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As climate change warms the planet, heat waves are increasingly moving sluggishly and lasting longer, according to a study published on Friday. Each decade between 1979 and 2020, the rate at which heat waves travel, pushed along by air circulation, slowed by about 5 miles per day, the study found. Heat waves also now last about four days longer on average. The longer heat waves stick around in one place, the longer people are exposed to life-threatening temperatures. Heat waves also dry out soil and vegetation, harming crops and raising the risk of wildfires.
Persons: , Wei Zhang Organizations: Utah State University
Erin Schaff/The New York TimesForce of Ship Collision Was on the Scale of a Rocket LaunchThe container ship Dali appeared to move sluggishly before striking the Francis Scott Key Bridge in Baltimore on Tuesday. Experts disagreed on whether it was reasonable for any bridge pier to withstand a direct collision with a massive container ship. F = ma force mass acceleration F = ma force mass accelerationOur first task, and a major source of uncertainty, was finding those numbers. F= (100,000 to 195,000 metric tons) × (7.8 mph - 2.5 mph) / 38 seconds mass acceleration F= (100,000 to 195,000 metric tons) × (7.8 mph - 2.5 mph) / 38 seconds mass acceleration For the actual calculation, we used metric units. We tried one more method: using a formula to calculate the ship collision force published by the American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials, the industry organization that publishes bridge safety standards.
Persons: Erin Schaff, Dali, Francis Scott Key, , , Ben Schafer, Nii, Sherif El, Themistoklis Sapsis, Tawil Organizations: The New York Times Force, Empire, Saturn, Johns Hopkins, University of Maryland, University of Michigan, M.I.T, American Association of State, Transportation, U.S . Army Corps, Engineers, Reuters, Sunshine Skyway Locations: Baltimore, Dali, Tampa Bay, Florida
Here's what the real estate firm expects for the housing market over the next 12 months. AdvertisementSoftening lock-in effectIn the last two years, homeowners have been unwilling to sell their homes because of the lower mortgage rates they secured previously. AdvertisementNo housing market crashLow rates could spark some additional homebuying, but demand will ultimately stay muted and the market will "continue to move sluggishly," according to LendingTree. A separate November survey from LendingTree found that 41% of Americans at the time expected the housing market to crash in 2024. At the same time, LendingTree maintains that the housing market will stay "prohibitively expensive" for Americans, regardless of how rates move.
Persons: , Jacob Channel, LendingTree Organizations: Service, Business, Federal
CNN —A Somali sports official was suspended for nepotism on Wednesday after a viral video showed an apparent novice runner skipping across the finish line in last place at an international competition. The video, which circulated widely on Wednesday, showed Nasro Abukar Ali competing in the third heat of the first round of the women’s 100-meter race at the International University Sports Federation’s (FISU) Summer World University Games in China. She finished in 21.81 seconds – more than 8 seconds slower than the second-last runner, and more than 10 seconds behind the winner of the heat. “What happened today was not representative of the Somali people,” he said in Somali, Forbes reported. The Summer World University Games are ongoing in Chengdu, southwestern China.
Persons: Nasro Abukar Ali, Ali, sluggishly, , disheartening, “ It’s, Khadijo Aden Dahir, Dahir, Sports Mohamed Barre Mohamud, Forbes, Mohamud, Organizations: CNN, International University Sports Federation’s, Games, Twitter, Ministry of Youth, Sports, Somali Athletics Federation, Somali National Olympic, Youth, Association of Somalia Universities, Somali University Sports Association, Athletics Federation of, ” CNN, East African country’s Sports Ministry, Somali National Olympic Committee, World Athletics, World Locations: China, Somalia, Somali, Athletics Federation of Somalia, Chengdu
If you look at price increases over the past year, overall inflation has come down a lot, but much of that reflects falling gasoline prices, so the traditional measure of core inflation, which doesn’t include those gas price cuts, has barely fallen at all. To see why, it’s helpful to know something about the history of why we typically talk about two different measures of inflation. Inflation caused by, say, a spike in oil prices tends to be easy come, easy go, but inflation driven by, say, rising wages tends to have a lot of inertia and be hard to bring down. Or to put it another way, a measure that excluded more volatile prices could help extract the signal from the noise. The Fed, however, kept calm and carried on, because core inflation remained subdued — and the Fed was right.
Persons: Robert Gordon, debasing Organizations: Federal Reserve
Sabalenka survives scare to reach Adelaide quarters
  + stars: | 2023-01-04 | by ( ) www.reuters.com   time to read: +2 min
Having received a bye into the second round, second seed Sabalenka started sluggishly to find herself in trouble trailing by five games to one but the 24-year-old roared back to save six set points and claim the opening set in the tie-break. After the pair traded breaks other early in the next set, Sabalenka showed her mental toughness again in the tie-break to seal her first win of the season in two hours and 15 minutes. "She's an incredible player with a huge serve, so it was a tough match and I'm super happy with this win." Sabalenka will next face former French Open runner-up Marketa Vondrousova, who handed Kaia Kanepi a bagel en route to a 6-0 6-4 victory. Reporting by Shrivathsa Sridhar in Bengaluru; Editing by Robert BirselOur Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.
The labor shortage has reached "the most overheated level in postwar US history," Goldman Sachs says. The US had a labor force of almost 164 million in January 2022, per seasonally adjusted data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS). There were close to 11 million job openings in the US in December, per seasonally-adjusted BLS data. Restaurants, hotels, and retail had the highest turnover rates in December, BLS data shows. But in constant 1982-1984 dollars, workers' pay actually fell by almost $0.20 during that time period because of inflation, BLS data shows.
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