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Immersion in hot water promotes health more than saunas

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From ancient Roman baths to modern infrared saunas, passive heat therapy has become an increasingly popular therapeutic tool for improving health and reducing the risk and/or severity of disease. As the heat seeps in, your core temperature rises. The result? Your cardiovascular system kicks into gear, your blood vessels expand, your heart rate elevates – like a brisk jog without leaving the bench.

Call it a spa day with benefits; it’s this thermal tug-of-war that prompts powerful physiological responses.

But not all heat is created equal. In a new study from the University of Oregon, scientists turned up the temperature to see which type of passive heat therapy packs the most health punch: hot baths, traditional saunas, or those fancy far-infrared saunas.

The winner? Hot water immersion.

Among young, healthy adults, soaking in hot water triggered the strongest responses across the board, helping the body regulate temperature, boost circulation, and even enhance the immune system more effectively than either sauna style.

A group of 20 fit, health-conscious young adults (ages 20 to 28, non-smokers, and without medication) signed up for the study.

Guided by human physiology expert Christopher Minson, the researchers tracked a range of body signals – core temperature, blood pressure, heart rate, the heart’s workload, and even the immune system’s activity.

Each person visited the lab 10 times; taking turns soaking in a hot tub (45 min at 40.5 °C/105 °F), sweating it out in a traditional sauna (3 × 10 min at 80 °C/176 °F), and basking in the warmth of a far-infrared sauna (45 min at 45–65 °C/113–149 °F). The team collected data before, during, and after each heat session to see what gets the body fired up – literally.

Among all methods, the change in temperature from baseline was greater in hot water immersion. Increased body temperature means increased blood flow and a greater inflammatory response. The team was not surprised by the study results.

“Hot water immersion gives you the most robust changes in core temperature because you can’t effectively dissipate heat as you can if you have contact with the air and you’re sweating to cool the body,” explained lead author Jessica Atencio. “When you’re submerged in water, the sweat mechanisms aren’t efficient.”

Minson does note regular physical activity can offer similar or in fact better results than heat therapies. But, for those who are unable to exercise, heat therapy can be a great alternative.

The study is published in in the American Journal of Physiology.

Source: University of Oregon via Science Daily

Mbappe scores as Real Madrid claim exciting victory over Dortmund at Club World Cup | Football News

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Kylian Mbappe was among the scorers as the French forward continues comeback in Real Madrid’s 3-2 win against Dortmund.

Kylian Mbappe’s spectacular bicycle kick was among three goals in the second-half stoppage time, as Real Madrid beat Borussia Dortmund 3-2 in a Club World Cup quarterfinal match.

The drama was not restricted to the late goals, with Real keeper Thibaut Courtois using his fingertips to palm away the potential levelling goal from the game’s final play.

Gonzalo Garcia and Fran García scored in the first 20 minutes as Madrid built a 2-0 lead.

Dortmund’s Maximilian Beier scored three minutes into stoppage time, and Mbappe, who entered in the 67th, restored a two-goal lead with his bicycle kick one minute later.

Serhou Guirassy converted a penalty kick in the eighth minute of added time after he was fouled by Dean Huijsen, who received a red card and will miss the semifinals.

Courtois used all of the lengthy arm on his 200cm (6ft 7in) frame to tip away Marcel Sabitzer’s shot just before the final whistle.

Real Madrid’s Thibaut Courtois saves a shot from Borussia Dortmund’s Marcel Sabitzer [Vincent Carchietta/Reuters]

Madrid advanced to a semifinal match against Champions League winner Paris Saint-Germain on Wednesday, a day after Chelsea meets Brazilian club Fluminense.

On a sunny afternoon, in 30 degrees Celsius (86 F) at the 3pm kickoff, Gonzalo Garcia scored in the 10th minute and Fran Garcia in the 20th.

Garcia, a 21-year-old who made only five Spanish league appearances in the past two seasons, was given the start by new Real Madrid coach Xabi Alonso over Mbappe, who is still regaining fitness after acute gastroenteritis.

Garcia has four goals, tying Benfica’s Angel Di María and Al Hilal’s Marcos Leonardo for the tournament lead.

FIFA Club World Cup - Quarter Final - Real Madrid v Borussia Dortmund - MetLife Stadium, East Rutherford, New Jersey, U.S. - July 5, 2025 Real Madrid's Gonzalo Garcia scores their first goal past Borussia Dortmund's Gregor Kobel
Real Madrid’s Gonzalo Garcia scores their first goal past Borussia Dortmund’s Gregor Kobel [Hannah McKay/Reuters]

Mbappe came on for Jude Bellingham, who missed a chance to play against his brother, Jobe, who was suspended for yellow-card accumulation.

Madrid beat Dortmund 2-0 in the 2024 Champions League final and overcame a two-goal halftime deficit in a 5-2 victory in this season’s league phase. Los Blancos were eliminated by Arsenal in this year’s Champions League quarterfinals.

Madrid has won five consecutive games against Dortmund and is unbeaten in seven since a 2014 Champions League quarterfinal defeat.

American midfielder Gio Reyna did not get off the bench and finished the tournament with one 13-minute appearance for Dortmund in five matches.

This game drew 76,611 fans to MetLife Stadium, the site of next year’s World Cup final. Seats looked filled, except for a completely empty suite level on one side.

There was a moment of silence before kickoff for Liverpool’s Diogo Jota and his brother, Penafiel’s Andre Silva, who died in a car crash on Thursday.

UMG names Kayla Schmandt as Vice President of Digital Strategy for AMEA

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Universal Music Group has appointed Kayla Schmandt to the role of Vice President, Digital Strategy, Africa, Middle East, and Asia (AMEA), effective from July 1, 2025.

In this role, Schmandt will report to Adam Granite, CEO of UMG AMEA, and will be based out of UMG’s London office.

Her remit is to help build, shape and implement UMG’s AMEA digital and commercial strategy, including the areas of e-Commerce and CRM.

Schmandt will draw on her expertise from her previous role as VP Commercial Affairs, where she “assessed market trends, identified potential new revenue streams, and analysed untapped venture opportunities.”

Commenting on her role, Kayla Schmandt said: “I’m excited to be joining Adam and the wider AMEA team at such a pivotal moment for our regions.

“The cultural richness and creative energy of our markets is driving new growth opportunities for artists and fans alike – and it’s a real privilege to support that evolution through digital innovation.”

Added Schmandt: “I’m looking forward to learning from our brilliant local teams and helping to build strategic partnerships that bring our artists even closer to their audiences.”

“The cultural richness and creative energy of our markets is driving new growth opportunities for artists and fans alike – and it’s a real privilege to support that evolution through digital innovation.”

Kayla Schmandt, Universal Music Group

Adam Granite, CEO of UMG AMEA, said: “We’re delighted to have Kayla joining the team at this important moment in our growth.”

Adam Granite Universal Music

“We’re delighted to have Kayla joining the team at this important moment in our growth.”

Adam Granite, Universal Music Group

Added Granite: “Her experience analysing the market for new commercial opportunities, and the strength of her international network make her a valuable addition to the team.

“Our digital market strategy continues to be an important driver of our success, and Kayla’s expertise and track record to date makes her the perfect candidate to help us navigate this next phase of our growth.”

 Music Business Worldwide

Desperate Hunt for Survivors of Deadly Flood that Claimed 32 Lives, Including 14 Children

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A frantic search for survivors is under way in central Texas after flash floods killed at least 32 people, including 14 children.

Many were asleep when the Guadalupe River rose more than 26 ft (8m) in less than an hour in the early hours of Friday.

Officials in Kerr County have said 27 children are missing from a Christian youth camp located along the river. Some 850 people were rescued.

Weather forecasts suggest that more rain and, potentially, more flooding could be on the horizon for the area.

Among the areas most severely hit by the floods were mobile homes, summer camps and camping sites where many had gathered for 4 July holiday celebrations.

At a press conference on Saturday afternoon, Texas Governor Greg Abbott said he had signed an expanded disaster declaration to boost search efforts.

He said officials would be relentless in ensuring they locate “every single person who’s been a victim of this event”, adding that “we will stop when job is completed”.

It remains a search and rescue mission, officials said, not a recovery effort.

They said rescuers were going up and down the Guadalupe River to try to find people who may have been swept away by the floods.

Much of the rescue has focused on a large all-girls Christian summer camp called Camp Mystic.

The camp, where 27 remain missing, is on the banks of the Guadalupe River near Hunt, Texas.

Texas Lieutenant Governor Dan Patrick told the BBC’s Radio 4 PM programme that of the 27 children missing from Camp Mystic “many of these girls are younger girls under the age of 12”.

He also said that many more people were likely to remain unaccounted for across the region, because some were visiting for the holiday weekend.

In an email to parents of the roughly 750 campers, Camp Mystic said that if they haven’t been contacted directly, their child is considered missing.

Some of the families have already stated publicly that their children were among those who were found dead.

US President Donald Trump has said his administration is working closely with local authorities to respond to the emergency.

Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem said the president was “devastated” by the loss of life and promised full federal support.

Noem joined Governor Abbott at Saturday afternoon’s press conference and said the federal government would soon be deploying the Coast Guard to help search efforts.

Elsewhere in central Texas, in Travis County, officials say another two people have died and 10 are missing because of the flooding.

Forecasters have warned that central Texas may see more flooding this weekend.

The National Weather Service (NWS) said the area could see 2 to 5in (5cm to 12cm) of rain on Saturday.

Up to 10in of rain was possible in some areas that are still reeling from Friday’s deluge.

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Public Swimming Now Allowed on the Seine River for the First Time in Over 100 Years

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A year after the long-polluted River Seine was cleaned for the 2024 Paris Olympics, French officials opened multiple sites for locals to go swimming.

Hamas reacts to Gaza ceasefire proposal with ‘positive spirit,’ says it will respond

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Hamas says it responds to Gaza ceasefire proposal in 'a positive spirit'

UN Chief Expresses Strong Condemnation of Russian Drone Attack on Ukraine in Latest Developments of Russia-Ukraine War

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Antonio Guterres raises alarm over ‘dangerous escalation’ after hours-long Russian drone and missile barrage this week.

United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres has condemned a Russian drone and missile attack against Ukraine this week that has been described as the largest such assault in the three-year war.

In a statement on Saturday, Guterres’s spokesperson said the Russian strikes “disrupted the power supply to the Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Plant, once again underlining the ongoing risks to nuclear safety”.

“The secretary-general is alarmed by this dangerous escalation and the growing number of civilian casualties,” the statement read.

Ukrainian officials said Moscow fired more than 500 drones and 11 missiles at the capital Kyiv overnight into Friday in an attack that killed one person, injured at least 23 others and damaged buildings across the city.

The sounds of air raid sirens, kamikaze drones and booming detonations reverberated until dawn.

Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelenskyy called the attack “deliberately massive and cynical”.

Russia has been stepping up its long-range attacks on Ukrainian cities as United States-led efforts to reach a ceasefire to end the war have stalled.

On Saturday, Ukraine’s top military commander, Oleksandr Syrskii, warned of a possible new Russian offensive in the Kharkiv region, a part of northeastern Ukraine that has seen heavy fighting since Russia invaded in 2022.

Moscow has been slowly grinding its way along several parts of the Ukrainian front line in recent months, throwing forth continuous waves of infantry as it seeks to press home its advantage in troops and munitions.

Russian forces have already pushed into northern Ukraine’s Sumy region over the past months, carving out a small foothold there.

Russia fired 322 drones and decoys into Ukraine overnight into Saturday, Ukraine’s air force said. Of these, 157 were shot down and 135 were lost, likely having been electronically jammed.

Ukraine has also ramped up its retaliatory strikes in Russia, with the Ministry of Defence saying it shot down 94 Ukrainian drones overnight into Saturday, along with 45 further drones in the morning and early afternoon.

Four Ukrainian drones also were shot down while approaching Moscow on Saturday, according to Mayor Sergei Sobyanin. Meanwhile, a woman was killed in a Ukrainian drone attack in the Rostov region, the acting governor said.

Separately, the Ukrainian military said in a statement on social media on Saturday that its special forces struck Russia’s Borisoglebsk military airfield in the Voronezh region, hitting a glide bomb store and a trainer aircraft.

The military said that other aircraft were also likely hit, without giving details.

The governor of Voronezh, Alexander Gusev, wrote on Telegram that more than 25 drones were destroyed over the region overnight. He said a power line was temporarily damaged, but made no mention of a military airfield.

The attacks come as Ukraine’s Zelenskyy said on Friday that he had a “very important and fruitful” phone conversation with US President Donald Trump in his efforts to strengthen Ukraine’s air defences.

The US president also spoke to his Russian counterpart, Vladimir Putin, a day earlier in a conversation that he said was disappointing.

“I’m very disappointed with the conversation I had today with President Putin, because I don’t think he’s there, and I’m very disappointed,” Trump said after the call on Thursday. “I’m just saying I don’t think he’s looking to stop, and that’s too bad.”

Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov said on Friday that it was “preferable” to achieve the goals of Russia’s invasion through political and diplomatic means.

“But as long as that is not possible, we are continuing the special operation,” he said.

Camp Mystic has been passed down through generations within the same family

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The Texas summer camp hit by massive flooding on Friday has been in the same family for generations and counts relatives of top Texas politicians among its alumnae.

Rescue crews continue to search for two dozen children from Camp Mystic, a Christian summer camp for girls in the Texas Hill Country. The powerful storm that raised the Guadalupe River by 26 feet in just 45 minutes on Friday has killed at least 24 people.

The camp did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Camp Mystic was first established in 1926 by “Doc” Stewart, a University of Texas coach, according to the camp’s website.

In 1939, it was purchased by Agnes Stacy and her husband “Pop” Stacy. They and their children—Anne Stacy Eastland Spears and William Gillespie Stacy Jr.—kept the camp in continuous operation, except when it served as a rehabilitation and recovery camp for World War II veterans from 1943 to 1945.

The current owners and executive directors are Dick and Tweety Eastland, who are the third generation to manage Camp Mystic. Dick, who is Agnes Stacy’s grandson, and Tweety also make their home at Mystic, according to the website.

The camp has reportedly drawn girls from top Texas families during its century-long history. The daughters of Texas Governors Price Daniel, Dan Moody, and John Connally have attended, according to a Texas Monthly article from 2011.

In addition, the daughters, granddaughters, and great-granddaughters of President Lyndon Johnson also went to the camp as well a daughter and a granddaughter of James Baker, who served in top roles for multiple presidents.

Before buying Camp Mystic with her husband in 1939, Agnes Stacy was a strong believer that women should participate in sports.

According to Texas Monthly, Anne Morgan—the daughter of banking magnate J. P. Morgan—asked Stacy to help rebuild France after World War I. Stacy developed a physical education program to help children traumatized by the war.

After returning from Europe, Stacy taught physical education at the University of Texas, then took a job at the camp that would become Mystic, the report said.

She and her husband sold everything they owned and borrowed $50,000, an enormous sum at the time, to purchase the camp after the owner died.

Stacy sought to foster emotional and physical self-reliance among its campers, according to Texas Monthly, which cited an old brochure from her time.

“By close contact with girls their own age, Mystic aspires to develop in its campers loyalty, open-mindedness, and tolerance of individual differences,” it said.

This ‘Water Lily’ Will Introduce Floating Solar Panels to the Sea

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In recent years, there has been increasing interest in harnessing marine renewable energies such as tidal and wave power. However, the energy transition is also focusing on the sea to introduce traditionally land-based energies, moving towards a more sustainable world. Offshore wind energy is already a reality, and floating offshore wind is gaining momentum. Now, floating photovoltaic energy is expected to follow suit.

Although there are not yet many prototypes of floating structures developed for this purpose, the Sierra Brava floating photovoltaic plant features one of the most advanced models, based on a novel membrane technology. In this article, we will cover the following:

The current state of floating photovoltaics

Currently, several projects are leveraging the potential of floating photovoltaic plants on bodies of water such as irrigation reservoirs and dams. Solar panels can be installed on the water by using semi-rigid structures anchored to the bottom, increasing installed capacity without occupying land. This solution is excellent for developing clean energy in areas where land is scarce, the terrain is unsuitable, or other activities make land-based solar plants impractical.

By 2022, global floating PV capacity exceeded 5 GWh, with an estimated annual growth of 30% in the coming years. A recent study by researchers from China, Thailand, Sweden, and the USA indicated that if 30% of the world’s reservoir surface area were used, global generation capacity could exceed nine TWh per year. Countries with significant potential include the USA, Brazil, Portugal, and Spain.

The floating PV HUB of Sierra Brava

Spain already has a notable example of floating photovoltaics in the Sierra Brava reservoir in Extremadura, located in the province of Cáceres. Developed and installed by ACCIONA Energía, this plant was the first to be connected to the electricity grid in Spain. Here, six floating photovoltaic fields are being analyzed, testing different configurations of solar panel types, inclinations, and flotation systems, as well as their integration with the surrounding ecosystem.

The latest technology installed at Sierra Brava features a circular structure reminiscent of water lilies. It includes a thin hydro-elastic membrane less than two millimeters thick, which supports up to seven hundred and seventy panels. These double-glazed panels rest directly on the membrane, maximizing water cooling and allowing maintenance personnel to walk on them.

This membrane has its own mooring and anchoring system, providing greater flexibility and resistance to strong waves and wind gusts. This feature simplifies the mooring system in dams and reservoirs and enables the expansion of floating photovoltaic solar energy to the sea. The open ocean’s conditions are more unpredictable and challenging than those of a reservoir, but the marine environment offers vast potential for solar energy to help mitigate climate change. Additionally, this could facilitate the hybridization of offshore wind farms and other marine technologies.

Main advantages of membrane floating photovoltaics

Floating photovoltaics offer numerous benefits, such as utilizing aquatic surfaces, reducing water evaporation, and algae proliferation, and improving panel efficiency. Hydro-elastic membrane technology provides additional advantages, including:

  • Modules are installed at a 0° angle, parallel to the surface, reducing wind resistance and the “sail effect,” simplifying the mooring system.
    • The system can withstand winds up to 275 km/h and waves up to 10 m (33 ft).
    • Direct support of the modules on the membrane maximizes cooling by water contact.
  • The membrane requires fewer installation materials, enhancing sustainability and efficiency.
  • A 0.6 MWp membrane fits in a twelve-meter container, reducing the carbon footprint of transportation.
  • Installation is simplified, allowing up to one floating platform to be installed per day.
  • Multiple platforms can be assembled simultaneously.

The evolution of floating photovoltaic energy at the Sierra Brava Floating PV HUB, which already has half a dozen platforms with various configurations, indicates a high growth potential for solar energy. To learn more about other technologies harnessing the sea’s potential, such as reverse osmosis desalination, subscribe to our newsletter at the bottom of this page.

 

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