Overwatch 2 ‘Launch Experience Has Been Frustrating’

Image: Activision Blizzard

Overwatch 2 has not been having a good time. After undergoing two attacks by external parties that made it nearly impossible to play, the hero shooter came under fire for its bad cell phone policy. Then, many had issues trying to play Overwatch 2 with friends. Blizzard worked to ease these pains, axing the phone requirement outright and allowing more players to experience the sequel as the week went on, but not before some extended downtime on Thursday night. By Friday, fans had discovered a chat bug that randomly spent their real-world money on the shop. Now it’s the evening, and to kick the weekend off, Blizzard has another update.

In a new status update post, Blizzard expressed gratitude that fans have been “patient” through this entire saga, and while there are some welcome improvements now, the game’s larger status update is still kind of a mixed bag.

Effective immediately, console players who have a linked Battle.net account since June 9, 2021, along with any PC players with tied accounts, won’t need a cell phone, Blizzard announced in the status update. In an email, a Blizzard spokesperson clarified that totally new players to Overwatch 2, however, would need a phone number still, so the requirement isn’t totally gone.

While Blizzard says that it is making progress on things like account merging issues, along with players unable to access their purchased Watchpoint Pack on consoles, the developer states that some may still experience hiccups. There’s still a queue for the former problem, and in the case of the latter issue, PlayStation owners in particular may not see the product in their inventories. A fix is reportedly set to roll out later tonight. Some may still experience those pesky login issues, too, but Blizzard made it sound like this is now a much smaller stumbling block for the game.

Perhaps the most ironic bullet point in the status update is what has replaced the login issue. Here’s Blizzard, explaining how by improving one thing, players might now see a worse experience elsewhere:

Now that we’ve increased capacity and have a higher player concurrency, matchmaking systems are being affected, which means you may be seeing a wait before being placed in a match. We are changing configurations within this system today and hope to somewhat shorten that wait throughout the day. We will continue looking into the matchmaking queues through the weekend to identify any additional improvements we can make.

At least you can be inside the game while waiting, though.

Blizzard knows that fans might be frustrated after the week that’s just transpired In the send-off to this update, after thanking players and acknowledging that the game has undergone a tough launch, Blizzard wrote:

We deeply appreciate your patience and thank you for your support, and we are laser focused on improving the Overwatch 2 experience for all players.

For now, it seems as if Overwatch players will have to hang tight until next week to see more meaningful changes beyond the ones slated to hit the game later tonight.

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U.S. adds China’s YMTC and 30 other firms to ‘unverified’ trade list

WASHINGTON, Oct 7 (Reuters) – The United States on Friday added China’s top memory chipmaker YMTC and 30 other Chinese entities to a list of companies that U.S. officials have been unable to inspect, ratcheting up tensions with Beijing and starting a 60 day-clock that could trigger much tougher penalties.

The new listings were the first of a slew of new restrictions announced on Friday on exports of technology to China aimed at blocking military advances. The crackdown included curbs on access to chipmaking tools for Chinese firms including Yantze Memory Technologies Co (YMTC), as reported by Reuters a day earlier. read more

U.S. senators from both parties have been calling for YMTC, China’s fast-growing chip manufacturer, to be placed on a trade blacklist known as the “entity list.” The company, founded in 2016, poses a “direct threat” to U.S. chip companies, according to the Biden administration.

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YMTC and the Chinese embassy in Washington did not respond to requests for comment.

YMTC is under investigation by the Commerce Department over whether it violated U.S. export controls by selling chips to blacklisted Chinese telecommunications company Huawei Technologies Co Ltd. Its chips also are being evaluated by Apple Inc for inclusion in some of its iPhones in China, a major concern for U.S. lawmakers and the Biden administration.

Companies are added to the unverified list because the United States could not complete on-site visits to determine whether they can be trusted to receive sensitive technology exports from the United States. U.S. inspections of Chinese companies require the approval of China’s commerce ministry.

U.S. exporters must conduct additional due diligence before sending goods to entities placed on the “unverified list,” like the 31 added on Friday, and may have to apply for more licenses.

Under the Biden administration’s new policy, if a government prevents U.S. officials from conducting site checks at companies placed the unverified list, Washington will start the process for adding them to the entity list after 60 days.

Entity listing YMTC would further escalate tensions with Beijing and force its U.S. suppliers to seek difficult-to-obtain licenses from the U.S. government before shipping them even the most low-tech items.

Not all the measures announced on Friday were bad news for China. The United States removed a unit of Wuxi Biologics, maker of ingredients for AstraZeneca’s COVID-19 vaccine, from the unverified list. Reuters reported last summer that U.S. officials had been able to conduct an inspection at the Wuxi city site, a stepping stone to removal from the list.

A Wuxi Biologics spokeswoman said the company was pleased the Wuxi site was removed from the list, given the inspection in June. The company looks forward to scheduling an inspection of its Shanghai subsidiary, which also was placed on the unverified list in February, she added.

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Reporting by Karen Freifeld; Editing by Chris Gallagher, Chris Sanders, Chizu Nomiyama, Mark Porter and Richard Chang

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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[VIDEO] ‘Wolf Pack’ Release Date, Teaser Trailer For Paramount+ Series

The next generation of teen wolves is making tracks for Paramount+.

Wolf Pack, a new series written and executive-produced by Jeff Davis (Teen Wolf) will become available to Paramount+ subscribers on Thursday, Jan. 26 — the same day as Teen Wolf: The Movie. The news was announced Friday during the show’s panel at New York Comic Con.

Based on Edo Van Belkom’s book series, Wolf Pack “follows a teenage boy and girl whose lives are forever changed when a California wildfire awakens a terrifying supernatural creature,” per the official logline. “Wounded in the chaos of its attack, the teens are inexplicably drawn to each other and to two others who were adopted sixteen years earlier by a park ranger after another mysterious wildfire. As the full moon rises, all four teens come together to unravel the secret that connects them — the bite and blood of a werewolf.”

Wolf Pack stars Sarah Michelle Gellar (Buffy the Vampire Slayer) as arson investigator Kristin Ramsey, described as a “highly regarded expert in her field and no stranger to personal loss, brought in by authorities to catch the teenage arsonist who started a massive wildfire which may have also led to the reawakening of a supernatural predator terrorizing Los Angeles.”

Another familiar face will be that of Rodrigo Santoro (Lost) as Garrett Briggs, a Los Angeles park ranger “dedicated to protecting the environment, and adoptive father to the remarkable teenagers. A man of strong values, he is also someone with dark secrets and deep suspicions, especially towards anyone questioning the relationship with his children who were found in the wildfire years earlier.”

The four aforementioned teens are Armani Jackson (Chad) as Everett, Bella Shepard (The Wilds) as Blake, Chloe Rose Robertson as Luna, and Tyler Lawrence Gray as Harlan.

As revealed during the panel, the following actors are also joining in recurring roles: Bailey Stender (iCarly), Chase Liefeld (Chang Can Dunk), Hollie Bahar (Westworld), Lanny Joon (Baby Driver), Rio Mangini (Everything Sucks), Stella Smith (Stargirl), Zack Nelson (Loot) and James Martinez (Love, Victor). Other guest stars will include Amy Pietz (Caroline in the City), Bria Brimmer (Doom Patrol), John L. Adams (The Dead Zone) and Sean Philip Glasgow (Diary of a Future President).

In addition to Davis, Wolf Pack is executive-produced by Jason Ensler, and Joe Genier and Mike Elliott for Capital Arts.

Hit PLAY on the show’s first teaser above, then drop a comment with your thoughts on Wolf Pack below.



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An Incredibly Detailed Look At The C8 Corvette Z06

When the C8 Corvette Z06 was revealed, the internet went absolutely wild for it. More power than the last Z, from a naturally-aspirated engine that revved to 8,600 RPM? It had all the makings of a masterpiece. And, as the reviews have come out, it seems that’s exactly what Chevy built. But how did the company do it? What did it take to build that engine, to make the chassis accommodate it, and combine both into a package cohesive enough to sell?

If you want those answers, you’re in luck. The guys over at Savagegeese have put together a massive documentary on the creation of the new Z06, interviewing engineers, designers, and more to get the full picture of the car’s creation. It’s nearly an hour long, full of everything from interviews to first-drive impressions and track driving. And, oh yeah, that exhaust note.

2023 Corvette C8 Z06 | Making Cars Great Again

Few people on YouTube will go as in-depth on a car as the folks from Savagegeese, and their dedication always shows in the end product. This documentary is a prime example, with more detail and craftsmanship than you’re likely to find nearly anywhere else. You can always tell when someone really cares about what they’re making, and few care care more than these two.

So why not start your weekend with a viewing of the most intensive Z06 documentary on the internet? Grab some dinner, sit down in front of the TV, and learn all about the difficulties GM’s engineers faced in making a high-revving flat-plane supercar usable and comfortable as a daily driver. After all, that golf bag storage means nothing if you don’t want to take the car out to the course, right?

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Florida tokers inadvertently smoked rat poison; 52 sickened, 4 dead

Enlarge / A man holds a K2 cigarette in an area that previously witnessed an explosion in the use of synthetic marijuana, in East Harlem on August 31, 2015, in New York City.

Just hours before President Biden unveiled a major effort to reform federal marijuana laws Thursday, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention published a report highlighting some of the collateral damage of harshly criminalizing the relatively safe drug.

The report documented a mass poisoning from alternative marijuana products tainted with rat poison. The event—which severely sickened 52, killing four—isn’t the first or even the largest of such poisonings. In 2018, rat poison-laced fake products sickened nearly 200 in a multi-state rash of poisonings that also left four dead.

In the most recent cluster, health officials in Florida first began noting the cases in December of last year. And, based on the 2018 outbreak, they quickly linked the illnesses to synthetic cannabinoids (aka spice, K2, synthetic marijuana, or fake weed).

Synthetic cannabinoid products are often sold in small foil packages containing some sort of dried, shredded plant material that has been sprayed with lab-made, mind-altering chemicals meant to imitate components of marijuana. They’re also sometimes sold as liquids. The products are poorly regulated and can contain an ever-changing lineup of substances to sidestep evolving laws. Nevertheless, they’re often falsely marketed as safe, natural, and legal alternatives to marijuana, promising the same benefits as the real drug while being undetectable by drug tests.

Synthetic cannabinoids are dubious and can be risky, but products containing brodifacoum, a rat poison, are particularly dangerous. Brodifacoum is among a class of rodenticides called “superwarfarins,” and used to be the active ingredient in the rat bait “D-Con.” The toxic chemical is a long-acting vitamin K oxidoreductase antagonist, which blocks the activity of a specific enzyme. This results in an increase in an inactive form of vitamin K, which plays a critical role in blood clotting. Specifically, a protein in blood that is directly involved with clotting, prothrombin, is dependent on vitamin K.

Potent hit

Ingestion of brodifacoum can prevent proper clotting, leading to life-threatening bleeding. And it’s a long-acting drug, meaning poisonings can take months to treat. Brodifacoum has a half-life of 16 to 36 days, and researchers have observed it staying in the body for up to 270 days after acute exposure.

In the new report of the poisonings in Florida, Tampa-area health officials noted that most common symptoms of the poisonings were abdominal pain, peeing blood, and vomiting blood. And it was difficult to treat. “Many patients needed high doses of oral vitamin K1 (i.e., 150 mg/day), which required taking 30 5-mg tablets daily during hospitalization and for 3–6 months after discharge,” the authors noted.

They were also expensive to treat. The oral vitamin K1 treatments can run $65,000 or more per month. And testing for brodifacoum poisoning costs more than $750. The Florida officials noted that two-thirds of the patients were uninsured, and a private pharmaceutical company ended up donating enough vitamin K1 tablets to treat all 52 patients.

Officials don’t know for certain why anyone would put brodifacoum in fake weed, but researchers speculated that it could prolong or enhance the effects of synthetic cannabinoids. Brodifacoum has also been found tainting actual marijuana and cocaine.

The poisonings are yet another reason advocates for drug policy reform have called for legalizing and regulating marijuana, which is already happening in some states. Currently, 37 states and the District of Columbia have laws permitting medical use of marijuana, according to a report from the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws. Nineteen states and the District of Columbia laws permitting some recreational use, and 27 have partially or fully decriminalized some possession offenses.

On Thursday, President Biden made movements to reform federal laws by issuing mass pardons for federal simple possession offenses. He also directed federal officials to review the status of marijuana as a “Schedule 1” drug, a designation used for the most dangerous drugs.

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The Rings Of Power’ Season One Finale Trailer – Deadline

Amazon’s The Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power blasted off its PR tour at San Diego Comic-Con and it’s winding it down at New York Comic-Con with the streamer dropping a season one finale trailer, that episode dropping on Friday, Oct. 14 at 12 am EDT. A majority of the trailer has footage from the first seven episodes.

Coming away from an episode 7, “The Eye”, which finds the Queen-Regent Míriel blinded, and the Southlands getting erased off the map and renamed Mordor as the orcs settle into their new homeland. Also in Ep. 7, King Durin III steps in between the bromance of Elrond and Durin, given his distrust of elves, declaring that elves won’t be helping the dwarves out with any resources. The trailer teases the arrival of Sauron, the forging of rings, as well as “Mordor will rise, heroes will fall, and all will be revealed” all set to composer Bear McCreary’s score, “Sauron.” It’s clear that Elves, Harfoots, Dwarves and Númenóreans are finally forming a solid alliance.  

“There is jewelry imminent,” teased Charles Edwards who plays Lord Celebrimbor on the show.

Prime Video’s The Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power is set thousands of years before the events of J.R.R. Tolkien’s The Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings books.

You can watch it below:

Seven of the series’ cast appeared on the Empire Stage at New York Comic Con: Cynthia Addai-Robinson (Queen Regent Miriel), Nazanin Boniadi (Bronwyn), Edwards (Lord Celebrimbor), Leon Wadham (Kemen), Benjamin Walker (High King Gil-galad), Daniel Weyman (The Stranger), and Sara Zwangobani (Marigold ‘Goldie’ Brandyfoot) with moderator New York Times best-selling author, and newly announced host of the show’s official free podcast on Amazon Music, Felicia Day. Most of the gang on stage joked that they were actually “Sauron”. Given how “The Eye” just dropped, Day was hesitant to recap before the audience, but delve into a convo about ep. 6.

The cast mentioned that they haven’t seen the finale yet. Edwards mentioned that during filming two years ago, scripts were redacted.

Cynthia Addai-Robinson teased about Queen Regent Miriel changing course and mustering an army into the Southlands, “she has a lot on her mind….she’s seen some things.”

Showrunners J.D. Payne and Patrick McKay weren’t able to attend NYCC in person, but sent a message from the show’s UK set, where production is already underway on season 2.

The Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power‘s first two episodes pulled in over 25M views during the series premiere weekend. Nielsen also reported that The Rings of Power delivered 1.25 billion minutes streamed in the U.S. during (or over) its premiere weekend, making it the No. 1 show on their overall and original streaming charts. This is the first time a Prime Video series has debuted at No.1 on the Nielsen chart, and The Rings of Power was also the only series that crossed the 1 billion minutes streamed threshold for the week.

Also today, Amazon released “Where the Shadows Lie,” a new song performed by Grammy-winning artist Fiona Apple, from The Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power (Season One: Amazon Original Series Soundtrack). The track was written by series composer Bear McCreary and will appear in the season finale. The tune is inspired by the Ring-verse written by J.R.R. Tolkien in the original The Lord of the Rings trilogy. As written, the poem was composed by the Free Peoples of Middle-earth about the origins of the Rings of Power and their relationship under the power of the One Ring. The song was produced by McCreary, Apple, and Andrew Slater, and engineered by Jason LaRocca and David Way.

The Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power streams exclusively on Prime Video in more than 240 countries and territories, with new episodes available each Friday at 12:00 a.m. EDT (Thursdays at 9:00 p.m. PDT).

The series is led by showrunners and EPs Payne and McKay. They are joined by EPs Lindsey Weber, Callum Greene, J.A. Bayona, Belén Atienza, Justin Doble, Jason Cahill, Gennifer Hutchison, Bruce Richmond, and Sharon Tal Yguado, and producers Ron Ames and Christopher Newman. Wayne Che Yip is co-EP and directs, along with Bayona and Charlotte Brändström.

Valerie Complex contributed to this article.



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Don’t ‘be a hero’ while the Fed battles inflation

CNBC’s Jim Cramer on Friday warned investors against adding to their portfolios until the stock market and economy become less volatile.

“This economy is a runaway train; it’s smashed through the Fed’s blockades today, so now they may just blow up the tracks to derail the whole darn thing. When they detonate, it’ll be safe to buy. Until then, I am urging you not to be a hero,” he said.

Cramer warned that he expects central bank officials to stick to their hawkish stance on inflation, adding that the producer price index and consumer price index due next week could shed more light on the state of inflation and the Fed’s next moves.

Stocks tumbled on Friday after the September jobs report signaled that the job market is strengthening despite the central bank’s aggressive interest rate increases.

“There’s always the possibility that this is the last red-hot employment number, in which case the Fed’s tightening into an abyss and the damage could be catastrophic,” he said.

Cramer also previewed next week’s slate of earnings. All earnings and revenue estimates are courtesy of FactSet.

Wednesday: PepsiCo

  • Q3 2022 earnings release at 6 a.m. ET; conference call at 8:15 a.m. ET
  • Projected EPS: $1.84
  • Projected revenue: $20.81 billion

Cramer said he’s hoping the company will report that its raw costs are coming down.

Thursday: Delta Airlines, Walgreens Boots Alliance, Domino’s Pizza, BlackRock

Delta Air Lines

  • Q3 2022 earnings release at 6:30 a.m. ET; conference call at 10 a.m. ET
  • Projected EPS: $1.55
  • Projected revenue: $12.90 billion

The company is likely concerned about rising oil prices, Cramer predicted.

Walgreens Boots Alliance

  • Q4 2022 earnings release at 7 a.m. ET; conference call at 8:30 a.m. ET
  • Projected EPS: 77 cents
  • Projected revenue: $32.09 billion

Domino’s Pizza

  • Q3 2022 earnings release at 7:30 a.m. ET; conference call at 10 a.m. ET
  • Projected EPS: $2.98
  • Projected revenue: $1.07 billion

He said that he believes both Walgreens and Domino’s are dealing with worker shortages.

BlackRock

  • Q3 2022 earnings release at 6:15 a.m. ET; conference call at 8:30 a.m ET
  • Projected EPS: $7.64
  • Projected revenue: $4.3 billion

Cramer said he’s betting the company will report great results and that he’d be a buyer of the stock.

Friday: JPMorgan Chase, Wells Fargo, Morgan Stanley, UnitedHealth Group

JPMorgan Chase 

  • Q3 2022 earnings release at 7 a.m. ET; conference call at 8:30 a.m. ET
  • Projected EPS: $2.92
  • Projected revenue: $32.13 billion

Wells Fargo 

  • Q3 2022 earnings release at 7 a.m. ET; conference call at 10 a.m. ET
  • Projected EPS: $1.10
  • Projected revenue: $18.76 billion

Morgan Stanley 

  • Q3 2022 earnings release at 7:30 a.m. ET; conference call at 9:30 a.m. ET
  • Projected EPS: $1.52
  • Projected revenue: $13.24 billion

“With employment still red-hot, it’s entirely possible the banks can make a killing here without much risk of bad loans,” Cramer said.

UnitedHealth Group

  • Q3 2022 earnings release at 5:55 a.m. ET; conference call at 8:45 a.m. ET
  • Projected EPS: $5.43
  • Projected revenue: $80.52 billion

While he has faith the quarter will be solid, he expects the stock to decline if the company’s results are short of being perfect.

Disclaimer: Cramer’s Charitable Trust owns shares of Morgan Stanley and Wells Fargo.

Jim Cramer’s Guide to Investing

Click here to download Jim Cramer’s Guide to Investing at no cost to help you build long-term wealth and invest smarter.

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Trader Who Accurately Called This Year’s Crypto Crash Says Bitcoin Rally Imminent – Here’s His Outlook

A widely followed Bitcoin (BTC) analyst who predicted the 2022 BTC collapse is spotting a potential bear trap in the brush.

Pseudonymous crypto trader Capo tells their 547,900 Twitter followers that the US Dollar Index (DXY) and traditional stocks are setting up for a BTC rebound.

“DXY bounce is looking weak and it wants to dump again.

SPX at support.

BTC looks good for $20,500-$21,000.”

The king crypto is down 2.5% over the last 24 hours, currently going for $19,555. Still, Capo believes the slump is nothing more than a “bear trap” signaling that a bounce is imminent for BTC.

“Bear trap… Bounce incoming.”

Turning to the charts, Capo says BTC’s low time frame (LTF) target remains at $21,000.

“BTC LTF

Same plan. Price is at support and late longs have been liquidated. 

Main target for the local top remains $20,500-$21,000. 

Bearish confirmation: clean break of $19,000.”

Source: CryptoCapo_/Twitter

Capo also looks at BTC sentiment to support his bouncing Bitcoin hypothesis.

“Sentiment is ultra bearish even though price keeps printing higher lows on LTF.

Bounce is very likely.”

With the largest crypto by market cap down by nearly 3% over the last day, Capo still says all of today’s losses will be regained.

“Today’s dump about to be fully reversed.”

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Colossal one-million-mile-long plume shooting out from the sun’ is captured by astrophotgrapher

Colossal one-million-mile-long plume shooting out from the sun’s surface is captured by astrophotgrapher: Stunning image shows glowing stream of plasma that traveled 100,000mph as it floated off into space

  • An amateur astrophotogropher took more than a million images of the sun  over a six-hour span
  • A solar storm was erupted, resulting in a the largest solar prominence he has ever witnessed
  • A plume of plasma began to form from the prominence that grew until it was about one million miles long, then broke off and floated off into space until it disappeared 

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An amateur astrophotogropher pointed his telescope toward the sun and observed a plume shooting out from the fiery surface at 100,000 miles per hour as it grew to more than one million miles long.

Andrew McCarthy, who lives in Arizona, told DailyMail.com that he spent six hours taking more than a million pictures that he ‘stitched’ together for the final image – but because the plume was so massive, he could only capture half of it in the photo.

The ejection of energetic and highly magnetized, superheated gas, or coronal mass ejection (CME), was released from what McCarthy said was the largest solar prominence he has ever witnessed – the bright feature extending outward from the surface was about 500,000 miles wide.

The day McCarthy observed the sun was also when a minor solar storm flared on the sun, which led to the formation of the large prominence that caught his attention.

‘I noticed the large prominence began to lift off -a clear sign that something exciting was about to happen,’ he said.

‘So I kept my telescope pointed [at] it and watched the CME form.

‘These are the moments solar astronomers live for.’

Andrew McCarthy captured a colossal plume shooting out from the sun. The stream of plasma stretched for about one million miles. The event happened during a minor solar storm 

The colossal plume formed on September 24, which was the day a solar storm erupted on the sun. 

However, the storm ranked in the lowest category and may have been missed by eyes on Earth.

The plume of plasma began to appear from the giant prominence and then broke off, flying into space at around 100,000 miles per hour, according to McCarthy who also live-tweeted the event.

The images were taken using a modified five-inch refractor telescope, which McCarthy said ‘it has to be modified because pointing a telescope at the sun would blind you otherwise.’

The plume began to slowly grow, reaching 200,000 miles and then 600,000 before reaching more than a million and breaking off into space.

‘That’s the distance from Earth to JWST [Jame Webb Space Telescope],’ he shared in a tweet.

McCarthy, who has a gallery of stunning images showing the wonders of space, kept his eyes on the plume for at least two hours, watching it break off and float into space where it became more of a moon-sized blob, rather than the roaring ball of superheated gas it initially was.

And the farther it moved, the fainter it became.

‘The prominence you see in the photo extends around 500,000 miles, maybe a little less,’ McCarthy told DailyMail.com.

McCarthy took more than a million pictures of the sun and stitched them together for the final piece. He watched the plume grow until it broke off and floated off into space. Pictured is a raw image he took

‘It’s easy to visualize when you realize the sun is 865,000 miles wide!

‘The little bits I tracked in my live tweets were closer to a million miles out, but those didn’t make it into the final photo.’

McCarthy continued to explain that because so many images were used he incorporated a technique called ‘lucky imaging in his shots.

‘I use TIFF format (many astrophotographers use video format) because I find it gives me more control over rejecting bad frames when my wind picked up or seeing conditions worsened,’ he said.

Our atmosphere makes things tricky sometimes.’’



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Post-impact images of DART mission have not disappointed

Enlarge / Nailed the landing.

At a press conference shortly before NASA’s Double Asteroid Redirection Test (DART) spacecraft smashed into an asteroid, a reporter tried to get a sense of just what would happen as a bunch of metal and electronics smashed into a pile of rubble left over from the birth of the Solar System. “Give us a sense of this combat between our spacecraft and this rock,” the reporter asked a scientist at the Applied Physics Lab.

“The spacecraft’s going to lose,” APL’s Nancy Chabot quipped back.

The amazing thing about that loss is that we got to experience it in real time, as the last image from DART’s onboard camera cut out after only a small fraction of it was transmitted to Earth.

Details of the spacecraft’s crash landing/impact on the asteroid Dimorphos had to be captured on cameras that were quite a bit further from the point of impact. Many of those have now been made available, so we put together a collection of them and describe a bit about what you can see.

The closest cameras we had were on board LICIACube, a cubesat that was carried to space on board DART, and then separated a few weeks before impact. LICIACube had two onboard cameras (named Luke and Leia), one that does wide-field imaging, and one that can focus on details better. The Italian Space Agency, which ran the LICIACube mission, hasn’t indicated which camera produced which picture, but it released a number of them, including a distant view of the collision, close-ups taken shortly after, and an animation showing the sudden brightening after the collision scattered material into space.

Enlarge / A close-up and somewhat overexposed view of the impact, showing lots of material in the vicinity of Dimorphos.
Enlarge / A more distant view of the collision aftermath, showing that Dimorphos looks a bit indistinct due to all the material ejected in the aftermath of the collision.

For those uncertain, the collision didn’t produce enough light on its own to be visible in these images. Instead, the debris ejected from the asteroid by DART reflected a lot more sunlight than the asteroid could on its own.

The brightening was large enough that Earth-bound telescopes also caught the brightening; in a few cases, their operators put the images online as they became available. Both of the ones I’ve found show the Didymos/Dimorphos system moving peacefully past background stars from Earth’s perspective (with most of the light reflected off the far larger Didymos). Suddenly, the object brightens significantly, with the debris gradually moving off to one side of the asteroids.

There are two big differences between the images. One image taken by the ATLAS project, which is based in Hawaii but has telescopes there, South America, and South Africa—the collision was only visible from the last of those. In its image, the asteroid is moving right to left against the background stars.

In contrast, the Las Cumbres observatory’s data from a telescope in South Africa shows the Didymos system moving across the star field in the opposite orientation. But it also has some rather significant information: time stamps for each exposure in the animation, which makes it clear that most of the action took place over roughly a half hour.

The ESA has also produced a video of the collision that covers the same time period, and posted it online.



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