Statistical Leaders Week 9

PASSING

QB Brady Hart (Cocoa) 2002yds 151/231 65% 21TD 6INT QBR 112

QB Chase Cromartie(Viera) 1484yds 130/201 65% 16TD 11INT QBR 90

QB Joseph Allen (MCC) 1427yds 98/175 56% 18TD 8INT QBR 98

QB Brogan Mcnab (HT) 1260yds 82/122 67% 15TD 2INT QBR 134

RUSHING

ATH Brian Oesterle (MCC) 682yds 84Car 6TD 1FUM

RB Latavious Welch( EAU) 680yds 73Car 6TD

QB Brogan Mcnab (HT) 641yds 60Car 10TD

ATH Nate Lopez (Titusville) 547yds 92Car 7TD 3FUM

RECEIVING

WR Jayvan Boggs (Cocoa) 880yds 53Rec 16TD

ATH Jaeden Parker McMillan(HT) 680yds 45Rec 7TD

WR Cj Bragg (Cocoa) 664yds 49Rec 4TD

WR Ramel Hernandez(MCC) 634yds 31Rec 9TD

TACKLES

LB Johnny Wright (Melbourne) 132Tkls 6TFLs

ILB Tyler Gagen (Melbourne) 117Tkls 3TFLs

DB Wyatt Votava (Melbourne) 106Tkls 1TFL

OLB Dai’veon Parham (Cocoa) 76Tkls 12TFLs

SACKS

DE Javion Hilson (Cocoa) 8Sacks 26Hurs

DT Da varrius “peewee” Robertson (Cocoa) 7Sacks 16Hurs

DT Connor Robinson (Heritage) 7Sacks

DE Payton Maynard (Bayside) 6Sacks 5Hurs

INTS

DB Xavier Lherisse (Eau) 6INTS 102yds

DB Demetres Samuel Jr (Heritage) 5INTS 116yds

FS Julien Warden (HT) 4INTS

FS Jamarcus Giscombe (Rockledge) 3INT 79yds

SPECIAL TEAMS KICK SCORING

K/P Gunnar Trout (Cocoa) 41Pts 26PAT 5FGs

K/P Marcus Trout 39Pts (HT) 30PAT 3FGs

K/P Dean Roberts 38Pts (Titusville) 29PAT 3FGs

K Blake Pulliam 27Pts (Viera) 21PAT 2FGs

SPECIAL TEAMS TOTAL RETURNS

DB Xavier Lherisse (EAU) 325yds

ATH Jaeden Parker McMillan (HT) 256yds

ATH Kamar Fielder (HT) 219yds

CB Demetres Samuel Jr (Heritage) 185yds

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  2. Jan Beutel was half-watching a live stream of Kleines Nesthorn, a mountain peak in the Swiss Alps, when he realized its cacophony of creaks and rumbles was getting louder. He dropped his work, turned up the sound and found himself unable to look away.
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    “The whole screen exploded,” he said.

    Beutel, a computer engineer specializing in mountain monitoring, had just witnessed a glacier collapse. On May 28, an avalanche of millions of tons of ice and rock barreled down the slope, burying Blatten, a centuries-old village nestled in the valley below.

    Local authorities had already evacuated the village after parts of the mountain had crumbled onto the glacier; a 64-year old man believed to have stayed remains missing.

    But no one expected an event of this magnitude.

    Successive rock avalanches onto the glacier increased the pressure on the ice, causing it to melt faster and the glacier to accelerate, eventually destabilizing it and pushing it from its bed. The collapse was sudden, violent and catastrophic. “This one just left no moment to catch a breath,” Beutel said.
    The underlying causes will take time to unravel. A collapse of this magnitude would have been set in motion by geological factors going back decades at least, said Matthias Huss, a glaciologist at the Swiss university ETH Zurich.

    But it’s “likely climate change is involved,” he said, as warming temperatures melt the ice that holds mountains together. It’s a problem affecting mountains across the planet.

    People have long been fascinated with mountains for their dramatic beauty. Some make their homes beneath them — around 1 billion live in mountain communities — others are drawn by adventure, the challenge of conquering peaks.

    These majestic landscapes have always been dangerous, but as the world warms, they are becoming much more unpredictable and much deadlier.

    “We do not fully understand the hazard at the moment, nor how the dangers are changing with climate change,” said David Petley, an Earth scientist at the University of Hull in England.

  3. A nuclear fusion power plant prototype is already being built outside Boston. How long until unlimited clean energy is real?
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    In an unassuming industrial park 30 miles outside Boston, engineers are building a futuristic machine to replicate the energy of the stars. If all goes to plan, it could be the key to producing virtually unlimited, clean electricity in the United States in about a decade.

    The donut-shaped machine Commonwealth Fusion Systems is assembling to generate this energy is simultaneously the hottest and coldest place in the entire solar system, according to the scientists who are building it.

    It is inside that extreme environment in the so-called tokamak that they smash atoms together in 100-million-degree plasma. The nuclear fusion reaction is surrounded by a magnetic field more than 400,000 times more powerful than the Earth’s and chilled with cryogenic gases close to absolute zero.

    The fusion reaction — forcing two atoms to merge — is what creates the energy of the sun. It is the exact opposite of what the world knows now as “nuclear power” — a fission reaction that splits atoms.

    Nuclear fusion has far greater energy potential, with none of the safety concerns around radioactive waste.

    SPARC is the tokamak Commonwealth says could forever change how the world gets its energy, generating 10 million times more than coal or natural gas while producing no planet-warming pollution. Fuel for fusion is abundant, derived from deuterium, found in seawater, and tritium extracted from lithium. And unlike nuclear fission, there is no atomic waste involved.

    The biggest hurdle is building a machine powerful and precise enough to harness the molten, hard-to-tame plasma, while also overcoming the net-energy issue – getting more energy out than you put into it.
    “Basically, what everybody expects is when we build the next machine, we expect it to be a net-energy machine,” said Andrew Holland, CEO of the Fusion Industry Association, a trade group representing fusion companies around the globe. “The question is, how fast can you build that machine?”

    Commonwealth’s timeline is audacious: With over $2 billion raised in private capital, its goal is to build the world’s first fusion-fueled power plant by the early 2030s in Virginia.

    “It’s like a race with the planet,” said Brandon Sorbom, Commonwealth’s chief science officer. Commonwealth is racing to find a solution for global warming, Sorbom said, but it’s also trying to keep up with new power-hungry technologies like artificial intelligence. “This factory here is a 24/7 factory,” he said. “We’re acutely aware of it every minute of every hour of every day.”

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