit saved fuel as much as possible, and recent calculations have increased its life expectancy to more than 20 years, he said. I need a dog, but I installed six in case of a breakdown.

He also said, It is still too early to have hope, but there is talk of whether NASA will send a robot to L2 orbit within 10 to 20 years to further extend the lifespan of the Webb telescope, he said.

He emphasized the importance of continuous interest and support for space science and astronomy, saying that the development of the space telescope has created various technologies that improve the quality of our real life as well as the development of pure science.

He said, The universe is not a vague object of admiration, but a space where anyone can realize a specific dream through a scientific method. expected.

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They called him the Angel of Darkness. But this astronomer just wanted to keep West Texas skies pure. – mySA

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Bill Wren remembers exactly where he was when he was first called the Angel of Darkness.

He doesn't remember the year, but it was at a Texas Star Party, an annual gathering of 500 or so amateur astronomers held at the Prude Ranch in Fort Davis, Texas. Wren, a longtime advocate for the dark skies movement against light pollution as a staffer at UT's McDonald Observatory, was well known by that point, so a Texas Star Party attendee introduced him to a crowd with a new heavy metal-sounding nickname.

"It got a real nice laugh, and it got repeated," Wren says. "The media picked it up."

Wren is good-natured talking about the stark sobriquet even though if it's not his favorite. But if it gets people talking about the necessary steps to keep the night sky dark and the stars bright, he'll make the sacrifice.

"I'm willing to go along with just about anything, but I don't care for the moniker very much. I can do without it," Wren laughs. "Whatever works, you know?"

Earlier this week, Wren retired from the McDonald Observatory, where he made dark skies education and advocacy his work for 32 years.

"The skies over McDonald Observatory are among the darkest of any professional observatory in the United States, in no small measure thanks to Bill Wren," Taft Armandroff, director of McDonald Observatory, said in a statement upon Wren's retirement.

Wren says it was time for him to pack it in, to give someone else a chance to take the baton and run with it. "Life is short. I was past due. The pandemic made things a little less fun, working from home all the time," he says.

That home was university housing at the observatory. The University of Texas at Austin, which operates the McDonald Observatory, chose West Texas' Davis Mountains for its site in 1933 because its skies are some of the darkest in the United States. Since then, light pollution has worsened, especially with drilling rigs cropping up in West Texas during oil booms. Every time that happens, bright lights shine into the night skies, which is detrimental to both the enjoyment of the cosmic view and the scientific work conducted by astronomers at the McDonald Observatory.

USA, Texas, Fort Davis, McDonald Observatory. Houses 430 inch Hobby-Eberly Telescope. Elevation 6791 feet.

A self-taught astronomer, Wren grew up in the hills of Missouri, where, he says, "the starry sky was splendid, almost like wallpaper." He moved to Houston at 15, and noticed that the sky looked different in the city after dusk. On a hunch, he drove out on 290 toward Hempstead. He was awestruck by the stars in the dark night sky.

"Wow, you know, you couldn't see that when I looked at yesterday," Wren remembers thinking. "And it's certainly gotten a lot worse."

That realization led to a lifelong interest in amateur astronomy, beginning with spotting Saturn's rings and Jupiter's moons from his backyard. He eventually bought a larger telescope and started traveling more with his Peterson Field Guide,learning the night sky over the course of a few years. While working at a runaway shelter in Austin and helping a state agency start its suicide hotline, he tutored astronomy students at UT Austin using his self-taught knowledge. He met Frank Bash, UT astronomy professor and the director of the McDonald Observatory, who was impressed with Wren and let him know that the visitor's center had a job opening.

"Thirty days later I pulled the plug on my counseling career in Austin and moved to West Texas," Wren says. "March 1, 1990 was just in time for spring break. It was baptism by fire."

During Wren's second month in Fort Davis, he was encouraged to attend a meeting of the International Dark Sky Association at the University of Arizona campus. He learned that areas could be well-lit without polluting the sky, that people were wasting light and ruining beautiful sights and complicating research for astronomers.

"I wouldn't call it a born-again experience because it's almost like being evangelized," Wren says. "It was just like wow, this is I need to help spread the word on this."

So that's what he did.

The summer Milky Way rises over the McDonald Observatory near Fort Davis, Texas.

In addition to hosting Star Parties and giving tours, Wren gave talks on dark skies for years. It was around 2011, during the oil and gas boom in the Permian Basin, he realized he needed to work directly with companies to keep the skies dark. It wasn't just the drilling sites, but from the adjacent commerce hotels, new housing, chain stores that comes with oil exploration. He remembers giving a presentation to San Antonio-based Pioneer Energy Services, whose president owned a ranch outside Marathon.

"He was waxing poetically about seeing the Milky Way horizon-to-horizon," Wren says. "He said, 'Yes, this is worth protecting, here's our fleet of drilling rigs. See what you can do with the lighting."

Around that time Wren stopped most of his other work at the observatory to focus on dark skies full time. He worked with many oil and gas companies to alter their lighting systems to reduce light pollution, he says, without much pushback at all. In fact, in most cases the sites became safer and with higher visibility and reduced glare, a true win-win for each side.

"And they do recognize the value in the night sky," Wren says. "Many of them do ... well, probably many of them don't. But there are people that get it."

Though light pollution can be reversed, dark skies are disappearing around the country as fewer locations with high visibility remain truly remote. Even though Wren is retiring, he is still staying active in the dark skies community from his new home in Cloudcroft, New Mexico.

"The places where people can go to see an actually dark night sky are rapidly shrinking and becoming fewer and farther between," Wren says. "And it's becoming the case that McDonald Observatory in particular, but the Big Bend region in general, is being recognized as a dark sky destination, a place where people can take in the night sky something with which most of us have lost track of the wonder, the splendor of it all. We're trying to get people to buy into preserving the night skies in far West Texas."

Wren says the best way for people to get the picture is to get a visual demonstration. He says that once you see the effects of light pollution on dark skies, you can't unsee it.

"Being able to do a demonstration or being able to point it out to someone so they can see it with their own eyes can be a very powerful, life altering thing," Wren says. "For some pool souls, it'll be cursing my name til the day they die."

Such is the blessing and the curse of the Angel of Darkness.

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They called him the Angel of Darkness. But this astronomer just wanted to keep West Texas skies pure. - mySA

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Astronomers Measure the Layers of an Exoplanet’s Atmosphere – Universe Today

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The number of planets discovered beyond our Solar System has grown exponentially in the past twenty years, with 4,919 confirmed exoplanets (and another 8,493 awaiting confirmation)! Combined with improved instruments and data analysis, the field of study is entering into an exciting new phase. In short, the focus is shifting from discovery to characterization, where astronomers can place greater constraints on potential habitability.

In particular, the characterization of exoplanet atmospheres will allow astronomers to determine their chemical makeup and whether they have the right characteristics to support life. In a new study led by the University of Lund, an international team of researchers characterized the atmosphere of one of the most extreme exoplanets yet discovered. This included discerning what could be several distinct layers that have particular characteristics.

The study, which recently appeared in the journal Nature Astronomy, was conducted by researchers from the Lund Observatory (University of Lund), the National Centre of Competence in Research (NCCR) PlanetS, the Max Planck Institute for Extraterrestrial Physics, the National Institute for Astrophysics (INAF), the European Southern Observatory (ESO), and multiple universities and research institutes from the UK, Canada, and Chile.

As Earths atmosphere demonstrates, planetary atmospheres do not consist of a single uniform envelope but many layers, each with characteristic properties. The lowest layer of our atmosphere, which extends from sea level to the highest mountain peaks (the troposphere), is where most meteorological phenomena occur since it contains the most water vapor of any layer. Above that is the stratosphere, which contains the ozone layer that shields the surface from potentially harmful ultraviolet radiation.

Next is the mesosphere, which is very thin and cold but still dense enough that meteors will burn up as they pass through it. The thermosphere is next, where temperatures increase again with altitude (due to Solar heating).The uppermost layer is the exosphere, which is too thin for any meteorological phenomena to occur. However, the Aurora Borealis and Aurora Australis sometimes occur in the lower part of the exosphere, overlapping into the thermosphere.

For the sake of their study, the international team examined the exoplanet known as WASP-189b, a Hot Jupiter located 322 light-years from Earth. This planet was discovered in 2018 using the Wide-Angle Search for Planets (WASP) consortium, while extensive follow-up observations were conducted in 2020 using the ESAs CHaracterising ExOPlanets Satellite (CHEOPS). These revealed a planet about twice the radius of Jupiter that orbits its host star 20 times closer than Earth orbits the Sun leading to daytime temperatures of 3,200 C (5,790 F).

Using more recent observations with the High Accuracy Radial velocity Planet Searcher (HARPS), a spectrograph integrated with the 3.6-meter telescope at the ESOs La Silla Observatory, the team was able to examine the atmosphere of this Hot Jupiter for the first time. These spectral observations revealed an atmosphere with the chemical fingerprints of iron, chromium, vanadium, magnesium, and manganese.

As Lund doctoral student Bibiana Prinoth (who was the lead author on the study) explained in a University of Bern press release:

We measured the light coming from the planets host star and passing through the planets atmosphere. The gases in its atmosphere absorb some of the starlight, similar to Ozone absorbing some of the sunlight in Earths atmosphere, and thereby leave their characteristic fingerprint. With the help of HARPS, we were able to identify the corresponding substances.

In addition to the previously-mentioned minerals, the team was interested to find traces of titanium oxide gas. This substance has a melting point of 1,843 C (3350 F) and is very scarce on Earth, where it is typically used as a pigment known as titanium white. Because of its particular properties, this gas may play an important role in the atmosphere of WASP-180b similar to how ozone played an important role in the evolution of Earths atmosphere.

Like ozone, Titanium oxide absorbs short-wave electromagnetic radiation, including ultraviolet light. Therefore, the detection of this compound could indicate that there is a layer in WASP-189 bs atmosphere that interacts with stellar radiation the same way the Earths Ozone Layer does. Already, researchers have found hints of this and other layers on the ultra-hot Jupiter-like planet. As Prinoth explains:

In our analysis, we saw that the fingerprints of the different gases were slightly altered compared to our expectation. We believe that strong winds and other processes could generate these alterations. And because the fingerprints of different gases were altered in different ways, we think that this indicates that they exist in different layers similarly to how the fingerprints of water vapour and ozone on Earth would appear differently altered from a distance, because they mostly occur in different atmospheric layers.

These results may change how astronomers investigate exoplanets. In the past, astronomers tended to assume that the atmosphere of exoplanets existed as uniform layers and tried to characterize them as such. But these latest results demonstrate that even the atmospheres of extreme planets like ultra-Hot Jupiters have complex three-dimensional structures. AS co-author Kevin Heng, a professor of astrophysics at the University of Bern and a member of the NCCR PlanetS, concludes:

We are convinced that to be able to fully understand these and other types of planets including ones more similar to Earth, we need to appreciate the three-dimensional nature of their atmospheres. This requires innovations in data analysis techniques, computer modelling and fundamental atmospheric theory.

Further Reading: Bern University, Nature Astronomy

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Astronomers Find Burned Out Galaxies in Ancient Universe – Tufts Now

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A team of astronomy researchers has discovered a surprising fact from the first couple of billion years of the universe: there were at least some large groups of galaxies that were already burning out at the time, contrary to the general pattern of galaxies having vigorous star formation then.

The massive grouping of at least 38 young galaxies that was discovered, called protocluster MAGAZ3NE J0959, is about 11.8 billion light-years away from Earth, and was found using the W. M. Keck Observatory in Hawaii. At the center of MAGAZ3NE J0959 is an ultra-massive galaxy with more than 200 billion suns.

The discovery of this protocluster with a population dominated by ultra-massive galaxies with halted star-formation activity was surprising, said Danilo Marchesini, a Tufts professor of astronomy who was part of the research team. It shows that even in the early universe there was already a great range of diversity in terms of the properties of galaxies.

We were not expecting this, and this finding raises new exciting questions, said Marchesini, who was joined on the project by Tufts postdoctoral researcher Marianna Annunziatella.

One issue is if the censuses of distant protoclusters are biased or incomplete, he said. The fact that previously reported protoclusters at this epoch were found to contain mostly star-forming galaxies may be evidence that our view of dense environments in the early universe is at least incomplete, or most likely biased, as finding distant quiescent galaxies is much harder than finding actively star-forming galaxies.

The research team, led by University of California at Riverside astronomers Ian McConachie and Gillian Wilson, reported their findings in the Astrophysical Journal. In marked contrast to protoclusters previously reported at this epoch which have been found to predominantly contain star-forming members, MAGAZ3NE J0959 was found to have an elevated fraction of quiescent galaxies, the research team wrote. This suggests that protoclusters exist in a diversity of evolutionary states in the early Universe.

Looking ahead, the researchers note in the paper that future ground and space telescopes with the capability to survey significantly wider areas, such as the James Webb Space Telescope . . . will undoubtedly facilitate the discovery of larger samples, allowing better insight into the uniqueness of MAGAZ3NE J0959, and helping to propel our understanding of the formation of UMGs [ultra-massive galaxies] and protoclusters into the even earlier Universe.

Taylor McNeil can be reached at taylor.mcneil@tufts.edu.

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Operator Theory Seminar – Professor Palle Jorgensen; Univ of Iowa | Physics and Astronomy | The University of Iowa – Iowa Now

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Stochastic Processes and Dual Pairs of Operators

Abstract. A new harmonic analysis for Krein-Feller operators is presented. We first show that a Krein-Feller operator is associated to pairs of measures assumed positive, sigma-finite, and non-atomic. Our approach to the problem is via dual pairs of operators, referring to the corresponding pairs of L^2 Hilbert spaces.The operator pairs used for our Krein-Feller analysis consist of two specific densely defined (unbounded) operators, each one contained in the adjoint of the other. We show how this approach yields a rigorous analysis of the corresponding Krein-Feller operators as closable quadratic forms. For given measures, including the case of fractal measures, we compute the associated diffusion, Markov processes, semigroups, Dirichlet forms, and generalized heat equations. Key tools for our analysis are the use of associated reproducing kernel Hilbert spaces (RKHSs), time-change, and Gaussian fields.

ZOOM ID:965 4759 0309

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Operator Theory Seminar - Professor Palle Jorgensen; Univ of Iowa | Physics and Astronomy | The University of Iowa - Iowa Now

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Math Physics Seminar – Professor Wayne Polyzou | Physics and Astronomy | The University of Iowa – Iowa Now

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Completeness and complex probabilities in descrete systems

Abstract: I discuss a general real-time path integral treatment of discrete systems motivated by Jorgensen and Nathanson's treatment of real time path integrals based on complex probabilities. For imaginary times in the continuum theory there is a path measure that can be alternatively considered as a probability measure; while for real time there is no countably additive measure on the cylinder sets of paths, the probability interpretation survives if the notion of probability is properly extended to complex probabilities. In the discrete case the complex probability arises from the completeness relation, there are no Fresnel integrals, and the space of paths are cylinder sets of paths that take on discrete values of complementary pairs of observables at different time slices. The cylinder sets of discrete paths are in 1-1 correspondence with ordered sequences of transition amplitudes involving complementary pairs of operators. I will discuss a trivial application to quantum field theory.

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Math Physics Seminar - Professor Wayne Polyzou | Physics and Astronomy | The University of Iowa - Iowa Now

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Maunakea telescope to be decommissioned this summer – Maui Now

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Maunakea. PC: University of Hawaii Hilo

The decommissioning of the California Institute of Technology Submillimeter Observatory on University of Hawaii-managed lands on Maunakea will be completed by the end of 2022, according to aFebruary 10 news releasefrom CSO.

The Hawaii State Board of Land and Natural Resources unanimously approved a conservation district use permit on Jan. 14, 2022 for the removal and site restoration of the CSO observatory.

CSO is one of two Maunakea telescopes currently in the final stages of the decommissioning process, established in the Maunakea Comprehensive Management Plan. The UH Hilo Hk Kea Telescope is on track to be decommissioned in 2023.

The decommissioning of these first two observatories will be milestones in the stewardship of the mauna, said Greg Chun, executive director of the UH HiloCenter for Maunakea Stewardship. This is a very thorough process as a lot of work went into the development of the CMP more than a decade ago, which guides our management of Maunakea.

CMS is responsible for administering the BLNR approved CMP along with the new Maunakea Master Plan, approved by the UH Board of Regents in January 2022, and the administrative rules.

The new Master Plan set a limit of nine operating astronomy facilities on Maunakea by 2033. Five of the 14 astronomy sites will be closed permanently to astronomy development once the existing facilities there have been decommissioned.

More broadly, the Master Plan serves as a framework for aligning land-use decisions consistent with UHs mission and purpose. The administrative rules cover public and commercial activities.

The CMP addresses activities like cultural, natural, and scientific resource protection, education and outreach, permitting and compliance, infrastructure and maintenance, construction activities, operations, and monitoring. The CMP has four sub-planspublic access, cultural resources management, natural resources management and observatory decommissioning that further specify those activities. According to the decommissioning sub-plan, the Maunakea Observatories are responsible for the cost of decommissioning.

The CDUP for CSO sets the terms and conditions required for decommissioning. As part of the process, CSO has completed an archeological assessment, a cultural setting analysis, a hydrogeological evaluation, a biological inventory, a biological setting analysis, a traffic analysis and an asbestos/lead paint/mold survey.

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Coinbase giveaway: How to get $15 in free Bitcoin and opt in for $3M cryptocurrency sweepstakes – NJ.com

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Coinbase had a Super Bowl 2022 commercial, and shortly after the ad aired, its own platform crashed.

Nonetheless, now that we have your attention, the cryptocurrency company announced its hosting a sweepstakes and giving away free Bitcoin to new users.

First, the free cryptocurrency offer: If you have yet to sign up, you can do so here. New users will receive $15 worth of Bitcoin, but only through Feb. 15.

Next, the giveaway: Coinbase is handing out $3 million worth of Bitcoin. To be eligible, you just have to opt in by Feb. 27.

There will be three winners, each rewarded $1 million worth of Bitcoin. Winners will be notified around mid-March.

One Bitcoin is currently worth over $42,000, according to real-time data tracked by CoinMarketCap (Market capitalization is constantly changing).

What is cryptocurrency?

Cryptocurrency is a digital asset designed to be used over the internet, according to Coinbase. Its decentralized, meaning it isnt controlled by the government or any other central authority such as a bank.

You can use cryptocurrency to buy products from retailers who accept it as payment, such as Overstock, or sell it to make a profit.

Other well-known cryptocurrencies besides Bitcoin include Dogecoin, Shiba Inu, Ethereum and Tether.

Where else can I buy cryptocurrency?

Crypto.com is another popular cryptocurrency trading platform, and also aired an ad during Super Bowl 2022.

Here are some other places where you can buy cryptocurrency:

You can also buy cryptocurrency on Venmo.

How much does it cost to buy cryptocurrency?

To invest, you dont have to buy one entire cryptocurrency, such as Bitcoin you can buy just a fraction. One Bitcoin is currently worth over $42,000, whereas one Dogecoin is not even worth 15 cents.

Ultimately, it depends on which cryptocurrency youre buying. Each has a different price and market value.

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For local governments, adopting more inclusionary practices is about preparation and action. – USAPP American Politics and Policy (blog)

Posted: at 6:07 am

Why do some cities make intentional efforts to become more inclusive of their diverse populations while others do not? Using the food metaphor of a roux, Jonathan M. Fisk, Geoffrey A. Silvera, John C. Morris, Xi Chen, Xiaofeng Chen, Mac-Jane Crayton and Jan Hume write that without careful consideration by local governments, diverse constituencies may not be able to participate in the communities in which they live. They find that local governments especially those with a professional city or county manager are more willing to offer inclusion initiatives such as cultural competency training for their employees when more of their residents are foreign born.

As administration scholars, we are rarely able to weave food metaphors into our work. But they can be useful in helping us explain our new research on diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) in US local governments, as they encapsulate many of the associated principles and actions. Much of the literature around DEI uses food metaphors, and so, in trying to appreciate the contributions of our findings, there was a need to understand what sets the table for DEI initiatives in local governments. Local governments have been thrust into the limelight on issues of diversity management, so it is timely to look at how local governments address inclusion.

In our work, we use the metaphor of a roux, a mixture of flour and fat which requires close monitoring and managing, and serves as the foundation for gumbo, one of Louisianas celebrated dishes that combines culinary aspects of African, French, Spanish, German, and the Choctaw (First Nation Tribe) cultures. We believe that the roux metaphor is helpful for understanding diversity, equity, and inclusion efforts in local governments. Local governments often already represent diverse constituencies whether it is via their citizens race and ethnicity, gender and sexual orientation, experiences, learning styles, age, or other characteristics that make an appreciable difference. In other words, there are already many ingredients. Yet, without careful and deliberate inclusion, the flavors of those ingredients may not be able to contribute. For cities, the challenge is similar and requires careful and deliberate actions that push the community towards greater degrees of inclusion and equity. With these careful and deliberate steps, local governments are better positioned to maximize the collective skills, passions, and abilities of all their citizens.

We set out in this project to understand what factors are associated with local governments that go beyond counting and beyond legal compliance; why do some cities make intentional efforts to become more inclusive while others do not? Understanding these factors within US local governments is particularly important as local governments are involved in an array of services that affect citizens lives such as law enforcement and public safety, parks, recreation, planning and zoning, and community and economic development. Yet, the distribution of services, the points of contact with citizens, and the impacts on diverse groups are not necessarily spread in an equitable manner. By being inclusive and seeking to (re)build partnerships, to collect data, to learn, to reflect, and to change practices, more and diverse citizens are likely seated at the table and may meaningfully contribute to the gumbo making. The stakes could not be higher. For many, they involve life and death decisions. For many others, they strike at the core of local democracy and who governs.

We examined three inclusive initiatives that have the potential to assist a community as it seeks to become more inclusive i.e., in becoming the roux: offering cultural competency training, providing access to multi-lingual community information, and including a preference for multi-lingual job applicant. To do so, we analyzed data from the International City/County Management Association (ICMA)s 2018 Local Government & Immigrant Communities Survey and community demographic variables from the American Community Survey (ACS) from 1,201 local governments.

In general, the results suggest that local governments are more willing to engage in inclusion initiatives as a response to the needs of their citizens and residents. Data shows that as the number of residents who were born elsewhere (i.e., foreign-born) increase the odds of the local government offering cultural competency training to its employees increases. We surmised that as the number of foreign-born individuals within the jurisdiction increases, their presence and associated needs may reveal deficiencies in the current skillsets of local government employees or gaps in services. As a response, local officials may turn to cultural competency training with a particular emphasis on incorporating new knowledge into more inclusive service delivery and engagement. Local needs were also associated with the adoption of both language service variables.

We suggest that within these communities, language-specific needs are likely to be greater. As a result, multi-lingual skills are a key tool in ensuring that various groups have a seat in city hall or in the county commission chamber and that they can be an important part of the conversation. Our data also suggest that the form of government and whether there is a professional city or county manager in the local government matter. We infer that the professional training of city and county managers makes a difference, as compared to those with less expertise in local government. While we could not pinpoint a reason, managers may place a greater value or significance on multi-lingual skills and abilities in meeting the aims of the local government administration.

In every local government administration, diversity (the ingredients) is present, but inclusion does not just happen, and cities cannot continue to believe that they will be able to react their way into being inclusive. To continue the cooking metaphor, our finding that of the importance of the relationship between city and county managers and inclusion initiatives shows that preparation is key. Both the ingredients and the cook are important drivers of inclusion. Like a roux, inclusion requires intentional oversight by one who is willing to read the recipe card and act.

Our finding that the presence of foreign-born populations increases the likelihood of engaging in inclusion initiatives seems to affirm that some ingredients matter differently than others in their likelihood to stimulate local inclusionary efforts just like some ingredients are more motivating than others when preparing a meal. Yet still, we affirm that inclusion efforts are warranted even when local government administrators do not see the need for it, as diversity, in some form, is always present. Populations, by their nature, are diverse, and while many of the conversations in the diversity, equity, and inclusion space are wrapped around racial diversity, populations are also often diverse in ways that cannot be perceived, including ethnic diversity, LGBTQ, mental health needs, literacy, etc. Thus, the time for local governments to begin engaging in inclusion efforts is always right now.

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Note: This article gives the views of the authors, and not the position of USAPP American Politics and Policy, nor of the London School of Economics.

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Jonathan M. Fisk Auburn UniversityJonathan M. Fisk is an associate professor in the Department of Political Science at Auburn University. His work focuses on state and local energy/environmental policy and local government management.

Geoffrey A. Silvera University of Alabama-BirminghamGeoffrey A. Silvera is a management scholar that serves as an Assistant Professor of Health Services Administration at The University of Alabama-Birmingham. His work centers on the ability of executive decision-makers to positively influence end-user outcomes such as patient care quality, patient experience, and inclusion.

John C. Morris Auburn UniversityJohn Morris is a professor in the Department of Political Science at Auburn University. His research focuses on collaboration, public-private partnerships, water policy, federalism, and organization theory. He has published twelve books and more than 100 journal articles, book chapters, and reports.

Xi Chen Auburn UniversityXi Chen is a doctoral candidate in the Department of Political Science at Auburn University. His research interests include research methods for public administrators, representative bureaucracy, state and environmental politics, and diversity and inclusion.

Xiaofeng Chen Auburn UniversityXiaofeng Chen received her Ph.D. in 2021 from the Department of Political Science at Auburn University. Her research interests include local government management, immigration, and diversity and inclusion.

Mac-Jane Crayton Auburn UniversityMac-Jane Crayton is a doctoral candidate in the Department of Political Science at Auburn University. Her research interests include energy policy, non-profit management, and diversity and inclusion.

Jan Hume Auburn UniversityJan Hume received her Ph.D. in 2021 from the Department of Political Science at Auburn University. Her research interests include education policy, comparative state politics, and diversity and inclusion.

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For local governments, adopting more inclusionary practices is about preparation and action. - USAPP American Politics and Policy (blog)

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Want to Lure Young Workers With Cryptocurrency? 3 Things to Know – GoLocalProv

Posted: at 6:07 am

Monday, February 14, 2022

Sam Slade, Business Contributor

In todays tight labor market, Bitcoin could give you an edge. But before you forego paychecks, here are 3 things to consider.

Comply with federal and state law: Some states require wages to be paid in US currency. However, others allow an employee to agree in writing to receive part or all of their wages in another form. No matter where you operate, youll want to make any program optional and have employees authorize their participation in writing.Decide how youll pay: You can either pay employees in their normal currency, with a portion of the wages then converted to the digital asset of their choice, or you could pay in the cryptocurrency itself. With the latter, keep in mind youll need to withhold and report payroll taxes, which could be a little more challenging administratively since youll need to determine the fair market value of the cryptocurrency.Disclose the risks: Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies can be volatile and drop steeply in value. (In December, Bitcoin fell as much as 21% in a matter of hours.) Plus, theres the potential capital gains taxes theyll need to understand since cryptocurrencies are currently considered property by the IRS. Be sure to make employees aware of the risks and agree to them in their written acknowledgment.

These are just a few of the topics youll need to think about when considering digital currencies as a payment method. With many potential legal issues, its a good idea to consult your attorney first before making any decision to pay wages or bonuses in cryptocurrency.

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Want to Lure Young Workers With Cryptocurrency? 3 Things to Know - GoLocalProv

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