Tag Archives: 2022s

North America’s ranks of the ultrarich shrank 4% to $16.5 trillion amid 2022’s epic bear market—and the world actually lost ultrawealthy for the first time since 2019, study finds – Fortune

  1. North America’s ranks of the ultrarich shrank 4% to $16.5 trillion amid 2022’s epic bear market—and the world actually lost ultrawealthy for the first time since 2019, study finds Fortune
  2. Asia’s ultra-rich population records largest drop in the world. Here’s how North America and Europe did CNBC
  3. India bucks the trend, sees increase in population of ultra wealthy in 2022: Report Times of India
  4. World’s ultra-wealthy population SHRINKS for the first time since 2018 Daily Mail
  5. Altrata: Asia Records Sharpest UHNW Decline in 2022 finews.asia
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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‘Bros’ Accounted for 80% of All Transgender Characters in 2022’s Top Grossing Movies According to New Hollywood Diversity Study – Variety

  1. ‘Bros’ Accounted for 80% of All Transgender Characters in 2022’s Top Grossing Movies According to New Hollywood Diversity Study Variety
  2. Inclusion in Hollywood’s top movies lags for people of color, LGBTQ+ USA TODAY
  3. Progress toward parity for women on movie screens has stalled, report finds The Associated Press
  4. Culture Shift: Asian Representation in Movies Rose 12.5 Percent in 16 Years, Study Finds Hollywood Reporter
  5. Inclusion In Movie Casting Has Seen Little Progress Since 2007, USC Annenberg Study Finds Deadline
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Wall Street’s top strategist admits he ‘was wrong’ about a plunge in U.S. stocks as the S&P 500 is close to erasing 2022’s decline – Fortune

  1. Wall Street’s top strategist admits he ‘was wrong’ about a plunge in U.S. stocks as the S&P 500 is close to erasing 2022’s decline Fortune
  2. ‘We Were Wrong’: Morgan Stanley’s Wilson Offers Stocks Mea Culpa Bloomberg
  3. Morgan Stanley: May be short-term pain but long-term opportunity in emerging markets CNBC Television
  4. Morgan Stanley’s Mike Wilson admits ‘we were wrong’ about 2023 stock-market rally, but refuses to throw in the towel MarketWatch
  5. “We were wrong” to write off stocks’ AI-fueled rally, Morgan Stanley says Markets Insider
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Stocks fall in 2022’s final trading session as Wall Street wraps up worst year since 2008

Stocks fell on Friday as investors made their final trades in the worst year for the market since 2008.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average slipped 280 points, or 0.8%. The S&P 500 shed 1.1%, while the Nasdaq Composite dropped 1.4%.

Friday marks the final day of trading of what’s been a painful year for stocks. A volatile bear market, sticky inflation, and aggressive rate hikes from the Federal Reserve battered growth and technology stocks. These factors also weighed on investor sentiment.

All three of the major averages are marching toward their worst year since 2008, slated to snap a three-year win streak. The Dow fared the best of the indexes in 2022, down 8.58% through Thursday, while the S&P and tech-heavy Nasdaq tumbled 19.24% and 33.03%, respectively.

As the calendar year turns the corner, some investors think the pain is far from over, and expect the bear market to persist until a recession hits or the Fed pivots. Some also project stocks will hit new lows before rebounding in the second half of 2023.

“We’re sort of stuck in neutral right now, because there are more unanswered questions than there are known entities. … We’ve got a lot riding on this coming earnings season, when we think about the pressures that are going to exist on margins,” Rebecca Felton, senior market strategist at Riverfront Investment Group, said on “Squawk Box.”

“There are a lot of questions as we head into the new year, but we certainly will be happy to see 2022 go over,” Felton added.

Despite the yearly losses, the Dow and S&P 500 are on pace to snap three-quarter losing streaks. The tech-heavy Nasdaq, however, is on track for its fourth consecutive negative quarter for the first time since 2001.

Communication services stocks in the S&P 500 are down more than 40% on the year and consumer discretionary has fallen 37.4%, while energy, the large-cap index’s only positive sector, has soared nearly 58%.

Next week will see a slightly more active slate for economic data, highlighted by the nonfarm payrolls report set for Jan. 6. Financial markets are closed Monday in observance of the New Year’s Day holiday.

— Gabriel Cortes contributed reporting

Correction: A chart in this story has been updated to reflect the correct year-to-date decline for the Dow Jones Industrial Average.

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2022’s unforgettable moments in space exploration

Sign up for CNN’s Wonder Theory science newsletter. Explore the universe with news on fascinating discoveries, scientific advancements and more.



CNN
 — 

This year, humankind glimpsed the universe in ways that were never before possible, and space missions took unprecedented leaps forward in unraveling the mysteries of the cosmos.

We witnessed the first mission to the International Space Station funded entirely by space tourists. A new space-based internet service played a key role in the war in Ukraine. And there were historic launches of spacecraft and technology by NASA and its international partners that could one day be used to land humans on Mars.

“There is no doubt that 2022 was out of this world,” NASA Administrator Bill Nelson said in a statement. “2022 will go down in the history books as one of the most accomplished years across all of NASA’s missions.”

Here are some of the unforgettable space discoveries and moments from 2022.

After years of preparation, NASA finally got its latest lunar exploration program off the ground with an uncrewed test flight that carried anastronaut-worthy spacecraft around the moon.

The mission was chock-full of huge moments. The rocket that got the mission off the ground, the Space Launch System or SLS, became the most powerful rocket ever to reach orbit — boasting 15% more thrust than the Saturn V rockets behind the Apollo program.

Upon reaching space, the Orion capsule, which flew empty save for a few test mannequins, captured stunning images of the Earth and moon. And Orion’s orbital path swung farther out beyond the far side of the moon than any spacecraft designed to carry humans has traveled before.

The trial run has paved the way for future Artemis missions, with the aim of returning humans to the lunar surface before mapping out a pathway for the first human spaceflight to Mars.

In partnership with international space agencies, NASA not only made strides in its human exploration program, but it also notched steps forward in scientific endeavors. After decades of anticipation, the James Webb Space Telescope finally began observing the universe in July.

Since then, the world’s most powerful space observatory has turned its gaze on planets, stars and galaxies in infrared light, which is invisible to the human eye.

The telescope has spied unseen aspects of the universe and previously hidden features, including the most distant galaxies ever observed. Webb has also shared new perspectives on some of astronomy’s favorite cosmic features and captured them in a new light, such as the Pillars of Creation.

The telescope’s images have already gone beyond what astronomers expected — and the best news: Webb is just getting started.

The Webb telescope, however, wasn’t the only space observatory expanding our understanding of deep space. The Hubble Space Telescope spied the most distant single star ever observed, faintly shining 28 billion light-years away. The star existed just 900 million years after the big bang created the universe, and its light has traveled nearly 13 billion years to reach Earth.

Astronomers nicknamed the star Earendel, derived from an Old English word that means “morning star” or “rising light.”

Meanwhile, astronomers used the Event Horizon Telescope to capture an image of the supermassive black hole at the center of our galaxy for the first time. This first direct observation confirmed the presence of the black hole, known as Sagittarius A*, as the beating heart of the Milky Way.

While black holes don’t emit light, the shadow of the cosmic object was surrounded by a bright ring — light bent by the gravity of the black hole.

In late September, NASA successfully completed the first test mission for planetary defense. The space agency slammed a spacecraft into Dimorphos, a small asteroid that orbits a larger space rock named Didymos — and yes, the collision was intentional. The Double Asteroid Redirection Test, or DART, was a full-scale demonstration of deflection technology.

Neither Dimorphos nor Didymos poses a threat to Earth, but the system was a perfect target to test a technique that may one day be used to protect the planet from an asteroid strike.

The DART mission marked the first time humanity intentionally changed the motion of a celestial object in space. The spacecraft altered the moonlet asteroid’s orbit by 32 minutes.

And that’s not all 2022 offered when it came to the study of unusual objects in the skies. In June, NASA announced it would delve into the mysteries surrounding unidentified aerial phenomena, more popularly known as unidentified flying objects or UFOs. The space agency later selected a team of experts across numerous disciplines — including astrobiology, data science, oceanography, genetics, policy and planetary science — for the task.

Officials at NASA aren’t suggesting aliens may be responsible for such phenomena. The goal is merely to take a serious look at the as-yet-unexplained — but much publicly debated — topic of UAPs and how they might be studied through a scientific lens.

“Without access to an extensive set of data, it is nearly impossible to verify or explain any observation, thus the focus of the study is to inform NASA what possible data could be collected in the future to scientifically discern the nature of UAP,” according to a NASA news release.

Meanwhile on the red planet, the InSight lander’s mission came to an end due to a surplus of dust on its solar panels (and no whirlwinds to vacuum them clean), but the stationary spacecraft made history in 2022. InSight detected the largest quake on Mars and captured the sounds of space rocks slamming into the planet — which created craters that revealed treasure troves of subsurface ice.

As InSight winds down, the Perseverance rover’s sidekick has continued to take to the Martian skies, above and beyond its original five-flight mission. The Ingenuity helicopter broke its own altitude record and has aced 37 flights on the red planet since April 2021. The little chopper has acted as an aerial scout for Perseverance, which collected an incredible diversity of Martian rock and sediment samples.

Now, the rover is setting up a depot of samples that will be stored on the Martian surface. The samples will be retrieved and returned to Earth in 2033 via the ambitious Mars Sample Return program, which will send a lander and a duo of retrieval helicopters to the red planet later this decade.

Speaking of space rocks, a rare specimen traveled to Earth in 2014. But scientists just put its puzzle pieces together this year, and the discovery was announced in a US Space Command document.

The first known interstellar meteor to hit Earth crash-landed along the northeast coast of Papua New Guinea in January 2014.

Interstellar meteors are space rocks originating from outside our solar system, such as ʻOumuamua, the first known interstellar object in our solar system that was detected in 2017.

To be sure, NASA has seen many successes this year but also faced reminders of tragedy and disaster. Investigators set off in March to search suspected shipwreck sites in the Bermuda Triangle, a swath of the northern Atlantic Ocean said to be the site of dozens of shipwrecks and plane crashes, for a TV docuseries. But the crew stumbled upon something unexpected at another site off Florida’s east coast: a 20-foot-long (6-meter-long) piece of debris from the Space Shuttle Challenger, which broke apart shortly after takeoff in 1986 and killed all seven crew members aboard.

It was the first debris to be discovered since pieces from the shuttle washed ashore in 1996.

“This discovery gives us an opportunity to pause once again, to uplift the legacies of the seven pioneers we lost, and to reflect on how this tragedy changed us,” Nelson, the NASA administrator, said in a statement. “At NASA, the core value of safety is — and must forever remain — our top priority, especially as our missions explore more of the cosmos than ever before.”

As Russia launched its invasion in February and some areas of Ukraine lost internet access, a space-based internet system that barely existed a few years ago began to provide crucial connectivity.

Elon Musk’s SpaceX designed and launched the system, called Starlink. It makes use of thousands of small satellites orbiting a few hundred miles above Earth. The satellites work in tandem to blanket the globe in internet connectivity, and all that’s needed to get online is an easy-to-use Starlink satellite dish.

Musk and SpaceX sent thousands of those dishes to Ukraine. Though a funding controversy later ensued, the use of Starlink in the Eastern European country was hailed as a game changer in strategic communication for its military, allowing Ukraine to fight effectively, even as the ongoing war disrupted cellular phone and internet networks.

Starlink, however, is one small part of SpaceX’s booming business. The company routinely launches not only satellites but also astronauts into space on NASA’s behalf. And this year, SpaceX even flew a few wealthy thrill-seekers to the International Space Station on a mission brokered by Axiom. The event marked the first space station mission that was fully paid for by paying customers and included only private citizens.

There were four crew members. Michael López-Alegría, a former NASA astronaut-turned-Axiom employee, was mission commander. And the three paying customers were Israeli businessman Eytan Stibbe, Canadian investor Mark Pathy and Ohio-based real estate magnate Larry Connor.

The mission, called AX-1, launched on April 8 and was originally billed as a 10-day trip. Delays, however, extended the mission by about a week.

Allowing private missions to the space station is part of NASA’s plan for more commercial activity in low-Earth orbit as it turns its focus to exploring deep space.

Read original article here

2022’s unforgettable moments in space exploration

Sign up for CNN’s Wonder Theory science newsletter. Explore the universe with news on fascinating discoveries, scientific advancements and more.



CNN
 — 

This year, humankind glimpsed the universe in ways that were never before possible, and space missions took unprecedented leaps forward in unraveling the mysteries of the cosmos.

We witnessed the first mission to the International Space Station funded entirely by space tourists. A new space-based internet service played a key role in the war in Ukraine. And there were historic launches of spacecraft and technology by NASA and its international partners that could one day be used to land humans on Mars.

“There is no doubt that 2022 was out of this world,” NASA Administrator Bill Nelson said in a statement. “2022 will go down in the history books as one of the most accomplished years across all of NASA’s missions.”

Here are some of the unforgettable space discoveries and moments from 2022.

After years of preparation, NASA finally got its latest lunar exploration program off the ground with an uncrewed test flight that carried anastronaut-worthy spacecraft around the moon.

The mission was chock-full of huge moments. The rocket that got the mission off the ground, the Space Launch System or SLS, became the most powerful rocket ever to reach orbit — boasting 15% more thrust than the Saturn V rockets behind the Apollo program.

Upon reaching space, the Orion capsule, which flew empty save for a few test mannequins, captured stunning images of the Earth and moon. And Orion’s orbital path swung farther out beyond the far side of the moon than any spacecraft designed to carry humans has traveled before.

The trial run has paved the way for future Artemis missions, with the aim of returning humans to the lunar surface before mapping out a pathway for the first human spaceflight to Mars.

In partnership with international space agencies, NASA not only made strides in its human exploration program, but it also notched steps forward in scientific endeavors. After decades of anticipation, the James Webb Space Telescope finally began observing the universe in July.

Since then, the world’s most powerful space observatory has turned its gaze on planets, stars and galaxies in infrared light, which is invisible to the human eye.

The telescope has spied unseen aspects of the universe and previously hidden features, including the most distant galaxies ever observed. Webb has also shared new perspectives on some of astronomy’s favorite cosmic features and captured them in a new light, such as the Pillars of Creation.

The telescope’s images have already gone beyond what astronomers expected — and the best news: Webb is just getting started.

The Webb telescope, however, wasn’t the only space observatory expanding our understanding of deep space. The Hubble Space Telescope spied the most distant single star ever observed, faintly shining 28 billion light-years away. The star existed just 900 million years after the big bang created the universe, and its light has traveled nearly 13 billion years to reach Earth.

Astronomers nicknamed the star Earendel, derived from an Old English word that means “morning star” or “rising light.”

Meanwhile, astronomers used the Event Horizon Telescope to capture an image of the supermassive black hole at the center of our galaxy for the first time. This first direct observation confirmed the presence of the black hole, known as Sagittarius A*, as the beating heart of the Milky Way.

While black holes don’t emit light, the shadow of the cosmic object was surrounded by a bright ring — light bent by the gravity of the black hole.

In late September, NASA successfully completed the first test mission for planetary defense. The space agency slammed a spacecraft into Dimorphos, a small asteroid that orbits a larger space rock named Didymos — and yes, the collision was intentional. The Double Asteroid Redirection Test, or DART, was a full-scale demonstration of deflection technology.

Neither Dimorphos nor Didymos poses a threat to Earth, but the system was a perfect target to test a technique that may one day be used to protect the planet from an asteroid strike.

The DART mission marked the first time humanity intentionally changed the motion of a celestial object in space. The spacecraft altered the moonlet asteroid’s orbit by 32 minutes.

And that’s not all 2022 offered when it came to the study of unusual objects in the skies. In June, NASA announced it would delve into the mysteries surrounding unidentified aerial phenomena, more popularly known as unidentified flying objects or UFOs. The space agency later selected a team of experts across numerous disciplines — including astrobiology, data science, oceanography, genetics, policy and planetary science — for the task.

Officials at NASA aren’t suggesting aliens may be responsible for such phenomena. The goal is merely to take a serious look at the as-yet-unexplained — but much publicly debated — topic of UAPs and how they might be studied through a scientific lens.

“Without access to an extensive set of data, it is nearly impossible to verify or explain any observation, thus the focus of the study is to inform NASA what possible data could be collected in the future to scientifically discern the nature of UAP,” according to a NASA news release.

Meanwhile on the red planet, the InSight lander’s mission came to an end due to a surplus of dust on its solar panels (and no whirlwinds to vacuum them clean), but the stationary spacecraft made history in 2022. InSight detected the largest quake on Mars and captured the sounds of space rocks slamming into the planet — which created craters that revealed treasure troves of subsurface ice.

As InSight winds down, the Perseverance rover’s sidekick has continued to take to the Martian skies, above and beyond its original five-flight mission. The Ingenuity helicopter broke its own altitude record and has aced 37 flights on the red planet since April 2021. The little chopper has acted as an aerial scout for Perseverance, which collected an incredible diversity of Martian rock and sediment samples.

Now, the rover is setting up a depot of samples that will be stored on the Martian surface. The samples will be retrieved and returned to Earth in 2033 via the ambitious Mars Sample Return program, which will send a lander and a duo of retrieval helicopters to the red planet later this decade.

Speaking of space rocks, a rare specimen traveled to Earth in 2014. But scientists just put its puzzle pieces together this year, and the discovery was announced in a US Space Command document.

The first known interstellar meteor to hit Earth crash-landed along the northeast coast of Papua New Guinea in January 2014.

Interstellar meteors are space rocks originating from outside our solar system, such as ʻOumuamua, the first known interstellar object in our solar system that was detected in 2017.

To be sure, NASA has seen many successes this year but also faced reminders of tragedy and disaster. Investigators set off in March to search suspected shipwreck sites in the Bermuda Triangle, a swath of the northern Atlantic Ocean said to be the site of dozens of shipwrecks and plane crashes, for a TV docuseries. But the crew stumbled upon something unexpected at another site off Florida’s east coast: a 20-foot-long (6-meter-long) piece of debris from the Space Shuttle Challenger, which broke apart shortly after takeoff in 1986 and killed all seven crew members aboard.

It was the first debris to be discovered since pieces from the shuttle washed ashore in 1996.

“This discovery gives us an opportunity to pause once again, to uplift the legacies of the seven pioneers we lost, and to reflect on how this tragedy changed us,” Nelson, the NASA administrator, said in a statement. “At NASA, the core value of safety is — and must forever remain — our top priority, especially as our missions explore more of the cosmos than ever before.”

As Russia launched its invasion in February and some areas of Ukraine lost internet access, a space-based internet system that barely existed a few years ago began to provide crucial connectivity.

Elon Musk’s SpaceX designed and launched the system, called Starlink. It makes use of thousands of small satellites orbiting a few hundred miles above Earth. The satellites work in tandem to blanket the globe in internet connectivity, and all that’s needed to get online is an easy-to-use Starlink satellite dish.

Musk and SpaceX sent thousands of those dishes to Ukraine. Though a funding controversy later ensued, the use of Starlink in the Eastern European country was hailed as a game changer in strategic communication for its military, allowing Ukraine to fight effectively, even as the ongoing war disrupted cellular phone and internet networks.

Starlink, however, is one small part of SpaceX’s booming business. The company routinely launches not only satellites but also astronauts into space on NASA’s behalf. And this year, SpaceX even flew a few wealthy thrill-seekers to the International Space Station on a mission brokered by Axiom. The event marked the first space station mission that was fully paid for by paying customers and included only private citizens.

There were four crew members. Michael López-Alegría, a former NASA astronaut-turned-Axiom employee, was mission commander. And the three paying customers were Israeli businessman Eytan Stibbe, Canadian investor Mark Pathy and Ohio-based real estate magnate Larry Connor.

The mission, called AX-1, launched on April 8 and was originally billed as a 10-day trip. Delays, however, extended the mission by about a week.

Allowing private missions to the space station is part of NASA’s plan for more commercial activity in low-Earth orbit as it turns its focus to exploring deep space.

Read original article here

The most stunning NASA Artemis footage from 2022’s mission to the moon

NASA’s new rocket, called the Space Launch System, or SLS, received a firehouse of criticism — much of it earned for the 322-foot-tall vehicle’s enormous, mounting costs. The rocket was supposed to launch years ago. As the much-anticipated flight finally drew close this year, engine problems and leaking fuel delayed the maiden voyage multiple times. Then hurricane season awoke, further pushing back the launch.

But at 1:48 a.m. ET on Nov. 16, the space agency started SLS’s thunderous engines and finally blasted the new megarocket into space. The mission, called Artemis I, hauled the agency’s latest lunar-bound spacecraft, Orion, which carried three mannequins on a looping journey around the moon. In the coming years, perhaps as soon as 2025, an Artemis mission may once again land astronauts on our natural satellite’s chalky surface.

Now the most powerful operational rocket on Earth, SLS will play an integral role in helping the U.S. establish a permanent presence on and around the moon over at least the next decade or so. (Commercial rockets will play a fundamental role, too.) SLS is an “evolvable” rocket, meaning it can be set up in six different ways as NASA sends supplies, lunar base materials, and astronauts to the moon.

“It’s a great pickup truck. I’m glad we built it. And I’m ready to fly,” John Blevins, the chief engineer for NASA’s SLS rocket, told Mashable earlier this year.

SEE ALSO:

The space race forged immortal rock and roll guitars

NASA completed the Artemis I mission on Dec. 11, after Orion braved 5,000-degree Fahrenheit temperatures in Earth’s atmosphere and then splashed down in the Pacific Ocean. Indeed, the rocket has both its supporters and detractors. But, crucially, SLS has the strong support of Congress — thanks to valuable jobs and contracts in many districts — so the rocket will continue to fly, even if the early flights cost $4.1 billion per launch.

Below are the stunning views from the historic, 25-day maiden voyage.

Blastoff

This is footage of the blastoff in the early hours of Nov. 16. As soon as all six engines ignite, the rocket’s massive thrust pushes down on Earth and begins to lift the vehicle. Thirty seconds in, SLS is flying at 128 mph. Eventually the rocket will travel over 21,000 mph.

Flight into space

NASA released dramatic footage of the megarocket’s flight into space from a camera aboard the rocket. In the video above, you can see events at just over two minutes into the journey from the Kennedy Space Center in Florida. Strapped to the side of the rocket’s core orange-colored booster are two powerful white side boosters. These are integral parts of the vehicle, because they provide 75 percent of SLS’s thrust, or force pushing down against Earth, during the first couple of minutes that SLS speeds through the atmosphere.

But after they’ve spent their fuel, the boosters dramatically (though safely) blast away from the rest of the rocket, which includes the Orion spacecraft that sits atop SLS.

These two boosters, standing at 17 stories tall, are potent. “These are the largest solid boosters ever built,” Blevins told Mashable.

After the boosters fell away to the Atlantic Ocean, the rocket’s orange booster, fitted with four RS-25 engines (which also powered NASA’s Space Shuttles), continued to propel the SLS rocket beyond Earth. Eventually, the Orion spacecraft broke away from this last booster and blasted its own engines on a trajectory toward the moon.

Looking back home

The Orion spacecraft and solar array with the moon in the distance
Credit: NASA

On Day 1 of the Artemis mission, a camera on Orion’s solar array snapped an image of Earth as the spaceship zoomed toward the moon. Already, Orion was 57,000 miles away.

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The deeply cratered moon

The cratered moon as captured by Orion’s optical navigation camera.
Credit: NASA

Almost a week into the mission, the Orion capsule snapped images from just 80 miles above the lunar surface.

The views show the moon is a barren desert teeming with craters and hills. Crucially, NASA suspects some of the satellite’s craters contain bounties of water ice — a necessary resource for future deep space missions.

When a space rock slams into the moon, the impact crater often stays for billions of years, almost frozen in time. That’s because, unlike Earth, our lunar satellite has no weather to wash away the collision, nor intense geologic activity to blanket the surface in new rock.

Deep space

The Orion spacecraft with the moon and Earth in the distance.
Credit: NASA

On Day 13 of the mission, Orion’s orbit around the moon brought it 268,563 miles from Earth, a historic feat.

“Orion has now traveled farther than any other spacecraft built for humans,” NASA said.

In that orbit (called “distant retrograde orbit”), the spacecraft is flying some 40,000 miles above the lunar surface, enabling it to at times “look back” at our natural satellite and beyond, to Earth.

Close flyby

A close moon flyby shows a detailed view of the moon.
Credit: NASA

Almost three weeks into the journey, the Orion spacecraft fired its engines (which engineers call a “burn”) to swing nearby the moon, ultimately setting Orion on course to return to Earth. At the closest approach, Orion flew within 80 miles from the moon, allowing for detailed views of its craters and rugged terrain.

Below are views of the large craters Aristarchus and Herodotus. The meandering lines are likely collapsed lava tubes, which is a tunnel formed by underground lava flows. (Lava tubes are common in places like Hawaii. And, yes, the moon has a robust volcanic past, with eruptions happening within 100 million years ago, Science reports.)

Craters and meandering, collapsed lava tubes on the moon
Credit: NASA

Splashdown

After plummeting through Earth’s atmosphere, the Orion capsule parachuted down into the Pacific Ocean on Dec. 11. The waiting Navy’s USS Portland, with NASA and Navy crew aboard, recovered the charred spacecraft.

Artemis I is in the bag. The first, major step of NASA’s ambitions to return to the moon is complete. Next up is Artemis II, which may launch as early as 2024. Two astronauts will be aboard this time, though they won’t land on the moon (that’s Artemis III).

“With Orion safely returned to Earth we can begin to see our next mission on the horizon which will fly crew to the Moon for the first time as a part of the next era of exploration,” Jim Free, NASA’s associate administrator for the Exploration Systems Development Mission Directorate, said in a statement. “This begins our path to a regular cadence of missions and a sustained human presence at the Moon for scientific discovery and to prepare for human missions to Mars.”

The Orion spacecraft after splashdown. The USS Portland is in the distance.
Credit: NASA



Read original article here

2022’s Best, Most Innovative Phones

Photo: Florence Ion / Gizmodo

When it comes to smartphones, the last couple of years have felt stagnant, regardless of who you get your handsets from. With all the time we were confined to our homes, there was no need to have the latest and greatest as the world slowed down to a relative crawl. Upgraded specs and a better camera seemed tertiary compared to everything else.

Then, as we started immunizing and returning to the grind, having a capable smartphone became important again. I even felt inspired to upgrade this year, simply because I felt like “If I’m going back out into the world again, I better have a phone that takes pictures I don’t need to edit every time I want to share them.”

2022 wasn’t the year to convince people who previously weren’t ready to upgrade to move on to the cool new thing, but it was a great year to upgrade if you were already inclined to do so. The iPhone 14 Pro, for instance, didn’t just tread water and instead shined a light on where Apple’s heading, and it managed to be first to the table on features like satellite connectivity and fully adopting the eSIM protocol. And while Google’s Pixel 7 Pro is still reigning with its picture-taking capabilities, Samsung’s foldables are making every other Android phone seem dull by comparison.

2022 tried to be an exciting year, and for the most part, it kept us entertained enough to look forward to what’s on the horizon. Next year’s smartphone forecast seems too tempting not to upgrade. But before considering what’s ahead, we must first step back and see how far we’ve come.

Read original article here

Xbox Game Pass Is About To Get One Of 2022’s Best Games

Image: Raw Fury

Just because the spooky season has passed doesn’t mean Microsoft’s Netflix-like subscription service is fresh out of spice to stimulate your gaming senses for the rest of November. While November’s assortment of games isn’t quite as loaded as last month’s helpings, it does feature a diverse hodgepodge of games, including one of the best-written titles to come out of 2022.

Here’s everything coming to and leaving Xbox Game Pass in the coming weeks:

November 15

  • Pentiment (Cloud, Console, and PC)
  • Somerville (Cloud, Console and PC)
  • Vampire Survivors (Cloud)

November 17

  • Dune: Spice Wars (Game Preview) (PC)
  • Ghostlore (Game Preview) (PC)
  • Lapin (Cloud, Console, and PC)
  • Norco (Cloud and Console)

November 22

  • Gungrave G.O.R.E (Cloud, Console, and PC)

November 29

  • Insurgency: Sandstorm (Cloud and Console)
  • Soccer Story (Cloud, Console, and PC)

November 30

  • Warhammer 40,000: Darktide (PC)

Read More: A Stunning Southern Dystopia Is One Of The Best-Written Games Of The Year

The creme de la creme of this month’s assortment of Game Pass games isn’t the spice melange of the Dune real-time strategy game but rather a little-known text-based point-and-click adventure game called Norco. You play as Kay, a 20-year-old woman who returns to her childhood home after the passing of her mother from cancer. When you aren’t completing your mother’s half-finished chores with the help of a self-aware robot named Million, you’re searching the industrial underbelly of New Orleans for your brother Blake, who went missing shortly after your mother’s passing. In our review of Norco, Kotaku said the game is “a stunning piece of magical realism” with exceptional dialogue that “plays its cards with enormous subtlety.”

If you missed out on playing this gem when it was a Game Pass PC offering back in March, now’s your chance to give this Disco Elysium-esque game a try. Fair warning, Norco contains instances of violence, suicide, substance use, and mature language.

If you’re in the upper echelon of Game Pass’ Ultimate tier and feel a tingle in your spine at the fact that “LeBron James frame data” is a phrase you can say now that makes sense, you get the added bonus of a free MultiVersus MVP pack drop this month. Obviously, reaping the benefits of this bundle’s variant, ring-out, and banners requires you to have the MultiVersus installed on your gaming device. And all Game Pass subscribers will get a bounty of DLC updates for The Elder Scrolls Online: Firesong (available today), The Elder Scrolls Online: Dark Heart of Skyrim Celebration (available on November 17), and Dead by Daylight: Forged in Fog (available on November 22).

Game Pass, much like the saying “out with the old in with the new,” is losing some games to make way for the new hotness. The following games are going back into the Xbox vault as of November 30:

  • Archvale (Cloud, Console, and PC)
  • Deeeer Simulator (Cloud, Console, and PC)
  • Final Fantasy XIII-2 (Console and PC)
  • Mind Scanners (Cloud, Console, and PC)
  • Mortal Shell (Cloud, Console, and PC)
  • Space Warlord Organ Trading Simulator (Cloud, Console, and PC)
  • Undungeon (Cloud, Console, and PC)
  • Warhammer 40,000 Battlesector (Cloud, Console, and PC)

      

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Pacific Super Typhoon Hinnamnor becomes 2022’s strongest storm

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The Atlantic may be wrapping up its quietest August in 25 years, but the strongest tropical system of 2022 is raging in the northwest Pacific. Super Typhoon Hinnamnor, the equivalent of a Category 5 hurricane, is on course to strike one or more of the islands of Japan.

The storm’s maximum sustained winds on Tuesday afternoon Eastern time were estimated to be about 160 mph by the U.S. Joint Typhoon Warning Center, which qualifies it as a rare super typhoon. Gusts of 190 mph were likely within the eyewall, the ring of destructive winds around the calm storm center. The powerhouse storm was located about 400 miles south-southeast of Japan’s Kyushu island and was churning west at 19 mph.

Typhoons in the northwest Pacific are no different from hurricanes in the Atlantic; they are just called different things. To become a “super typhoon,” a storm must attain sustained winds of at least 150 mph.

Atlantic heating up, with tropical storm formation expected this week

As Hinnamnor barrels westward, the main body of Japan isn’t under any watches or warnings yet, but storm and high-wave warnings have been hoisted for the Daito Islands southeast of Okinawa, which are home to about 2,100 residents. The two small populated islands, Minamidaitojima and Kitadaitojima, sit about 200 feet above sea level at their highest point and are made out of limestone that built up atop ancient coral reefs.

The storm center is predicted to pass 93 miles south of Kadena Air Base on Okinawa at 7 p.m. local time Wednesday, producing up to 5 to 6 inches of rain and wind gusts up to 69 mph, according to Stars and Stripes.

It’s unclear just how close the storm will get to the more densely inhabited islands of Japan, as well as how the storm could eventually influence the weather in North America.

On Tuesday, the Japanese satellite Himawari-8 captured eerie views from above as the atmospheric buzz saw crawled west. The storm was a rather compact “annular cyclone,” characterized by one intense band of convection, or thunderstorm activity, surrounding a hollowed-out eye. Most hurricanes, typhoons and mature tropical cyclones feature a spiral of arcing squall lines and rain bands feeding into the center. Annular cyclones have a tighter radius of maximum winds and are more symmetrical, which helps them sustain their ferocity.

On the periphery of the typhoon, high, thin, wispy cirrus clouds can be seen on satellite radiating away from the center. That marks outflow, or exhaust at high altitudes as “spent” air expands away from the storm. The more already-processed air a storm evacuates from above it, the more the internal air pressure can plummet. That means the storm can in turn ingest more moisture-rich surface air in contact with the ocean. That fuels its sustenance or intensification.

Hinnamnor will probably maintain its strength for another day or so before the possibility of some modest wekaening.

Regardless, it’s already the strongest storm to spin up on Earth this year, and it could be very problematic wherever it strikes. In fact, it’s still expected to be at least a Category 3 storm five days from now.

It appears Hinnamnor may curve slightly southward, suppressed by high pressure to the north. This will probably keep its center just south of the island of Okinawa, but either way it’s much too close for comfort. The Japanese islands of Miyakojima, Tarama and Ishigaki appear to be at greater risk, with the closest pass probably sometime Friday or Saturday.

By then it will probably be faltering just a bit, and it may weaken to a Category 3 or low-end Category 4 storm, but severe impact is still expected. Weather models diverge markedly in their simulations thereafter but agree on the same basic premise: An approaching low-pressure system to the northwest will help scoot Hinnamnor northward.

The American (GFS) model then suggests Hinnamnor will slam early next week into South Korea, which endured disastrous flooding just three weeks ago. The European model favors a somewhat weaker Hinnamnor crossing over southern Japan with hurricane-force winds and copious rainfall.

It unfortunately appears that either scenario will continue to starve China of meaningful rainfall. The country has been facing a blistering heat wave and brutal drought that’s wreaking havoc on agricultural production.

There’s a remote possibility that Hinnamnor’s eventual absorption into a mid-latitude low-pressure system in seven to 10 days could bend the jet stream enough to even influence the weather in North America in the next two or three weeks. Picture throwing a rock into a gently flowing stream. That rock would affect the flow around it, resulting in ripples downstream. The crests and troughs of those ripples are analogous to high- and low-pressure systems. The specifics of how such a chain reaction may play out remain to be seen.

Hinnamnor’s fit of fury comes amid an anomalously quiet season for tropical cyclones in the northern hemisphere. Thus far the hemisphere’s tropical storm activity is only running about 53 percent of average, with half the number of expected major hurricane-strength systems.

In the meantime, meteorologists are also carefully monitoring a system in the Atlantic that will probably become Danielle and could make a run at hurricane strength next week. All indications point to it heading out to sea and sparing the U.S., though it could be something to monitor for Bermuda.

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