Tag Archives: flies

India’s ‘Fighter’ Flies To $25M Global Bow; ’Aquaman 2’, ‘Migration’, ‘Beekeeper’ Hit New WW Milestones – International Box Office – Deadline

  1. India’s ‘Fighter’ Flies To $25M Global Bow; ’Aquaman 2’, ‘Migration’, ‘Beekeeper’ Hit New WW Milestones – International Box Office Deadline
  2. New Indian Action Movie Jumps Into Box Office Top 10 In Slow Moviegoing Weekend Screen Rant
  3. Fighter Box Office Collection Day 2: Hrithik Roshan-Deepika Padukone’s Film Registers A “Massive Growth” NDTV Movies
  4. Fighter Movie Review: Top-notch aerial action elevates a cliched narrative IndiaTimes
  5. ‘Fighter’ review: Jingoism grounds Siddharth Anand’s air force tribute Mint Lounge

Read original article here

As Texas Flies 91 Migrants to Chicago on Private Plane, Johnson Says Texas Governor Determined to ‘Create Chaos’ – WTTW News

  1. As Texas Flies 91 Migrants to Chicago on Private Plane, Johnson Says Texas Governor Determined to ‘Create Chaos’ WTTW News
  2. Texas begins flying migrants to sanctuary cities with first flight to Chicago Fox News
  3. Chicago migrant crisis: Private plane from El Paso TX drops off over 100 asylum seekers at O’Hare Airport, city officials say WLS-TV
  4. Planeload of migrants sent to O’Hare Airport by Texas emergency management officials, City of Chicago confirms WGN TV Chicago
  5. After Chartered Private Jet From Texas Flies Migrants To O’Hare, Handlers Flee In Uber Block Club Chicago

Read original article here

Ex-US presidential bodyguard protects Prince Harry as royal flies into Germany for opening of Invictus Games – Daily Mail

  1. Ex-US presidential bodyguard protects Prince Harry as royal flies into Germany for opening of Invictus Games Daily Mail
  2. Prince Harry Makes First Outing of Invictus Games Düsseldorf 2023 PEOPLE
  3. Princess Diana would be ‘proud’ of Prince Harry as he continues to make a positive impact The Mirror
  4. Inside Prince Harry, Meghan Markle’s ‘luxurious’ stay in Germany amid financial struggles The News International
  5. Prince Harry and Meghan Markle to stay in a ‘wonderful’ £2,000 hotel this weekend Express
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

Read original article here

The prime minister of New Zealand flies in a 30-year-old plane and prepared a spare plane for his trip to China in case the old one breaks down – Yahoo News

  1. The prime minister of New Zealand flies in a 30-year-old plane and prepared a spare plane for his trip to China in case the old one breaks down Yahoo News
  2. New Zealand leader’s plane so prone to breakdowns he takes a backup on China trip The Associated Press
  3. China, New Zealand should be ‘partners, not adversaries’, Xi tells Hipkins South China Morning Post
  4. New Zealand foreign minister confirms ‘very robust’ meeting with Beijing Yahoo News
  5. New Zealand PM heads to China with two air force jets due to breakdown fears Times of India
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

Read original article here

Green comet flies over Bay Area

A rare green comet is passing through our solar system for the first time in 50,000 years, and over the weekend, Bay Area stargazers could have the best chance of spotting it in the night sky. 

Dubbed C/2022 E3 (ZTF), the comet was first discovered in Jupiter’s orbit last March by astronomers Frank Masci and Bryce Bolin at the Palomar Observatory in San Diego County, and named after the Zwicky Transient Facility where it was identified. The comet made its closest approach to the sun on Jan. 12, and is now on a path that will bring it closest to Earth — about 27 million miles away — on Feb. 2.

Paul Lynam, an astronomer at the Lick Observatory on Mount Hamilton, told SFGATE it’s unlikely that anyone in the Bay Area will be able to see the comet with the naked eye due to light pollution, so a backyard telescope — or ideally, a small pair of binoculars, which offer a wider field of view — will come in handy. 

Lynam witnessed the comet from the observatory at about 9 p.m. on Wednesday night, and recommends that people look for it by scanning the northeastern night sky between the Big Dipper and the Little Dipper.

“What I noticed with a cheap pair of binoculars was an extended, diffused object that was more spread out than a star, and slightly brighter,” he said. “It looked like a lady’s hand fan that was open at an angle slightly less than 90 degrees.” 

If you can’t see it right away, don’t give up.

“Comets have already been known to change their appearance quite quickly from night to night,” Lynam said. “If you are able to see it, you may recognize that it’s moving relative to the stars in the background, and if you’re lucky, you may see the morphology — the shape and structure of the tail.”

Gerald McKeegan, an astronomer at the Chabot Space & Science Center in Oakland, said the comet may even appear to have two tails — one made of gas and one made of particles. He believes there’s still a chance observers “in very dark sky locations far from city lights” might be able to see it without visual aids from now until the first few days of February. After that, the comet will remain in the night sky, but it will become increasingly difficult to see from the U.S. as it moves over the southern hemisphere. 

Comet C/2022 E3 (ZTF) in the sky of Molfetta, Italy, before sunrise around 6 a.m. on Jan. 24, 2023. It last passed Earth 50,000 years ago, when Neanderthals still lived in our latitudes. The comet was discovered in early March 2022 and was initially thought to be an asteroid. 

NurPhoto via Getty Images

In spite of its name, observers shouldn’t expect the green comet to zoom across the sky in a vibrant, shamrock-colored hue, David Prosper, a night sky network administrator with the Astronomical Society of the Pacific in San Francisco, told SFGATE. 

“The funny part is while it’s called the green comet, the color isn’t really noticeable unless you get some good magnification on it,” said Prosper, who is also an administrator of the NASA Night Sky Network. “It seems folks report a definite green color when looking at it through telescopes that are 6 inches in diameter or greater, but everyone’s eyes are different. Photos do show the green color readily.” 

Unfortunately, there are a number of factors at play that could impact the visibility of the comet. Prosper told SFGATE the moon is expected to become increasingly bright over the next week, and Dalton Behringer, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service, said scattered to broken stratus clouds as well as a chance of rain may hinder observers on Saturday and Sunday night.   

“If people are really trying to see it, they could go into higher terrain and get above the cloud layer,” Behringer said. 

That being said, Thursday and Friday night could be your best bet. Later this weekend, stargazers may have more luck by heading over to the Chabot Space & Science Center, which plans to host free telescope viewing from 7:30 to 10:30 p.m. on Saturday and Sunday night, and again on Feb. 3 and 4. San Francisco Amateur Astronomers plans to host a public star party this Saturday from 6 to 10 p.m. at the Presidio Parade Grounds.

Lynam and McKeegan also suggested looking out for Jupiter, which will appear as one of the brightest lights in the western sky — you can even take a look at the four moons cycling around the planet if you have a pair of binoculars. Mars will also be visible, emitting a bright orange or red light.

Regardless of what you might find among the stars, it’s worth taking a look up, as the comet’s orbit is unpredictable and thousands of years could pass before it returns, if it does at all.

“We can’t definitively say what the comet’s orbit will be. It could come once and get thrown out of our solar system completely,” Lynam said. “It could take thousands of years, or it may never come back.”



Read original article here

Teary Bolsonaro calls loss unfair, condemns violence, flies to Florida

Comment

SÃO PAULO — Two days before leaving office, ending a tumultuous four years as the race-baiting, Amazon-developing, coronavirus-downplaying, vaccine-skeptical leader of Latin America’s largest country, Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro remained defiant in a teary farewell address on Friday, defending his record and saying the election that led to his ouster was not impartial, but condemning violence against the result.

Then he flew to Florida, Brazilian media reported, where in the past he has met with former president Donald Trump at Mar-a-Lago. He apparently planned to skip the inauguration of Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva on Sunday, when the outgoing leader traditionally presents the presidential sash to his successor, a ceremony intended to reaffirm the country’s young democracy.

Bolsonaro’s remarks, live-streamed for nearly an hour Friday morning, were his most extensive since he lost the election in October. He still has not conceded the race, but acknowledged that a new administration would take over on Sunday.

“Nothing is lost,” he told supporters. “Brazil is a fantastic country, and Brazil doesn’t end on January first.”

Lula won Brazil’s closest-ever election. That was the easy part.

Concern is growing over security around Lula’s inauguration in Brasília on Sunday. Bolsonaro supporters have camped outside army installations since his Oct. 30 defeat to call for a military coup to keep him in power. A group of radical bolsonaristas set fire to buses and tried to invade federal police headquarters in the capital this month after the arrest of a Bolsonaro supporter who was accused of having “expressly summoned armed people to prevent the certification of elected” officials.

On Saturday, police said they defused a bomb planted by a Bolsonaro supporter in a tanker truck full of gas near the international airport in Brasília. They said the suspect told investigators his plan was to provoke chaos to draw military intervention.

Bolsonaro asked supporters last month not to block highways, but said the gatherings outside army installations were legitimate protests. On Friday, he condemned violent demonstrations — and lamented that the Brazilian media had connected the bomb suspect to him.

“Nothing justifies this attempted terrorist act here in Brasília airport,” Bolsonaro said. “[Have] Intelligence. Let’s show we are different from the other side, that we respect the norms and the Constitution.”

His actions might sound familiar to Americans. Trump, a Bolsonaro ally, blamed his 2020 reelection loss on unfounded claims of fraud, declined to concede, urged his supporters to protest the result and skipped the inauguration of President Biden.

Bolsonaro said it had been difficult to stay mostly silent for two months, but refrained from speaking because anything he said “could make things more tumultuous.”

“I didn’t leave the four lines” of the Constitution, he said, comparing the document to a soccer pitch. “Either we live in a democracy or we don’t. Nobody wants an adventure.”

Gun ownership went up. Homicides went down. Brazil debates why.

Bolsonaro sought to explain to his more radical supporters why he didn’t embrace stronger efforts to stay in power. After he spent years casting doubt on the security of electronic voting machines, many of his supporters have claimed without evidence that the election was stolen.

“Now, many times, even within the four lines, you need to have support,” he said. But he found no support in the electoral court, the congress or the armed forces to reverse the election result. He asked his party to file a lawsuit alleging possible fraud in balloting, but the electoral court quickly rejected the claim.

He said he recognized the suffering of his supporters, but asked them to put themselves in his place. He said they had lost a battle, but not the war. As he spoke, comments expressing frustration began to appear on his Facebook page.

“Unfortunately we are adrift,” one person wrote. “So there was no fraud??? Hope is over.”

Bolsonaro said he would lead the opposition to Lula.

“The picture is not good, but that’s not why we are going to throw in the towel and stop opposing,” he said.

After the valedictory, Brazilian media reported, he boarded Força Aérea Brasileira — Brazil’s Air Force One — on a flight to Orlando. The presidency did not confirm his departure to The Washington Post, but recent filings with the Federal Register have indicated preparations for such a trip.

Days after Bolsonaro’s loss, allies met with Trump aides in the United States to discuss next steps. His son Eduardo, a Brazilian congressman, met Trump at Mar-a-Lago last month in Palm Beach, Florida.

Read original article here

S. Korea launches jets, fires shots after North flies drones

SEOUL, South Korea (AP) — South Korea’s military fired warning shots, scrambled fighter jets and flew surveillance assets across the heavily fortified border with North Korea on Monday, after North Korean drones violated its airspace for the first time in five years, officials said.

South Korea’s military detected five drones from North Korea crossing the border, and one traveled as far as the northern part of the South Korean capital region, South Korea’s Joint Chiefs of Staff said.

The military responded by firing warning shots and launching fighter jets and attack helicopters to shoot down the North Korean drones. The attack helicopters fired a combined 100 rounds but it wasn’t immediately known if the North Korean drones were shot down. There were no immediate reports of civilian damage on the ground in South Korea, according to the Defense Ministry.

One of the aircraft, a KA-1 light attack plane, crashed during takeoff but its two pilots both ejected safely, defense officials said. They said they also requested civilian airports in and near Seoul to halt takeoffs temporarily.

South Korea also sent surveillance assets near and across the border to photograph key military facilities in North Korea as corresponding measures against the North Korean drone flights, the Joint Chiefs said. It didn’t elaborate, but some observers say that South Korea likely flew unmanned drones inside North Korean territory.

“Our military will thoroughly and resolutely respond to this kind of North Korean provocation,” Maj. Gen. Lee Seung-o, director of operations at the South Korean Joint Chiefs of Staff, told reporters.

South Korea’s public confirmation of any reconnaissance activities inside North Korea is highly unusual and likely reflects a resolve by the conservative government led by President Yoon Suk Yeol to get tough on North Korean provocations. North Korea could respond with more fiery rhetoric or weapons tests or other provocation, some observers say.

On Friday, South Korea detected two short-range ballistic missile launches by North Korea, the latest in the country’s torrid run of weapons tests this year. Friday’s launches were seen as a protest of the South Korean-U.S. joint air drills that North Korea views as an invasion rehearsal.

It’s the first time for North Korean drones to enter South Korean airspace since 2017, when a suspected North Korean drone was found crashed in South Korea. South Korean military officials said at the time that the drone with a Sony-made camera photographed a U.S. missile defense system in South Korea.

North Korea has previously touted its drone program, and South Korean officials said the North has about 300 drones. In 2014, several suspected North Korean drones equipped with Japanese-made cameras were found south of the border. Experts said they were low-tech but could be considered a potential security threat.

Earlier this month, North Korea claimed to have performed major tests needed to acquire its first spy satellite and a more mobile intercontinental ballistic missile capable of reaching the U.S. mainland. They were among high-tech weapons systems that North Korean leader Kim Jong Un has vowed to introduce along with multi-warheads, underwater-launched nuclear missiles, nuclear-powered submarines and hypersonic missiles.

North Korea released low-resolution photos of South Korean cities as viewed from space, but some experts in South Korea said the images were too crude for surveillance purposes. Such assessments infuriated North Korea, with Kim’s powerful sister Kim Yo Jong issuing a series of derisive terms to insult unidentified South Korean experts and express her anger.

North Korea is to hold a key ruling Workers’ Party conference this week to review past policies and set policy goals. Some experts say that during the meeting, North Korea will likely reaffirm its push to bolster nuclear and missile arsenals to cope with what it calls hostile U.S. policies, such as U.S.-led international sanctions and its regular military training with South Korea.

North Korea would eventually use its boosted nuclear capability as a bargaining chip to win international recognition as a legitimate nuclear state, the relaxing of international sanctions and other concessions, analysts say.

Read original article here

James Cameron Flies One-Finger Salute To Fans Leaving ‘Avatar: The Way Of Water’ Screening

Director James Cameron appeared to take issue with some fans after a special screening of his latest film — “Avatar: The Way of Water” — flipping them the bird when they booed him for refusing to stop and sign a few autographs.

According to entertainment website TMZ, Cameron was at the WGA building in Beverly Hills on Saturday for the special screening — and when he went to leave, he was immediately surrounded by a crowd of fans clamoring for autographs.

As Cameron stepped into a waiting vehicle without stopping to sign anything, the crowd flipped on the famed director. “F*** Avatar,” someone said — and Cameron responded by rolling down his window just far enough to flash his middle finger at the crowd.

WATCH:

The long-awaited sequel to Cameron’s visually stunning 2009 film has done well at the box office so far, bringing in $134 million in North America and an additional $301 million from overseas markets — which places “The Way of Water” near the top for post-COVID opening weekends — but that may not be enough to balance the scales.

“The Way of Water” still fell short of the predicted $150-175 million for it’s first weekend in North American theaters — and with a $350 million price tag just for making the film, not to mention marketing it, the latest “Avatar” installment reportedly needs to land high among the top-grossing films of all time if producers expect to break even on the project.

But Cameron appears to have bet everything on the world he has created — he told GQ in November that he had already filmed the third installment in the series and the first act of a fourth film. When GQ pressed him on the possibility that, given his age, he might not ever make another film that was not a part of the franchise, he pushed back.

“I think first of all, that’s really unhealthy. Secondly, I’m not done until the big hook comes out from the side of the side curtain. So to me, everything, every idea, is a work in progress,” he said.

Disney seems confident that Cameron’s gamble will pay off as well. Tony Chambers, Disney’s EVP for theatrical distribution, said, “We’ve got a terrific movie that is playing across all demographics and (has) terrific word of mouth. We’ve got the screens and we’ve got a clear run. This isn’t about the opening day or the opening weekend. This is about the entire run.”



Read original article here

Orion flies far beyond the Moon, returns an instantly iconic photo

Enlarge / Orion, the Moon, and Earth in one photo.

NASA

NASA’s Orion spacecraft reached the farthest outbound point in its journey from Earth on Monday, a distance of more than 430,000 km from humanity’s home world. This is nearly double the distance between Earth and the Moon and is farther than the Apollo capsule traveled during NASA’s lunar missions in the late 1960s and early 1970s.

From this vantage point, on Monday, a camera attached to the solar panels on board Orion’s service module snapped photos of the Moon and, just beyond, the Earth. These were lovely, lonely, and evocative images.

“The imagery was crazy,” said the Artemis I mission’s lead flight director, Rick LaBrode. “It’s really hard to articulate what the feeling is. It’s really amazing to be here, and see that.”

LaBrode was speaking during a news conference at Johnson Space Center in Houston, where he and other NASA officials provided an update on the progress of the mission to test out the Space Launch System rocket and Orion spacecraft. This uncrewed test flight is a precursor to crewed missions later this decade, including a lunar landing on the Artemis III mission.

After it completed a successful launch, mission manager Mike Sarafin said the agency now has full confidence in the Space Launch System rocket. “The rocket is proven,” he said.

Orion still has work to do, of course. Its mission will not be complete until the spacecraft maneuvers back around the Moon, returns to Earth, survives reentry into the atmosphere, splashes down into the ocean, and is recovered off the coast near San Diego, California. That is scheduled to occur on December 11.

However, the mission is going so well that NASA has decided to add objectives, such as firing various thrusters for longer than intended to verify their performance. This work will further increase NASA’s confidence in the Orion capsule and the propulsive service module provided by the European Space Agency.

Overall, 31 of the Artemis I mission’s 124 baseline objectives are complete, Sarafin said. Many of these pertain to the performance of the launch vehicle. Of the remaining objectives, one half are in progress, and the other half are yet to be completed. Most of these are related to landing back on Earth, such as the parachute deployment system.

Understandably, NASA’s engineers are thrilled by the performance of Artemis I so far. It was a long, bumpy, and costly development path to reach this mission with the Space Launch System rocket and Orion spacecraft. But once the vehicles began flying, their performance has met every expectation and hope of the space agency, increasing confidence in the future of the Artemis program to explore the Moon.

Read original article here

Watch as Artemis 1 Orion flies by the moon Monday morning

NASA’s Artemis 1 mission will arrive in the moon’s neighborhood on Monday morning (Nov. 21), and you can follow the epic action live.

Artemis 1’s uncrewed Orion capsule has been cruising toward the moon since Wednesday morning (Nov. 16), when it launched atop NASA’s gigantic Space Launch System (SLS) rocket. 

Orion will finally reach the moon on Monday morning, skimming just 80 miles (130 kilometers) or so above the lunar surface at 7:44 a.m. EST (1244 GMT), if all goes according to plan. During that close approach, the capsule will fire its main engine in a “powered flyby burn,” which will set it on course to enter lunar orbit four days later.

Artemis 1 team members will explain and discuss the crucial maneuver during a webcast that starts Monday at 7:15 a.m. EST (1215 GMT). Watch it live here at Space.com, courtesy of NASA, or directly via the space agency (opens in new tab)

Related: Amazing views of NASA’s Artemis 1 moon rocket debut (photos)
Live updates: NASA’s Artemis 1 moon mission

Artist’s illustration of the Artemis 1 Orion capsule near the moon. (Image credit: ESA)

Artemis 1 is the first mission of NASA’s Artemis program of lunar exploration, which aims to set up a crewed research base on the moon by the end of the 2020s, among other objectives. The Artemis 1 liftoff also marked the debut of the SLS, the most powerful rocket ever to launch successfully.

Monday’s burn will set up another crucial maneuver on Nov. 25: an engine firing designed to insert Orion into a distant retrograde orbit (DRO) around the moon. The capsule will stay in the DRO — a stable path that will take it as far as 40,000 miles (64,000 km) from the lunar surface — until Dec. 1, when another engine burn will send the capsule back toward Earth.

Orion will come home on Dec. 11, hitting Earth’s atmosphere at tremendous speeds before ultimately splashing down softly in the Pacific Ocean off the coast of California.

If all goes well with Artemis 1, NASA will be free to start gearing up for Artemis 2, which will send astronauts around the moon in 2024 or thereabouts. 

In 2025, the agency plans to launch Artemis 3, which will put boots down near the lunar south pole, the site of the envisioned research base. Artemis 3 will be the first crewed lunar landing since the final Apollo mission in 1972, and the first ever to put a woman and a person of color down on the moon. 

Mike Wall is the author of “Out There (opens in new tab)” (Grand Central Publishing, 2018; illustrated by Karl Tate), a book about the search for alien life. Follow him on Twitter @michaeldwall (opens in new tab). Follow us on Twitter @Spacedotcom (opens in new tab) or Facebook (opens in new tab).



Read original article here

The Ultimate News Site