Tag Archives: explodes

Courtney Lindsey explodes out of the blocks but ALMOST fails to qualify for 200m semis | NBC Sports – NBC Sports

  1. Courtney Lindsey explodes out of the blocks but ALMOST fails to qualify for 200m semis | NBC Sports NBC Sports
  2. ‘That is truly remarkable’ – Kendra Harrison records fourth fastest time in history in women’s 100m hurdles Eurosport COM
  3. Keni Harrison Runs Fourth-Best 100m Hurdle Time EVER In World Athletics Championship Prelims! FloTrack
  4. Keni Harrison runs fourth fastest time IN HISTORY to win 100m hurdles heat at Worlds | NBC Sports NBC Sports
  5. Keely Hodgkinson makes it look EASY in 800m heat win at World Championships | NBC Sports NBC Sports
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Ancient Russian T-54 Tank Turned Into Rolling Bomb Explodes In Massive Shockwave – Yahoo News

  1. Ancient Russian T-54 Tank Turned Into Rolling Bomb Explodes In Massive Shockwave Yahoo News
  2. Russia claims to have remotely detonated tank laden with explosives, in apparent new tactic CNN
  3. Russian Fires Blow Leopard-2 Tanks to Ashes; Fearful Ukrainians ‘Reluctant’ to Fight I Report Hindustan Times
  4. Badly Damaged Russian Ka-52 Attack Helicopter Flies Without Its Tail Over Ukraine Yahoo News
  5. Russian Soldiers Get ‘Prize Money’ For Destroying HIMARS As Moscow Incentivizes Hunting Western Weapons EurAsian Times
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Paige explodes in ‘Summer House’ reunion trailer: Lindsay, Carl are jobless liars – Page Six

  1. Paige explodes in ‘Summer House’ reunion trailer: Lindsay, Carl are jobless liars Page Six
  2. Your First Look at the Summer House Season 7 Reunion | Summer House Sneak Peek | Bravo Bravo
  3. Summer House Reunion: Kyle Knew Bringing Up Carl’s Past ‘Was Going to Be a Knife to the Heart’ (Exclusive) PEOPLE
  4. Summer House’s Kyle Cooke Accuses Lindsay Hubbard of Starting Cheating Rumors After His and Amanda Batula’s Wedding: ‘She Sabotaged My Relationship’ Us Weekly
  5. The Summer House Season 7 Reunion Trailer Features Cheating Allegations, Friendship-Ending Remarks & Tears Bravo
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Jimmy Butler explodes for 56 as Heat stun Giannis Antetokounmpo, Bucks to put No. 1 seed on brink of elimination – Yahoo Sports

  1. Jimmy Butler explodes for 56 as Heat stun Giannis Antetokounmpo, Bucks to put No. 1 seed on brink of elimination Yahoo Sports
  2. Bucks vs. Heat score: Jimmy Butler explodes for franchise playoff record 56 points to lead Miami to Game 4 win CBS Sports
  3. JIMMY BUTLER GAME 4 FOURTH QUARTER TAKEOVER‼😱 ESPN
  4. Jimmy Butler’s 56 points power Heat past Bucks 119-114 and to stunning 3-1 series lead South Florida Sun Sentinel
  5. Jimmy Butler records Heat playoff RECORD after scoring 56 points to give Miami a 3-1 lead over Bucks Daily Mail
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Chicago teen nearly goes BLIND after boiling pot of chocolate explodes in her face

A 19-year-old student nearly went blind after a boiling pot of chocolate exploded in her face.

Samantha D’Aprile, from Chicago, Illinois, had been baking cookies with her mother in December 2021 when the pot shattered as she was hunched over it, launching boiling hot chocolate and shards of glass into her eyes.

She rushed to the bathroom and splashed water over her face, but her eyes quickly became swollen and her eyelids sealed shut. They remained sealed for five days, with doctors saying the damage was so bad it was as though someone had taken a ‘razor blade’ to them.

But Ms D’Aprile, who had perfect vision before the accident, has now had a ‘miracle’ recovery and is able to see perfectly again after resting at home. It comes after a teenager in Georgia was blinded in one eye when her hair dye tube exploded.

Ms D’Aprile, shown above after the accident, has made a full recovery and is back to her normal vision. Doctors described it as a ‘miracle’, and said that the moment when she splashed water on her face may have saved her eyes

Doctors discharged her after two days in hospital so she could recover at home, but she needed to return every day for tests. On day five, Christmas Day, she managed to open her eyes again

Ms D’Aprile is pictured above during her time in hospital, and afterward when she was able to open her eyes again

‘When I found out my vision was almost gone, I said to the doctors I didn’t want to live anymore,’ Ms D’Aprile told DailyMail.com.

‘I was in such a dark place and I was going crazy for the few days I couldn’t see. I couldn’t picture the rest of my life like that.’

She added: ‘Going from having the perfect vision to the next day being told I could be blind for the rest of my life was the scariest thing I have ever been through and I couldn’t wrap my head around it.’

After the pot exploded in her face, Ms D’Aprile said her eyes felt like they were ‘on fire’ as they started to swell shut.

She was rushed to hospital by her mother but had to be moved to another unit after the one they went to said it did not deal with burns.

She said: ‘I was in so much pain that my body started to shut down, they gave me morphine which helped the pain and I could breathe again. 

Samantha D’Aprile, 19, from Chicago, Illinois, was baking cookies with her mother in December 2021 when a bowl of boiling chocolate exploded in her face. Her mother rushed her to hospital, but she was unable to open her eyes for five days (Pictured above in hospital)

Ms D’Aprile, shown above with a friend, pictured before the accident. She rushed to the bathroom to splash water on her face when the chocolate pot exploded

Ms D’Aprile photographed in hospital after the injury. She suffered burns to her face as well as her eyes, which left her unable to see for five days

‘When I arrived at the hospital they rushed me right away to a room and did all sorts of treatments and tests on me. 

‘At this point, my eyes were swollen shut, I couldn’t open my mouth because that was also burnt shut, and I was very high on all these medications.’

An examination revealed she had burned her cornea — or the transparent dome-shaped area at the top of the eye.

Her eyelids were also burned.

Medics kept her in hospital for two nights to monitor her and administer treatment.

But Ms D’Aprile said the nights were ‘brutal’ and left her ‘unable to sleep’

She said: ‘I couldn’t sleep, and any sleep I did get I was woken up by nurses giving me medication and them prying my eyes open to put drops in, which was very painful.’

She was also given instructions by a blind specialist while in the hospital on how to walk, go to the bathroom, and do other daily tasks without being able to see.

Doctors treat eye burns using cycloplegic eyedrops, which temporarily paralyse the ring-shaped muscle that changes the shape of the eye’s lens — allowing it to focus. These muscles can spasm after burns.

Patients may also be administered with an antibiotic eye ointment to prevent infection.

Painkillers may also be administered. 

Doctors discharged Ms D’Aprile after two days so she could recover at home, although she still had to return daily for tests.

The student said: ‘Each day went by with me sitting in bed with my eyes shut. 

‘I was going crazy on the fact that I saw blackness and there was nothing I could do to fix it. 

‘On day three of not being able to see, the doctor opened my eyes to test if I had my vision still. 

‘The doctor opened them and I could barely see, but he slipped in “band-aids” for my eyes. 

‘He described my eyes as if someone took a razor and slit both of them.’

Medics feared Ms D’Aprile may lose her vision, or have reduced vision should cloudy patches be left in her cornea — which can be caused by injuries.

She said: ‘I had an 80 percent chance of being color blind because my cornea was so damaged. 

‘I prayed to god multiple times a day for me to keep my vision and that was the only hope I had.’

To help her eyes heal cold water was run over them. This can also help to soothe the pain

Ms D’Aprile is shown above with her mother. After the accident, she rushed to the bathroom to splash water onto her face

Five days after the accident, it was Christmas Day and the student decided to try and open her eyes again herself.

She found she was able to open them slightly, although this was extremely painful.

About two weeks after the accident, Ms D’Aprile found that her vision was back to normal and she was able to do everything she used to do.

This included reading, driving, looking at electronics, and finding that her eyes were less painful to open. 

More than a year after the accident, however, Ms D’Aprile says her vision is completely back to normal.

But she says it has still left scars on her mental health.

‘I get panic attacks about the accident but have learned to cope with it and what certain triggers are,’ she said.

‘I used to be super rebellious and never an overthinker, but now I don’t usually do anything out of my comfort zone and I am a lot more grounded.

‘It’s all a work in progress and all it takes is time to heal so I know it will get better with the mental factors but the accident is still relevant and I just need to be easier on myself and realize that this is all normal and a part of the healing process.  

‘My plans for the future are to finish school and get a good job in marketing, but mainly to live each day to the fullest and make the most memories with my friends and family.’

How are burnt eyes treated? 

Your eyes can get injured if they are struck or scraped by an object like metal slivers or wood chips, splashed with a boiling substance or exposed to chemicals.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) says about 2,000 Americans injure their eyes every day at work.

Thermal burns to the surface of the eye tend to damage the conjunctiva or cornea, the transparent part of the eye covering the iris and pupil.

Doctors may advise people to take painkillers, to relieve the pain.

Patients may also receive cycloplegic eye drops, which can prevent painful spasms of the muscles that constrict the pupil.

Antibiotics may also be administered to help prevent an infection.

If the eyelids are burned, doctors say these should be cleaned and then have an antibiotic applied to prevent an infection.

Source: Merck Manual 

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Cowboys at Buccaneers score: Dallas offense explodes en route to win, Tampa Bay falls flat

The Dallas Cowboys are moving on to the divisional round after a convincing win at Raymond James Stadium where they took down the Tampa Bay Buccaneers to wrap up Super Wild Card Weekend, 31-14. 

Both offenses were sluggish out of the gate as each registered consecutive three-and-outs to begin the game. Dallas then came alive on its third possession of the evening, traveling 80 yards on seven plays as Dak Prescott connected with Dalton Schultz for the game’s first touchdown. That did seem to open the flood gates as Tampa Bay then began moving the ball and got all the way to the Cowboys five-yard line. However, it was at that point when Tom Brady threw an interception in the end zone to Jayron Kearse. That was one of the few successful Bucs possessions of the night and their only shot at scoring when the game was still within reach. From there, Dallas scored three touchdowns on consecutive drives to help establish a 24-point lead. 

Even when Tampa Bay finally found the end zone at the end of the third quarter with a Brady 30-yard touchdown pass to Julio Jones, the Cowboys answered with a nine-play, 66-yard touchdown drive to go up 31-6. That really eliminate any slight inkling that Brady may pull another miraculous comeback out of his helmet.

Prescott finished with a superb stat line. He was 25 of 33 for 305 yards and four touchdowns. He also rushed for a score and added 24 yards on the ground. Schultz was his go-to target on the night, catching seven of his eight targets for a team-high 95 yards and two touchdowns. Meanwhile, Brady was 35 of 66 for 351 yards, two touchdowns and an interception.  

For a more detailed breakdown of how this game unfolded, check out our takeaways below. 

Why the Cowboys won

For a minute, it looked like Dallas was going to roll out a continuation of the Week 18 dud they had against Washington. Their first possession lasted roughly 10 seconds before punting the ball away, and they had another three-and-out on the following drive. During that stretch, Dak Prescott was unable to complete a pass. And then the switch was flipped. 

The Cowboys offense came alive, and it was thanks to the arm of Prescott that ripped off 11-straight completions, which were a new franchise playoff record. During that run, he conducted consecutive 80-yard touchdown drives. The first concluded with a touchdown to Dalton Schultz and Prescott then ran it in himself on a nifty fourth-and-goal play-call by Mike McCarthy. During that 11 completion streak, Prescott threw for 135 yards and a touchdown, while also adding that rushing score. 

Prescott didn’t slow down after that either, tossing another touchdown before halftime and another right after, making it four consecutive touchdown drives to help Dallas roll on a 24-0 run. Those scoring drives also weren’t layups either as they traveled 80, 80, 91, and 86 yards, slicing up this Tampa Bay defense up and down the field. That lead proved to be more than enough to keep a strong distance in front of Bucs. Even when they did finally get into the end zone, Dallas made sure snuff out any spark they had as they quickly answered with a 66-yard touchdown drive to go up 31-6.

After that initial sluggish start on the opening two drives, Dallas’ offense was also strong in critical situations, converting seven of their 11 third down situations and both fourth down tries. They were also successful in all four of their red zone trips, while the defense held the Bucs out of the end zone on two of their three trips. 

As it specifically relates to Prescott, it’s also notable that he did not throw a single interception in this game. That had been an issue for him throughout the regular season, being tied for the most interceptions in the league despite missing five games due to injury. If he can continue to keep the ball away from the opposition, Dallas will continue to be dangerous. 

The only real negative aspect of this game on the Cowboys side of things came on special teams with kicker Brett Maher, who missed four extra point attempts.

Why the Buccaneers lost

The big question surrounding the Buccaneers coming into these playoffs was whether or not they were a true postseason threat or a mere consolation winner of a dreadful division. From what we saw on Monday night, Tampa Bay didn’t look like a legitimate playoff contender by any stretch of the imagination. 

The offense was tremendously flat and Tom Brady did seem to struggle to find any sort of rapport with his pass catchers — specifically Mike Evans — early. As the Cowboys rolled out to a 24-0 lead, they Bucs offense punted five times (three three-and-outs), had an interception in the end zone, and were unable to score before time ran out in the first half. By the time they actually got on the scoreboard, the game was already out of reach and those holding out hope of a comeback were merely doing so because of the quarterback’s résumé rather than what the current product on the field was showing us they were. 

As has been the case throughout the season, the running game was nonexistent for Tampa Bay, which naturally impacts how defenses play against the pass. Even before the Bucs abandoned the run to try and throw themselves back into this matchup, they were not getting much of anything out of a backfield that rushed for 24 yards on seven carries in the first half. 

While the offense continued to have its fair share of issues, the defense didn’t exactly answer the bell either. They couldn’t get off the field as Dallas carved them up for long, soul-crushing drives, and particularly broke down in key areas of the field. The entire defense bit on Dak Prescott’s keeper touchdown run as no one followed him as he rolled out to his left and easily walked in for a touchdown. One of the bigger back-breaking moments in this loss came after Tampa Bay finally got into the end zone thanks to a 30-yard touchdown from Brady to Julio Jones. Dallas quickly moved down the field and got to the Buccaneers 18-yard line before deciding to go for it on fourth down. On that play, there was a complete breakdown in coverage that left CeeDee Lamb wide-open for the touchdown that put Tampa down by 25. 

This is the fourth one-and-done playoff trip for Tom Brady in his career. Now, all eyes will be on the quarterback and what he’ll do next. While there will be plenty of time to dissect all that, this was a game — and a season — to forget for TB12.  

Turning point

As is the case in most games, there were a handful of key swings in this game. Brady’s end zone interception was naturally a massive speed bump that blew out the tires of the Bucs offense. That was his first red zone interception since he joined Tampa Bay and snapped the longest streak in NFL history (407 attempts) of now throwing a pick in the red zone. 

With that turnover being sandwiched in between two Cowboys touchdowns, it exacerbated the miscue even more.  

While that swing was on the quarterback, there was also a decision by Todd Bowles in the first half that does deserve some second-guessing. On the possession following that interception, the Bucs found themselves down by 12 but finding some rhythm offensively. After starting at their own 25-yard line, they brought the ball to midfield and faced a fourth-and-3 situation, where Bowles elected to send out the punting unit. Given that the offense had started to show signs of life and where they were on the field, that should have been a moment to keep the unit on the field and go for it. 

Instead, they gave the ball back, and Dallas marched 91 yards down the field and went up by 18 points. In a playoff setting like this game, a little aggressiveness especially when your team started to build some momentum would’ve been the savvy move there by Bowles rather than playing it conservatively.  

Play of the game

Prescott’s second passing touchdown of the night was arguably his most impressive. With his initial reads bottled up and pressure coming up the middle, he was forced out to his left and was rolling towards the sideline before contorting his body to make an off-balanced throw that zipped right into the arms of Schulz. That concluded a 91-yard touchdown drive right before halftime that gave Dallas all the cushion they’d need to ensure the win. 

Prescott’s four passing touchdowns in this game tied a Cowboys playoff as he joined legends Troy Aikman and Roger Staubach. Prescott also had the highest passer rating (143.3) in a game in Cowboys playoff history (min. 20 attempts).

What’s next

From here, the Cowboys will gear up for their divisional round matchup with the San Francisco 49ers at Levi’s Stadium next Sunday at 6:30 p.m. ET. As for the Buccaneers, they’re about to enter what is poised to be a transformative offseason as Brady, who is set to hit free agency, decides his next move. 

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Start-up fails first launch as rocket explodes off Alaska’s coast

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CNN
 — 

A rocket operated by a California-based start-up failed near the coast of Alaska Tuesday, marking yet another mishap for companies hoping to offer their services to launch scores of small satellites into orbit.

The privately held ABL Space Systems attempted to launch its RS1 rocket at 1:27 p.m. local time (5:27 p.m. ET) in Alaska. But the company confirmed shortly after that there was an “anomaly,” an aerospace term for an issue or misstep, and the rocket “shut down prematurely.”

“This is not the outcome we were hoping for today, but one that we prepared for. We’ll revert with additional information when available,” the company said in a tweet. “Thanks to all for the support.”

The mission was aiming to carry two small satellites to orbit for OmniTeq, which recently spun off its space division. The company signed an agreement for ABL’s first launch in 2021 when it was still operating under the name L2 Aerospace.

ABL’s launch attempt on Tuesday was the second failure in two days for a burgeoning new industry: ABL is one among a long list of companies pursuing the same market — offering relatively cheap and easy access to launch services for operators of small satellites, which in years past have had to wait for extra room to open up aboard larger rockets.

On Monday, Virgin Orbit, a direct competitor of ABL attempting to launch its first mission out of the United Kingdom, acknowledged that its air-launched rocket failed to reach orbit.

The core of the business model propped up by companies like ABL and Virgin Orbit is offering frequent rides to space and making the process more responsive to the needs of small satellite companies, including those that are essentially building massive constellations of satellites in low-Earth orbit for a variety of purposes, such as providing space-based internet or monitoring Earth’s climate and resources.

These small spacecraft include SmallSats, which are as big as a family-size kitchen fridge, and a popular subset of SmallSats called CubeSats, which are standardized, miniature satellites that can be smaller than a shoebox.

The start-ups build rockets that are much smaller than SpaceX’s workhorse Falcon 9 rocket, for example. But so far, the new class of smaller rockets have not proven to be as reliable as their larger counterparts. Nearly every start-up in the industry has suffered at least one launch failure.

In a packed field, ABL was hoping to join a short list of US-based ventures that have notched at least one successful mission. The first, in 2018, was Rocket Lab, which so far has more than two dozen successful launches and three failures. Start-ups Astra and Firefly have also delivered satellites to orbit — as well as suffered setbacks.

Those companies may soon be joined by yet another start-up, Relativity, which currently has its first rocket poised at a launch site in Florida.

While all these rockets dedicated to launching small satellites are taking off, they do face competition from larger rockets that have started catering certain services to the same market. SpaceX, for example, started a SmallSat “rideshare” business in 2019 with its hefty Falcon 9 rocket, and the company so far has launched six missions dedicated to small satellites for various customers.

The failed ABL launch Monday comes after the first few attempts to get its RS1 rocket off the ground in December came up short. The company worked through several technical problems, including a faulty sensor and a couple pressurization issues, to get the RS1 ready for Tuesday’s flight attempt.



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Peru explodes into fiery protest as anger over political crises ignites

LIMA, Dec 13 (Reuters) – As Peru careers from one political crisis to another, the country has exploded in protest, with at least seven dead in the last week and the smoke of fires and tear gas hanging over city streets. A way out seems distant.

The spark of the current unrest was the ouster and arrest of leftist leader Pedro Castillo after he tried to dissolve Congress illegally. It followed a months-long standoff where lawmakers impeached him three times, the final time removing him from office.

Peru has been one of the economic stars of Latin America in the 21st century, with strong growth lifting millions out of poverty. But the political turmoil is increasingly threatening to derail its economic stability, with ratings agencies warning of downgrades, blockades impacting major mines in the world’s no. 2 copper producer, and protesters demanding Congress and new president Dina Boluarte step down.

For those watching closely it should be little surprise. Voters are fed up with the constant political infighting that has seen six presidents in the last five years and seven impeachment attempts.

The heavily fragmented unicameral Congress is loathed – with an approval rating of just 11%, according to pollster Datum. That is below Castillo’s, which despite a string of corruption allegations was 24% just before he was removed.

“The Peruvian people are just exhausted from all the political machinations, the crime, uncertainty and stalling growth,” said Eric Farnsworth, a vice president at the Council of the Americas and Americas Society.

He said Boluarte’s pledge to hold early elections in April 2024 could help calm things in the short run, but that would not solve entrenched issues of a divided electorate and infighting between the presidency and Congress.

“It’s a toxic soup, with a weak president, a dysfunctional Congress, the deposed president seeking to generate a popular resistance to his legitimate removal, an agitated populace, and little vision from anyone on how to get out of this mess.”

Peru’s constitution makes it relatively easy for an unhappy legislature to initiate an impeachment, while a lack of dominant political parties – the largest, Popular Force, controls just 24 of 130 seats – means agreement is thin on the ground. Corruption has also been a frequent problem.

The only way many Peruvians feel they can make their voices heard is in the street. In recent days, protesters have blocked roads, set fires, and even taken over airports. Police have come under criticism from human rights groups for use of firearms and teargas. At leave seven people, mostly teenagers, have died.

There are echoes of protests in 2020, when thousands took to the streets after the impeachment and ouster of popular centrist leader Martin Vizcarra, who was succeeded by Congress leader Manuel Merino. After two died he also was forced to resign.

Castillo, less popular but with a support base in rural regions that helped him to a narrow election win last year, has looked to stoke things from jail, where he is being held while he is investigated over accusations of rebellion and conspiracy.

On Monday, he called Boluarte, his former vice president, a “usurper” in a written letter to the Peruvian people where he claimed to still be the country’s legitimate leader.

“What was said recently by a usurper is nothing more than the same snot and drool of the coup-mongering right,” he wrote, adding a call – long popular among a younger generation of Peruvians – for a new constitution.

“The people should not fall for their dirty games of new elections. Enough abuse! A Constituent Assembly now! Immediate freedom!” he wrote.

Boluarte, a former member of Castillo’s far-left party who fell out with its leader and criticized Castillo after his attempt to dissolve Congress, has called for calm around the country and pledged a government of all stripes. But she faces a tough reality, caught between protesters and a hostile parliament.

With the recent history of Peruvian leaders littered with impeachment and jail, it is questionable whether Boluarte can hang on until new elections are held.

“Dina Boluarte is a murderer. Five people have died, and they say nothing. Nothing matters to her, she is shameless, treacherous,” said Guadalupe Huaman, a Castillo supporter protesting with a Peruvian flag and hard hat in Lima.

Cutting Peru’s outlook to negative and threatening a potential downgrade, ratings agency S&P said in a report on Monday that there seemed to be little to be hopeful about.

“The way Peru’s most recent change in power occurred reflects heightened political deadlock, and it increases risks ahead,” it said.

Farnsworth voiced similar concerns. While Peru had a history of volatile politics, it was unclear how things would resolve this time, he said.

“I think this time is somehow different,” he said. “There is no real path forward it seems.”

Reporting by Marco Aquino and Adam Jourdan, Editing by Rosalba O’Brien

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

Adam Jourdan

Thomson Reuters

Regional bureau chief in South Latin America with previous experience leading corporate news coverage in China and as an independent film director and producer.

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Jay Leno Rushed to Hospital With Burn Injuries After Vintage Car Explodes

Jay Leno was reportedly rushed to the hospital after one of his vintage cars unexpectedly erupted in flames on Sunday, leaving the comedian with burns to his face.

“Thank goodness, Jay is ok,” his agent, Steve Levine, told The Daily Beast via email on Monday afternoon.

The gas fire erupted at the Los Angeles garage where Leno keeps his prized vintage car collection. The flames burned the left side of Leno’s face, but thankfully spared his eye and ear, anonymous sources told TMZ, which first reported the news.

“I got some serious burns from a gasoline fire,” Leno said in a statement provided to The Daily Beast. “I am ok. Just need a week or two to get back on my feet.”

Leno was taken to the Grossman Burn Center where he is recovering from his injuries.

He has reportedly canceled all of his engagements for the week, including an appearance at The Financial Brand conference on Sunday.

“His family was not able to provide us very many details, but there was a very serious medical emergency that is preventing Jay from traveling,” conference organizers said in an email to attendees obtained by Yahoo! News. “All we know is that he is alive, so our prayers go out to him and his family tonight.”

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Hubble Space Telescope captures a supernova as it explodes

Talk about being at the right place at the right time.

In 2010, the Hubble Space Telescope captured several images of the Abell 370 galaxy cluster. In itself, that’s hardly a groundbreaking feat. But a team of astronomers systematically reviewing archival Hubble images discovered something incredible in those images: an image of an infant supernova that exploded some 11.5 billion years ago, taken just hours after the star’s death.

The team, led by postdoctoral researcher Wenlei Chen of the University of Minnesota, was looking for gravitationally lensed, transient events, and that’s exactly what the supernova is. It’s hidden behind Abell 370, but because light bends around the galaxy cluster due to its gravitational force — an effect known as gravitational lensing — we can actually see it from our vantage point, albeit in a warped manner.

Related: Hubble telescope spies a cosmic ‘spider web’ containing clues to dark secret

The left panel shows the portion of Abell 370 where the multiple images of the supernova appeared. Panel A, a composite of Hubble observations from 2011 to 2016, shows the locations of the multiply-imaged host galaxy after the supernova faded. Panel B, a Hubble picture from December 2010, shows the three images of the host galaxy and the supernova at different phases in its evolution. Panel C, which subtracts the image in Panel B from that in Panel A, shows three different faces of the evolving supernova. Using a similar image subtraction process for multiple filters of data, Panel D shows the different colors of the cooling supernova at three different stages in its evolution. (Image credit: NASA, ESA, STScI, Wenlei Chen (UMN), Patrick Kelly (UMN), Hubble Frontier Fields)

Inputting the Hubble data into models and analyzing details in the images like brightness and color, Chen and his team determined that the original star that had gone supernova was likely a red supergiant with a diameter approximately 530 times that of the sun.

They also determined that the first image in the series of three was taken by Hubble just six hours after the explosion following the core collapse, with the second and third being taken about 10 and 30 days after the explosion, respectively.

And because the supernova has high redshift — the wavelengths of light are stretched and shifted towards the red side of the spectrum due to the expansion of the universe — the astronomers were able to estimate the supernova’s age to approximately 11.5 billion years old, making it one of the oldest and most distant supernovas we’ve ever seen. 

The team hopes that their modeling will aid the study of similar distant supernovas, should they be discovered. Those discovered, in turn, would be able to progress the study of stellar populations at high redshift.

A paper based on this research was published in the journal Nature (opens in new tab) today.

Follow Stefanie Waldek on Twitter @StefanieWaldek (opens in new tab). Follow us on Twitter @Spacedotcom (opens in new tab) and on Facebook (opens in new tab). 



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