Monthly Archives: July 2024

NYCFC vying to start new win streak vs. CF Montreal – Deadspin

Posted: July 5, 2024 at 5:28 am

After seeing a lengthy winning streak recently end, New York City FC will try to start another one when they host CF Montreal on Wednesday evening.

New York City (10-8-2, 32 points) went on a run of five consecutive wins spanning the better part of May. June, however, turned out to be a rough month: New York City FC dropped three straight matches, first losing at home to the Columbus Crew and then falling to the LA Galaxy and Nashville SC on the road.

But on Friday, NYCFC topped Orlando City 4-2 for their seventh home win of the season; only Los Angeles FC (nine) has more. Key to that victory was Tayvon Gray, credited with a pair of assists to bring his season total up to four.

"He's an exceptional game player, and what I mean by that is his mentality is strong," NYCFC coach Nick Cushing said of Gray. "I know we can trust Tayvon in these moments. ... He's really improving his game and he's really helping the team at the moment."

For Montreal (5-8-7, 22 points), a 4-2 win on Saturday against the struggling Philadelphia Union snapped an 0-1-3 stretch.

Montreal, looking for back-to-back wins for the first time since the second and third match days of the season, has struggled to piece together a sustained run of strong form. Still, the club is just two points behind Atlanta United for the ninth and final playoff spot in the Eastern Conference.

"I don't want to be rude, but we have to be consistent when we play good and when we play bad," CF Montreal striker Josef Martinez said. "In this league, you have to be 100 percent every day. ... Hopefully, this victory (against Philadelphia) helps, not only for the players but for all of Montreal, and we are here all together."

Montreal, 2-6-3 away from home, has not won on the road since March 10. It will continue to be without Mathieu Choiniere, Samuel Piette and Joel Waterman (Canada) -- plus Ariel Lassiter (Costa Rica) -- due to Copa America. Choiniere was named an MLS All-Star on Monday along with NYCFC defender Thiago Martins.

Meanwhile, NYCFC will need to navigate the long-term absence of Malachi Jones, who broke his right leg during the win against Orlando and underwent surgery on Saturday. The No. 8 overall selection in the 2024 MLS SuperDraft has accumulated a goal and three assists through 14 appearances (four starts) this season.

--Field Level Media

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CF Montreal vs Philadelphia Union Prediction and Betting Tips | 29th June 2024 – Sportskeeda

Posted: at 5:28 am

The 2024 edition of MLS returns to the fold with another set of matches this weekend as Philadelphia Union take on a struggling CF Montreal side in an important clash at the Saputo Stadium on Saturday. Both teams can pack a punch on their day and will want to win this game.

Philadelphia Union are in 11th place in the MLS Eastern Conference standings and have been inconsistent this season. The Union slumped to a damaging 2-0 defeat at the hands of Charlotte FC in their previous game and have a point to prove this weekend.

CF Montreal, on the other hand, are in 14th place in the league table and have struggled this season. The home side suffered a 4-1 defeat against Colorado Rapids last week and will need to bounce back in this match.

Philadelphia Union have not been at their best in recent months and are in desperate need of an immediate resurgence. Tai Baribo has been impressive for the Union and will look to add to his goal tally in this match.

CF Montreal can pack a punch on their day but also have several issues to address this weekend. Philadelphia Union are the better team on paper, however, and hold a slight upper hand going into this game.

Prediction: CF Montreal 1-2 Philadelphia Union

Tip 1: Result - Philadelphia Union to win

Tip 2: Game to have over 2.5 goals - Yes

Tip 3: CF Montreal to score first - Yes

Tip 4: Tai Baribo to score - Yes

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CF Montreal vs Philadelphia Union Prediction and Betting Tips | 29th June 2024 - Sportskeeda

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‘358 days on Red Planet’: NASA volunteers set to return from Mars simulation mission on July 6 – Business Today

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'358 days on Red Planet': NASA volunteers set to return from Mars simulation mission on July 6  Business Today

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ESA – A snaking scar on Mars – European Space Agency

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Science & Exploration

03/07/2024 7480 views 39 likes

A fascinating feature takes centre stage in this new image from ESAs Mars Express: a dark, uneven scar slicing through marbled ground at the foot of a giant volcano.

This scar, known as Aganippe Fossa, is a patchy, roughly 600-km-long feature known as a graben: a ditch-like groove with steep walls on either side.

Aganippe Fossa cuts across the lower flank of one of Marss largest volcanoes, Arsia Mons. Mars Express regularly observesArsia Mons and its nearby companions in the region of Tharsis, where several of Marss behemoth volcanoes are found. This includesOlympus Mons, the tallest volcano in the Solar System (visible in the context map associated with this new image, as is Arsia Mons).

Arsia Mons itself measures 435 km in diameter and rises more than 9 km above the surrounding plains. For context, the highest dormant volcano on Earth, Ojos del Salado on the Argentina-Chile border, tops out at under 7 km.

Werestill unsure of how and when Aganippe Fossa came to be, but it seems likely that it was formed as magma rising underneath the colossal mass of the Tharsis volcanoes caused Marss crust to stretch and crack.

In this view, Mars ExpresssHigh Resolution Stereo Camera (HRSC)captures two different kinds of terrain: so-called hummocky terrain, which comprises many irregularly shaped mounds and valleys all clustered together, and lobate terrain, which is formed of gently sloping cliffs and rocky debris.

These terrains are characteristic of Arsia Monss ring-shaped aureole, a 100 000-square-kilometre disc around the base of the volcano, possibly associated with ancient glaciers. Intriguingly, this aureole has only built up on the northwestern flank of the volcano, likely due to prevailing winds from the opposite direction controlling where ice settled over time.

Windblown dust and sand have also shaped this patch of Mars, creating interesting zebra-like patterns to the right of the frame as darker material is deposited on lighter ground (or vice versa!). The surface here also shows evidence of lava flows, dating from when the volcano was active.

Mars Express has been orbiting the Red Planet since 2003. It is imaging Marss surface, mapping its minerals, identifying the composition and circulation of its tenuous atmosphere, probing beneath its crust, and exploring how various phenomena interact in the martian environment.

The spacecrafts HRSC, responsible for these images, has revealed much about Marss diverse surface in the past 20 years. Its images show everything fromwind-sculpted ridges and groovestosinkholes on the flanks of colossal volcanoestoimpact craters, tectonic faults, river channels and ancient lava pools. The mission has been immensely productive over its lifetime, creating a far fuller and more accurate understanding of our planetary neighbour than ever before.

The Mars Express High Resolution Stereo Camera(HRSC) was developed and is operated by the German Aerospace Center (Deutsches Zentrum fr Luft- und Raumfahrt; DLR).

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Mars tested tech invented in Utah has ‘world saving’ aspirations – KUTV 2News

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Mars tested tech invented in Utah has 'world saving' aspirations  KUTV 2News

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What is happening in the sky during July? – The Hill

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What is happening in the sky during July?  The Hill

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Strange polygon structures found buried beneath the surface of Mars – indy100

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A strange polygon structure has been discovered below the surface of Mars, giving experts new insights into the planets make-up.

Advancements in technology have allowed scientists to uncover amazing revelations about our universe, like the giant water reservoir floating in space and an overweight planet that should not exist.

The new discovery on the surface of Mars has come from the Chinese rover Zhurong, which is the first Chinese mission the land on the red planet.

Zhurong is exploring Utopia Planitia one of Mars biggest impact basins and is already bringing new insights thanks to new technology that has developed since it was last explored by Viking 2 in 1976.

Under the surface, the Chinese rover found 16 buried polygonal structures that experts believe were formed by the freeze-thaw cycle that created cracks in the terrain when it was at the surface.

In a study published in Nature Astronomy, it was revealed the radar on the Zhurong rover found the polygonal structures 35 metres down and looked at what they looked like horizontally, across 1.9 kilometres, for the first time.

Previous evidence has revealed that floods took place in the basin around 3 billion years ago and that the structures were formed by sediment and other thermal processes.

There was no evidence that the structures were formed through lava, like some polygonal structures seen on Earth, such as the Giants Causeway in Northern Ireland.

The study helped confirm that early Mars atmosphere was varied, in order to have created the freeze and thaw process. Experts suspect Mars may have once had a higher obliquity (axial tilt) than it does now, meaning its seasons could have been extremely different.

The study authors explained: Occurring at low latitudes (25 N), the polygonal terrain, which is interpreted as having most likely formed by thermal contraction cracking, makes a compelling case for the high obliquity of early Mars.

The subsurface structure with the covering materials overlying the buried palaeo-polygonal terrain suggests that there was a notable palaeoclimatic transformation some time thereafter.

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Fourth of July provides once-a-year opportunities in Mars – Butler Eagle

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Bicyclists of all ages were led by Mars police along the boroughs Independence Day parade route on Thursday, July 4. Morgan Phillips/Butler Eagle

MARS The Fourth of July is a day for people to celebrate the USA, but for the people who are part of the holidays entertainment, its also a time to make other people happy.

Gavin Gadde, 11, and Nathan Kramer, 12, are members of Mars Scout Troop 400 and Cub Scout Pack 413, and were excited Thursday, July 4, to be part of the parade not for the attention, but to throw candy to other children watching along the route.

I like throwing candy at people, Gavin said.

I like making people happy, Nathan chimed in.

The Mars Independence Day parade boasted dozens of entries, ranging from the Scouts to the local volunteer fire departments. Preceding the 3 p.m. parade was a street fair, which had multiple food and merchandise vendors plus games and activities for children and adults alike.

The highlight for many Mars natives was the parade, however, which was evident by the cheering of the crowd gathered on sidewalks and the screaming of children who dashed for candy and toys thrown from vehicles in the parade.

And although the temperature reached well into the 80s Thursday afternoon, the heat is part of the excitement of the parade for people like Alvin Tsau, a rising senior at Mars Area High School who plays trumpet in its marching band.

According to assistant band director Aaron Wagner, the Fourth of July parade is the marching bands first official event of the season each year, making it the first public performance for the freshmen entering high school.

Even if its hot, were going down and were trying to make everyone happy and make it a good time, Wagner said.

Alvin said he barely played his trumpet the first time he played in the Fourth of July parade out of nervousness. As a senior, though, the parade is his chance to mentor the next generation of students on how to handle challenging performances.

At first youre not used to the heat, so you feel like youre dying, like youre going to pass out, Alvin said. As you get used to it, it becomes more fun, you can play what you want to play.

The parade reached its end shortly after 3:40 p.m., but it will likely remain in the participants memories for years to come. Girl Scout in Mars Troop 28028 Anna Kramer, 10, said she wont soon forget the experience, because the annual parade is her one chance each year to ride atop a fire truck. She also said she enjoys getting the chance to make other people smile.

I like to hang out with my friends and make other people happy, Anna said after the parade. Only the oldest kids in the Girl Scouts are allowed to sit on the very top of the fire truck, and its very fun to make people smile.

Bicyclists of all ages were led by Mars police along the parade route for the boroughs Independence Day parade on Thursday, July 4. Morgan Phillips/Butler Eagle

Bicyclists of all ages were led by Mars police along the parade route for the Mars Independence Day parade on Thursday, July 4. Morgan Phillips/Butler Eagle

The crowd cheers on parade participants during the Mars Independence Day parade on Thursday, July 4. Morgan Phillips/Butler Eagle

A band of patriotically dressed motorcycles drove along the parade route for the Mars Independence Day parade on Thursday, July 4. Morgan Phillips/Butler Eagle

The crowd cheers on participants of Mars Independence Day parade on Thursday, July 4. Morgan Phillips/Butler Eagle

A band of patriotically dressed tractors drove along the parade route for Mars Independence Day parade on Thursday, July 4. Morgan Phillips/Butler Eagle

A member of the Mars Area High School marching band attempts to stay cool during the bands performance at Mars Independence Day parade on Thursday, July 4. Morgan Phillips/Butler Eagle

A patriotic float with the Statue of Liberty participated in the Mars Independence Day parade on Thursday, July 4. Morgan Phillips/Butler Eagle

A group of Scouts kick off the Mars Fourth of July parade by carrying the banner down Main Street. Morgan Phillips/Butler Eagle

A patriotic float with the Statue of Liberty participated in Mars Independence Day parade on Thursday, July 4. Morgan Phillips/Butler Eagle

A patriotic float with the Statue of Liberty participated in the Mars July 4 parade on Thursday, July 4. Morgan Phillips/Butler Eagle

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Organic material from Mars reveals the likely origin of life’s building blocks – EurekAlert

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image:

Daybreak at the Gale Crater on Mars where organic material was found Photo: NASA/JPL-Caltech/MSSS

Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/MSSS

In a meteor crater on the red planet, a solitary robot is moving about. Right now it is probably collecting soil samples with a drill and a robotic arm, as it has quite a habit of doing. NASA's Curiosity rover has been active on Mars as the extended arm of science for nearly 12 years, and it continues to make discoveries that surprise and challenge scientists' understanding of both Mars and our own world here on Earth.

Most recently, the discovery of sedimentary organic material with particular properties has had many researchers scratching their heads. The properties of these carbon-based materials, in particular the ratio of its carbon isotopes, surprised researchers.

Organic materials with such properties, if found on Earth, would typically be a sign of microorganisms, but they can also be the result of non-biological, chemical processes. The find obviously had researchers scrambling for a clear answer, but nothing seemed to fit.

However, for the research collaboration behind a new studypublished in Nature Geoscience, there has been little hair scratching and much enthusiasm.

In fact, the discovery on Mars provided the missing piece that made everything fall into place for this group of researchers from the University of Copenhagen and the Tokyo Institute of Technology.

As co-author and chemistry professor Matthew Johnson puts it, it is "the smoking gun" needed to confirm a decade old theory of his about so-called photolysis in Mars' atmosphere.

With the Curiosity sample, the new research is able to prove with reasonable certainty that the Sun broke down CO2 in the Martian atmosphere billions of years ago - as the old theory predicted. And that the resulting carbon monoxide gradually reacted with other chemicals in the atmosphere synthesizing complex molecules and thus providing Mars with organic materials.

Such carbon-based complex molecules are the prerequisite of life, the building blocks of life one might say. So, this it is a bit like the old debate about which came first, the chicken or the egg. We show that the organic material found on Mars has been formed through atmospheric photochemical reactions - without life that is. This is the 'egg', a prerequisite of life. It still remains to be shown whether or not this organic materialresulted in life on the Red Planet." said Johnson and continued:

Additionally because Earth, Mars and Venus had very similar CO2 rich atmospheres long ago when this photolysis took place, it can also prove important for our understanding of how life began on Earth, said Professor Matthew Johnson from Department of Chemistry at University of Copenhagen.

Two pieces separated by 50 Million Kilometers one puzzle solved

12 years ago Johnson and two colleagues used simulations based on quantum mechanics to determine what happens when a CO2 rich atmosphere is exposed to the UV-light of the Sun, in a process known as photolysis.

Basically, on Mars around 20% of the CO2 is split into oxygen and carbon monoxide. But carbon has two stable isotopes: carbon-12 and carbon-13. Usually they are present in a ratio of one carbon-13 for every 99 carbon-12. However, photolysis works faster for the lighter carbon-12, so the carbon monoxide produced by photolysis has less carbon-13 (is depleted), and the left over CO2 has more (is enriched).

Because of this, Johnson and his colleagues were able to make very precise predictions of the ratio of carbon isotopes after photolysis. And this gave them two distinctive fingerprints to look for. One of these was identified in a different Martian sample, years ago.

We actually have a piece of Mars here on Earth, which was knocked off that planet by a meteorite, and then became one itself, when it landed here on Earth. This meteorite, called Allan Hills 84001 for the place in Antarctica where it was found, contains carbonate minerals that form from CO2 in the atmosphere. The smoking gun here is that the ratio of carbon isotopes in it exactly matches our predictions in the quantum chemical simulations, but there was a missing piece in the puzzle. We were missing the other product of this chemical process to confirm the theory, and that's what we've now obtained," says Matthew Johnson.

The carbon in the Allan Hills meteorite is enriched in carbon-13, which makes it the mirror image of the depletion in carbon-13 that has now been measured in the organic material found by Curiousity on Mars.

The new study has thus linked data from two samples, which researchers believe have the same origin in Mars' childhood but were found more than 50 million kilometers apart.

There is no other way to explain both the carbon-13 depletion in the organic material and the enrichment in the Martian meteorite, both relative to the composition of volcanic CO2 emitted on Mars, which has a constant composition, similar as for Earths volcanos, and serves as a baseline, said Johnson

Hope to find the same evidence on Earth

Because the organic material contains this isotopic fingerprint of where it came from, researchers are able to trace the source of the carbon in the organic material to the carbon monoxide formed by photolysis in the atmosphere. But this also reveals a lot about what happened to it in between.

This shows that carbon monoxide is the starting point for the synthesis of organic molecules in these kinds of atmospheres. So we have an important conclusion about the origin of lifes building blocks. Although so far only on Mars, said Matthew Johnson.

Researchers hope to find the same isotopic evidence on Earth, but this has yet to happen, and it could be a much bigger challenge because our geological development has changed the surface significantly compared to Mars, Johnson explains.

"It is reasonable to assume that the photolysis of CO2 was also a prerequisite for the emergence of life here on Earth, in all its complexity. But we have not yet found this smoking gun material here on Earth to prove that the process took place. Perhaps because Earth's surface is much more alive, geologically and literally, and therefore constantly changing. But it is a big step that we have now found it on Mars, from a time when the two planets were very similar," says Matthew Johnson.

Facts: Organic material

The sample found on Mars contains deposits of so-called organic material. To laymen this may sound more exciting than it is. Organic material in a chemical context does not necessarily mean something living, as one might normally think. The term covers molecules that contain carbon and at least one other element and can easily exist without life. These molecules are rather the building blocks of life.

Facts: What is Photolysis

Photolysis means that the Sun's UV rays provide molecules with energy to perform a chemical transformation. According to the research this happened in the Martian atmosphere, where 20% of CO2 molecules there were split into oxygen and carbon monoxide.

In earlier research, Johnson and colleagues showed that carbon dioxide containing the carbon-12 isotope is photolysed more quickly than the heavier isotope carbon-13.

Over time, CO is produced that is depleted in 13C, and 13C builds up in the remaining CO2. This results in so-called isotopic enrichment in CO2 and depletion in CO, like mirror images or each other or the two halves of a broken plate.

It is the fractionation ratio in carbon, which serves as evidence of photolysis in the two samples from Mars.

Facts: The oxygen painted Mars red

Photolysis of a CO2 molecule yields carbon monoxide (CO) and an oxygen atom (O). On Mars, only carbon monoxide remains, which is transformed into the organic material found by the Curiosity rover.

But where the oxygen has gone is also no secret. The oxygen combines into O2, which interacts with iron on Mars' surface. The Red Planet is rust red due to oxidized iron.

Facts: Isotopes Have Different Weights

Isotopes are variants of the same element that have different weights because the nucleus contains more or fewer neutrons.

Carbon has two stable isotopes - Normally, about 99% of carbon has 6 protons and 6 neutrons in its nucleus (12C). About 1% has 6 protons and 7 neutrons instead (13C). The ratio can serve as a chemical fingerprint revealing what reactions the carbon has undergone.

Photolysis favors carbon-12, and a high concentration of the isotope can therefore indicate this process.

Extra Info: The Famous Mars Meteorite

The discovery of organic sediments on Mars with a low ratio of carbon-13 completes the puzzle of empirical evidence for the photolysis theory, since researchers already found the other part of that puzzle years ago in the famous meteorite, Allan Hills 84001. The meteorite contains carbonate with a heightened concentration of heavy carbon 13 isotopes.

Discovered in Antarctica 40 years ago by Roberta Score, the meteorite is believed to originate from the Red Planet and became particularly well known because it contains some deposits that led NASA researchers to announce in 1996 that they believed they had found traces of microscopic fossils of bacteria from Mars.

Today, the consensus is that these deposits are abiotic - that is, stemming from non-biological processes.

Extra info: Mars, Earth, and Venus Had the Same Atmosphere

According to researchers, Earth had approximately the same atmosphere as our neighboring planets Mars and Venus billions of years ago.

When the early planets Venus, Earth, and Mars eventually formed solid surfaces, researchers believe they began to release large amounts of CO2 from extreme volcanic activity. That's how they formed their first atmospheres with large concentrations of the gas. Oxygen had not yet become part of the atmosphere; this happened later on Earth, after the emergence of life.

The photolysis theory states that UV rays from the sun then start a chain of chemical reactions. A chain that starts with the breakdown of CO2 into carbon monoxide, which is the building block for a multitude of other chemical compounds.

Thus, with the help of the Sun, the foundation for the many carbon compounds and complex molecules we have today was formed - in the case of Earth, the foundation for life.

"Since then the fate of the three planets has been significantly different. Earth's carbon dioxide reacted with our large amount of surface water and much of it deposited over time as carbonate rocks like limestone, leaving the atmosphere dominated by nitrogen, as we have today. Life arose, and microorganisms produced oxygen, which, among other things, created our ozone layer, while Mars and Venus still have very CO2-dominant atmospheres today," explains Matthew Johnson.

Today, Venus has a very dense and toxic atmosphere primarily of CO2, which gives it a surface temperature of around 450 degrees Celsius.

On Mars, the atmosphere has become much thinner compared to Earth's, and has left a desert landscape.

About the new study:

The study is published in Nature Geoscience and has just appeared in the journal's June issue.

The following researchers have contributed to the new study:

From the Department of Chemistry at the University of Copenhagen:

Matthew S. Johnson and Johan A. Schmidt

From the Tokyo Institute of Technology:

Yuichiro Ueno, Xiaofeng Zang, Alexis Gilbert, Hiroyuki Kurokawa and Tomohiro Usui

From the University of Tokyo and the Royal Belgian Institute of Space Aeronomy:

Shohei Aoki

Nature Geoscience

Synthesis of 13C-depleted organic matter from CO in a reducing early Martian atmosphere

9-May-2024

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Solar Storm Hits Mars and Highlights Risks for Future Missions – Tomorrow’s World Today

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Using the orbiters circling the planet and rovers driving across its surface, astronomers captured the effects of a massive solar storm on Mars in order to better estimate the radiation levels that the first red planet astronauts may experience in the future.

According to NASA, the giant solar storm that hit Mars this May engulfed the planet with auroras and an influx of charged particles and radiation. After a massive cluster of sunspots faced the Earth, they rotated in the direction of Mars.

Within the past several months, the sun has shown increased activity as it nears the peak of its 11-year cycle which is predicted for later this year, also known as solar maximum. The spike in solar activity has included strong solar flares, X-class flares, and coronal mass injections or large clouds of ionized gas called plasma and magnetic fields that erupt from the suns outer atmosphere.

According to data from the Solar Orbiter spacecraft, the most severe storm took place on May 20 when an X12 flare was released from the sun. The flare sent X-rays and gamma rays toward Mars and a coronal mass ejection released on the heels of the flare, sending charged particles in the planets direction.

Scientists from NASAs Moon to Mars Space Weather Analysis Office at the Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland stated that the X-rays and gamma rays traveled at the speed of light and reached Mars first, followed by charged particles approximately ten minutes later.

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