Tag Archives: Magnificent

Morgan Stanley analyst predicts S&P 500 could leap another 11% this year, boosted by gains to ‘Magnificent Seven’ stocks – Fortune

  1. Morgan Stanley analyst predicts S&P 500 could leap another 11% this year, boosted by gains to ‘Magnificent Seven’ stocks Fortune
  2. S&P 500 Could Rally Another 11% by Year-End, Expert Says Markets Insider
  3. ‘We are buyers of gold on weakness’: Yellow metal resilient as real rates surge, says Morgan Stanley MarketWatch
  4. Morgan Stanley’s Slimmon Sees Strong Fourth-Quarter for Stocks Bloomberg Television
  5. Investors are ‘far from out of the woods’: Morgan Stanley chief investment officer The Globe and Mail
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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‘Barbie’ Music Boss Mark Ronson Trolls Bill Maher for Bashing the Film as ‘Man-Hating’ While Many Others ‘Enjoy a F—ing Magnificent Comedy’ – Variety

  1. ‘Barbie’ Music Boss Mark Ronson Trolls Bill Maher for Bashing the Film as ‘Man-Hating’ While Many Others ‘Enjoy a F—ing Magnificent Comedy’ Variety
  2. Bill Maher’s ‘Barbie’ Movie Review Is a Total Embarrassment Rolling Stone
  3. Bill Maher Criticizes “Preachy, Man-Hating” ‘Barbie’ | THR News The Hollywood Reporter
  4. Bill Maher calls ‘Barbie’ ‘preachy’ and ‘man-hating’ Entertainment Weekly News
  5. ‘Barbie’ movie: Bill Maher bemoans ‘preachy’ film fighting patriarchy USA TODAY
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Cannes Chief Thierry Frémaux Talks Scorsese’s Competition Invite, “Magnificent” Johnny Depp, Lineup Additions & A Jean-Luc Godard Tribute: Q&A – Deadline

  1. Cannes Chief Thierry Frémaux Talks Scorsese’s Competition Invite, “Magnificent” Johnny Depp, Lineup Additions & A Jean-Luc Godard Tribute: Q&A Deadline
  2. Wes Anderson and Todd Haynes to Compete at Cannes Film Festival The New York Times
  3. Jude Law’s Henry VIII, Alicia Vikander’s Catherine Parr – and Johnny Depp as Louis XV: Cannes again lays on a king’s banquet The Guardian
  4. Woody Allen, Jeff Nichols and Ladj Ly Did Not Submit Their Films For Cannes — World of Reel Jordan Ruimy
  5. French films to open Cannes 2023 but several big (male) names are conspicuously absent Screen International
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Ben Affleck Praises Wife Jennifer Lopez at ‘Air’ Premiere: “You’re Wonderful, Good, Kind, Magnificent and I Love You” – Hollywood Reporter

  1. Ben Affleck Praises Wife Jennifer Lopez at ‘Air’ Premiere: “You’re Wonderful, Good, Kind, Magnificent and I Love You” Hollywood Reporter
  2. Jennifer Lopez and Ben Affleck Pack on the PDA, Share a Kiss on the ‘Air’ Red Carpet Premiere: Photo Yahoo Entertainment
  3. Ben Affleck and Jennifer Lopez pack on the PDA at ‘Air’ premiere Page Six
  4. Jennifer Lopez’s Red Carpet Date With Ben Affleck Will Have You Floating on Air E! NEWS
  5. Jimmy Kimmel’s Wife Molly McNearney Pops in Polka-Dot Dress & Pumps at ‘Air’ Premiere in Los Angeles Footwear News
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Prince Harry envious of Will, Kate’s ‘magnificent’ palace apartment

An excerpt from Prince Harry’s bombshell new memoir, “Spare” reads like something out of the iconic 1970s British TV show “Upstairs, Downstairs” about a wealthy family and their servants — but with a royal twist.

Turns out Harry was green with envy over how luxuriously Prince William and Kate lived in their “magnificent” Kensington Palace apartment — while he and Meghan Markle made do early on in a cramped cottage with Ikea furniture.

Prince Harry and Meghan Markle lived the tiny Nottingham Cottage early in their marriage.
Netflix

The Duke of Sussex complains in “Spare,” that his first home with Meghan, Nottingham Cottage, was a far cry from William and Kate’s lavish “Apartment 1A,” although they both are on the grounds of Kensington Palace, the Daily Mail reported.

“The wallpaper, the ceiling trim, the walnut bookshelves filled with volumes of peaceful colors, priceless works of art. Magnificent. Like a museum,” he wrote about Prince William’s digs.

Apartment 1A and “Nott Cott” are part of the Kensington Palace complex.
Getty Images

“We congratulated them on the renovation without holding back the compliments while feeling embarrassed of our IKEA lamps and the second-hand sofa we’d recently bought on sale with Meg’s credit card on sofa.com.”

Apartment 1A is said to have 20 rooms, and has long been William and Kate’s London base. The home was refurbished to the tune of $5 million of taxpayer money in 2016 but the couple paid for fixtures and furnishings themselves.

In contrast, Nottingham Cottage, or “Nott Cott,” where Harry and Meghan started married life, is a modest two-bedroom home — so small it reportedly shocked Oprah Winfrey when she visited them there for tea, the couple claimed in their recent Netflix documentary.

Prince William and Kate recently moved to Windsor with their three children.
WireImage
Harry’s memoir was accidentally published five days early in Spain.
Samir Hussein/WireImage

Winfrey told them “no one would ever believe” they were living there.

In their Netflix documentary, Meghan said: ‘People thought we lived in a palace and we did. Well, a cottage in a palace.’

Added Harry: “The whole thing is on a slight lean, [with] really low ceilings. So I don’t know who was there before but they must have been very short.”

Harry and Meghan later moved from Nott Cott for ten-bedroom Frogmore Cottage on the Queen’s Windsor Estate.

“Spare” accidentally went on sale in Spain in a Spanish translation last week ahead of its official release Jan. 10.

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Hubble telescope spots magnificent open star cluster 160,000 light-years away

The open star cluster NGC 2002 glitters with stars in this image from the Hubble Space Telescope released on Dec. 5, 2022. (Image credit: NASA, ESA and G. Gilmore (University of Cambridge); Processing: Gladys Kober (NASA/Catholic University of America))

Stars in the NGC 2002 cluster glitter in a new Hubble Space Telescope image of deep space. 

The cluster lies about 160,000 light-years away from Earth inside the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC), a galaxy that orbits our own Milky Way. NASA shared the Hubble Space Telescope image on Dec. 5.

In the center of the cluster sit five red supergiants, or stars that have begun fusing helium because their inner hydrogen fuel has run out. These stars are heavier and have sunk inwards. Lighter stars have drifted to the outer edges of the cluster. 

Related: The best Hubble Space Telescope images of all time!

NGC 2002 is known specifically as an “open cluster,” which means its 1,100 stars are loosely bound to each other and may diffuse away from the cluster over the next few million years. The relative sparseness of the star cluster allows scientists to observe each individual star within.  It’s also a relatively young cluster, aged only 18 million years.

Because of its youth, NGC 2002 provides a natural laboratory in which scientists can observe the earliest stages of a star’s life. Understanding the birth, evolution and death of stars is vital to our wider understanding of the universe. Stars are the building blocks of the universe, providing places for planets to form (and for life to evolve!). To better understand our sun, solar system and galaxy, scientists turn to observing stars all over the universe. 

NGC 2002’s home, the LMC, is one of the best places for scientists to observe stars at a variety of ages. The LMC is a 7,000-light-year wide dwarf galaxy that orbits the Milky Way about 163,000 light-years away. It’s one of the closest galaxies to us, which allows scientists to observe individual stars of every age within the galaxy. 

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Magnificent ring of stars captured by Hubble is the result of two galaxies in head-on collision

A close-up image of the galaxy merger Arp-Madore 417-391 that was recently taken by the Hubble space telescope. A near-perfect ring of stars has been created by the gravitational forces of the massive cosmic collision. (Image credit: ESA/Hubble & NASA, Dark Energy Survey/DOE/FNAL/DECam/CTIO/NOIRLab/NSF/AURA, J. Dalcanton)

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The Hubble space telescope has snapped a stunning shot of a pair of colliding galaxies that have been warped into a colossal, glowing ring of stars by the intense gravitational forces between them.

The entwined galaxies, collectively known as Arp-Madore 417-391, lie around 670 million light-years away from Earth in the constellation Eridanus, which is visible in the Southern Hemisphere. 

The new image was captured by Hubble’s Advanced Camera for Surveys (ACS), which is specially designed to seek out galaxies from the early universe, and was released Nov. 21 by the European Space Agency (ESA).

“The two galaxies have been distorted by gravity and twisted into a colossal ring, leaving the cores of the two galaxies nestled side by side,” ESA representatives wrote online (opens in new tab)

Related: Stunningly perfect ‘Einstein ring’ captured by James Webb Space Telescope 

The cosmic collision is the latest in the Arp-Madore Catalog of Southern Peculiar Galaxies and Associations, an archive of more than 6,000 images of unusual galaxies that have been spotted in the southern skies. 

In June 2019, Hubble spotted another galaxy merger, known as Arp-Madore 2026-424, which produced a similar but imperfect ring structure that resembled a ghost’s face. 

Ring structures in galaxy mergers are extremely rare and only form when the two colliding galaxies smash into one another head-on rather than slowly being pulled together by gravity, according to NASA (opens in new tab).  

The Arp-Madore 417-391 merger as it appears in the original zoomed-out Hubble image. (Image credit: ESA/Hubble & NASA, Dark Energy Survey/DOE/FNAL/DECam/CTIO/NOIRLab/NSF/AURA, J. Dalcanton)

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The rings are only temporary, lasting for around 100 million years. After that, the stars gradually get pulled back into their parent galaxies, which eventually merge into a singler new galaxy between 1 billion to 2 billion years later, according to NASA. 

There are around 100 known galaxy merger rings, but very few form in such a perfect circle like the newly snapped Arp-Madore 417-391. The new ring’s symmetrical shape is likely because the colliding galaxies were roughly the same size, which is hinted at by the roughly similar size and brightness of the two galactic centers in the image. However, the exact mechanics of how the ring formed is still unknown.

Arp-Madore 417-391 has been flagged up as a potential future target for the James Webb Space Telescope to image, according to ESA. Therefore, we may not have to wait long to learn more about this delightful cosmic disc. 

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NASA’s Hubble Captures Magnificent Image of Intergalactic Bridge

Between black holes devouring smallish stars and vacant space embracing busy nebulas, our universe’s caverns of darkness are often relieved by glimmers of light — a poetic juxtaposition clearly apparent in one of NASA’s latest Hubble Space Telescope images. 

Last week, the agency released an ethereal view of galactic triplet Arp 248, also known as Wild’s Triplet for both the discoverer and the utterly extravagant nature of the spectacle itself. Behold.

Take a closer look at everything in this beautiful image of our electrifying universe.


ESA/Hubble & NASA, Dark Energy Survey/Department of Energy/Fermilab Cosmic Physics Center/Dark Energy Camera/Cerro Tololo Inter-American Observatory/NOIRLab/National Science Foundation/AURA Astronomy; J. Dalcanton

In this impeccable photo, two of three galaxies can be seen in the foreground of space’s void, bleeding into each other like they’re made of over-hydrated watercolor paint and forming what I can only describe as an intergalactic bridge. A third, unconnected realm stands in the far ground, enshrouded by deceptively tiny sparkles that represent a cosmic lifetime of even more galaxies scattered across the universe.

What’s especially mind-numbing about this image is that from Hubble’s vantage point — in Earth’s orbit, some 200 million light-years away — the three galaxies are compact enough to fit on our computer screens. 

In reality, these worlds are many (many) light-years wide, holding an incomprehensible amount of doppelgangers to our sun, exoplanets like our solar system’s eight, and moons akin to our glowing lunar companion. 

They are miniature universes in themselves, existing on a scale simply unfathomable to the human mind yet available for us to download as desktop wallpapers.

It is, in fact, because of those hefty contents that the two massive spirals at the centerpiece of this image are linked by a luminous bridge in the first place. Both harness immensely strong gravitational forces and are therefore pulling on each other like they’re playing a gentle tug of war, accidentally creating what’s known as a tidal tail, or an elongated stream of stars and iridescent interstellar dust. 

Tidal tails are usually the product of galaxies treading very close to one another while on a path toward merging into one huge galaxy. We’ve seen the breathtaking phenomena several times already — tidal tails are responsible for some adorable galaxy systems names, too. 

“The Mice,” or NGC 4676, boasts merging galaxies about 300 million light-years away from Earth, and “The Tadpole,” or UGC 10214, contains a large galaxy in the process of shredding a smaller galaxy, another event type that resulted in an awesome tidal tail. 

A Hubble Space Telescope image of NGC 4676, also known as “The Mice.”


NASA, H. Ford (JHU), G. Illingworth (UCSC/LO), M.Clampin (STScI), G. Hartig (STScI), the ACS Science Team and ESA

Even our Milky Way galaxy is currently on a collision course with Andromeda, meaning they may eventually generate some sort of intergalactic bridge too — but don’t worry. 

The emptiness between stars and planets within galaxies is far greater than you might think. 

When galaxies merge, it’s quite likely only a few actual collisions happen. Think about two large crowds entering a stadium, merging into one massive crowd. Most of the time, individuals wouldn’t literally bump into each other. They just settle near each other. Now imagine the same situation, except with about a light-year of space between every person.

Fascinatingly, the title “Arp” in Arp 248 comes from the surname of late astronomer Halton Arp, who, along with astronomer Barry Madore, created the Atlas of Peculiar Galaxies in 1966.

“Each collection contains a menagerie of spectacularly peculiar galaxies, including interacting galaxies such as Arp 248, as well as one- or three-armed spiral galaxies, galaxies with shell-like structures, and a variety of other space oddities,” NASA said of the atlas.

It’s a vast work filled with yet more examples of our wonderfully contrasted universe, an expanse built from the mind of a poet and condensed with the skill of a machine.

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Hubble Captures Magnificent Grand Spiral Galaxy Face-On

Hubble Space Telescope image of NGC 3631, the Grand Design Spiral, located about 53 million light-years away in the direction of the constellation Ursa Major. Credit: NASA, ESA, A. Filippenko (University of California – Berkeley), and D. Sand (University of Arizona); Image Processing: G. Kober (NASA Goddard/Catholic University of America)

This image from

Close inspection of NGC 3631’s grand spiral arms reveals dark dust lanes and bright star-forming regions along the inner part of the spiral arms. Star formation in spirals is similar to a traffic jam on the interstate. Like cars on the highway, slower-moving matter in the spiral’s disk creates a bottleneck, concentrating star-forming gas and dust along the inner part of their spiral arms. This traffic jam of matter can get so dense that it gravitationally collapses, creating new stars (seen here seen in bright blue-white).

The image uses data collected from Hubble’s Wide Field Camera 3 and Advanced Camera for Surveys. The color blue represents visible wavelengths of blue light, and the color orange represents infrared light.



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Shadow of Jupiter’s largest moon looms in magnificent new Juno photo

Giant Jupiter and the shadow of its biggest moon, Ganymede, dominate the view in this latest image from the system based on a NASA spacecraft’s data.

NASA’s Juno mission whizzed close by the radiation-spewing planet for the 40th time on Feb. 25, with the resulting raw images of the encounter beamed home to Earth. There, citizen scientist Thomas Thomopoulos created this stunning view based on what was seen by the JunoCam instrument.

Juno was flying roughly 44,000 miles (71,000 kilometers) above Jupiter’s cloud tops during the encounter, which is roughly 15 times closer than Ganymede’s orbital distance of 666,000 miles (1.1 million kilometers), NASA stated.

Related: Juno snaps stunning photos of crescent Jupiter and Ganymede

If an observer could brave the radiation to float within the oval seen in the picture, NASA added, that person would experience a total eclipse of the sun. “Total eclipses are more common on Jupiter than Earth,” the agency said, noting the planet hosts four large moons (Ganymede, Io, Europa and Callisto) that orbit closer to the plane of Jupiter than our own, singular moon.

JunoCam, the agency said, “captured this image from very close to Jupiter, making Ganymede’s shadow appear especially large.”

The Juno spacecraft is on a long-term mission to understand the weather and the dynamics of Jupiter, the largest planet of our solar system. Studying this planet from up close allows scientists also to get a sense of how large exoplanets may behave in other solar systems.

Juno remains in good health amid an extended mission, but will have a limited lifespan due to the amount of radiation it is facing, NASA has warned. But space scientists have big plans for the icy moons of Jupiter in the 2030s, including visits from NASA’s Europa Clipper and the European Space Agency’s Jupiter Icy Moons Explorer.

Follow Elizabeth Howell on Twitter @howellspace. Follow us on Twitter @Spacedotcom and on Facebook



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