Tag Archives: meteor

Helldivers 2 Patch Includes Fire Tornadoes, Meteor Showers, Mission Changes, Bug Fixes, And More – Game Informer

  1. Helldivers 2 Patch Includes Fire Tornadoes, Meteor Showers, Mission Changes, Bug Fixes, And More Game Informer
  2. Helldivers 2 Patch 01.000.100 Nerfs the Game’s Best Loadout, Adds Planetary Hazards IGN
  3. Helldivers 2 Nerfs First Metas, Throws In Fire Tornadoes Kotaku
  4. Helldivers 2 patch nerfs the best guns as designer says the balancing process will be “never-ending” Rock Paper Shotgun
  5. Helldivers 2 dev lays out Arrowhead’s strategy for buffing and nerfing the game’s guns: ‘Powerful weapons can’t be too versatile, versatile weapons can’t be too powerful’ PC Gamer

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Tiny Fragments of Interstellar Meteor May Have Been Found in Pacific Ocean – Sci.News

  1. Tiny Fragments of Interstellar Meteor May Have Been Found in Pacific Ocean Sci.News
  2. Harvard professor believes he may have found alien technology CBS News
  3. Harvard scientist claims ‘anomalous’ metal spheres pulled from the ocean could be alien technology. Others are not convinced. Livescience.com
  4. Physicist who found spherical meteor fragments claims they may come from an alien spaceship: Here’s what to make of it Phys.org
  5. Harvard professor Avi Loeb believes he may have found fragments of alien technology #shorts CBS News
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Intel Meteor Lake mobile lineup leaks with up to 14-core Core i9 as 128 EU Alchemist+ Xe LPG iGPU might also be on the cards – Notebookcheck.net

  1. Intel Meteor Lake mobile lineup leaks with up to 14-core Core i9 as 128 EU Alchemist+ Xe LPG iGPU might also be on the cards Notebookcheck.net
  2. Intel 14th Gen Core “Raptor Lake Refresh” reportedly launches between October 17 to 23 VideoCardz.com
  3. Intel’s 14th Gen Core Series Set to Launch in Mid-October Gizchina.com
  4. Intel Meteor Lake CPU Family Details Allegedly Leak Tom’s Hardware
  5. Intel Raptor Lake Refresh performance leak suggests up to 8% gain in single-core and 15% increase in multi-core workloads vs 13th gen Raptor Lake Notebookcheck.net
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Intel Meteor Lake CPUs With Up To 14 Cores, Raptor Lake Refresh With Up To 24 Cores For Next-Gen Laptops – Wccftech

  1. Intel Meteor Lake CPUs With Up To 14 Cores, Raptor Lake Refresh With Up To 24 Cores For Next-Gen Laptops Wccftech
  2. Intel Raptor Lake Refresh performance leak suggests up to 8% gain in single-core and 15% increase in multi-core workloads vs 13th gen Raptor Lake Notebookcheck.net
  3. Intel Meteor Lake specs leak lists 14 CPU cores and 8 Xe-Cores based on Xe-LPG architecture VideoCardz.com
  4. Intel Arrow Lake-S Desktop CPUs To Feature Support On Z890, B860 & H810 Motherboards Wccftech
  5. Intel Meteor Lake CPUs: everything we know so far TechRadar
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Intel To Host Innovation 2023 Event on 19th September: Meteor Lake, Raptor Lake Refresh & Alchemist+ Expected – Wccftech

  1. Intel To Host Innovation 2023 Event on 19th September: Meteor Lake, Raptor Lake Refresh & Alchemist+ Expected Wccftech
  2. Efficient Intel Meteor Lake described as “Zen 4 Phoenix Killer” as leak claims Intel is working on a 40-core Arrow Lake CPU Notebookcheck.net
  3. Intel Innovation 2023 set for September 19, Raptor Lake Refresh launch? VideoCardz.com
  4. Intel’s Innovation 2023 conference revealed for September 19-20 Neowin
  5. Intel Panther Lake and Beast Lake leak suggests up to 40% more single-core performance vs Arrow Lake for former and Extra Big cores for latter Notebookcheck.net
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Efficient Intel Meteor Lake described as “Zen 4 Phoenix Killer” as leak claims Intel is working on a 40-core Arrow Lake CPU – Notebookcheck.net

  1. Efficient Intel Meteor Lake described as “Zen 4 Phoenix Killer” as leak claims Intel is working on a 40-core Arrow Lake CPU Notebookcheck.net
  2. Intel To Host Innovation 2023 Event on 19th September: Meteor Lake, Raptor Lake Refresh & Alchemist+ Expected Wccftech
  3. Intel 14th Gen Meteor Lake CPU Launch on 19th September Alongside Raptor Lake Desktop Refresh? Hardware Times
  4. Intel Panther Lake and Beast Lake leak suggests up to 40% more single-core performance vs Arrow Lake for former and Extra Big cores for latter Notebookcheck.net
  5. Intel Innovation 2023 set for September 19, Raptor Lake Refresh launch? VideoCardz.com
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Shocking meteor EXPLOSION forced NASA to trigger its asteroid defense-the Chelyabinsk event – HT Tech

  1. Shocking meteor EXPLOSION forced NASA to trigger its asteroid defense-the Chelyabinsk event HT Tech
  2. Experts on the Future of Planetary Defense 10 Years After the Chelyabinsk Asteroid Impact’s 440 Kiloton Explosion SciTechDaily
  3. The 10-year anniversary of the Chelyabinsk meteor: How it impacted RMNB and Evgeny Kuznetsov’s experience Russian Machine Never Breaks
  4. This asteroid actually crashed against Earth and changed space science forever HT Tech
  5. 2013 Chelyabinsk crash: When an asteroid hit Earth and exploded with energy of 35 nuclear bombs India Today
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Out-of-this-world discovery in Antarctica

Scientists say they’ve found a space rock for the ages in Antarctica — an extremely rare meteorite that contains some of the oldest material in the solar system.

“When we saw this one just sitting by itself in the middle of the blue ice, we all got so excited,” Chicago Field Museum researcher Maria Valdes told the Chicago Tribune.

The 17-pound meteorite, described as about “the size of a gourd,” was discovered Jan. 5 by an international team at the end of an 11-day expedition.

The extraordinary rock, which contains material from billions of years ago, is one of the largest meteorites ever found on the continent and likely originated in the Main Asteroid Belt between Mars and Jupiter, The Independent reported.

“To put the meteorite’s size in perspective, of the 45,000 meteorites retrieved from Antarctica over the last century, only 100 are this size or larger,” said Chicago’s Field Museum, which was part of the expedition.

Researchers on snowmobiles spent the better part of two weeks combing ice fields in search of meteorites when they made the stunning find just as they were about to wrap up their exploration, according to The Tribune.

The researchers celebrate their out-of-this-world find.
Courtesy of Maria Valdes / SWNS

A close-up shot of the rare space rock.
Courtesy of Maria Valdes / SWNS

Valdes said they were hesitant about celebrating at first “because we knew that if we found a meteorite, this was really the mother lode. On the last day, the last hour.”

The team became convinced it had indeed found a rare space rock when members discovered it was “the size of a bowling ball but twice the weight of a bowling ball,” Valdes told the paper.

The rock had what Valdes described as a “fusion crust” — a glassy outer layer that slightly melted when it entered the atmosphere. It was also worn down, a sign it had been on Earth for many ages.

The meteorite was sent to The Royal Belgian Institute of Natural Sciences in Belgium for chemical analysis.

“All meteorites have something to say about the evolution of Earth,” Valdes said. “Size doesn’t necessarily matter when it comes to meteorites, and even tiny micrometeorites can be incredibly scientifically valuable.”


Scientists from the US, Belgium and Switzerland spent 11 days combing the icy continent looking for space rocks.
Courtesy of Maria Valdes / SWNS

Most of the 45,000 meteorites found in Antarctica over the past century have only weighed a few grams, The Independent noted.

The find came months after NASA successfully destroyed a 530-foot-wide asteroid in a test run to prepare for the possibility of a massive space rock hurling toward and threating Earth, such as the 6.2 mile-wide asteroid that scientists believe wiped out the dinosaurs millions of years ago.

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WATCH | Green meteor blazes across Oklahoma’s sky, people wake up to sonic boom

The cameras installed in the doorbells of residents captured a celestial light passing through the night sky which appeared like a meteor in Oklahoma, United States. 

According to the footage shared on social media platforms, a green meteor is seen flying through the sky like a blazing fireball as residents reported that they woke up to a sonic boom that they heard in Friday morning’s early hours. 

Fox 23 meteorologist Laura Mock shared the footage captured in her dashcam on Twitter. In the video, a bright green blazing meteor is seen passing through the sky.

Meanwhile, various residents also shared videos of the meteor on social media platforms. Some even reported that they felt their house shake when the meteor passed. 

The footage captured in the doorbell camera is being widely shared on social media and is attracting comments from netizens across the world. One user said it was, “Optimus Prime’s return,” while another commented, “I told you Hogwarts is real.” One user wrote, “That’s Superman.” However, an inquisitive user quizzed, “Where it landed though?”

However, an official statement was released by the National Weather Service in Tulsa on Twitter after it was sent multiple reports on the appearance of a meteor in the night sky and stated that it was spotted by a lightning detector over Wagoner country. 

WATCH | Meteor lights up the sky over Norway: Spectacular sight of meteors burning up in the atmosphere

“We have received multiple reports this morning, including videos, of a meteor that occurred over northeast Oklahoma this morning. This was detected by the Geostationary Lightning Mapper (GLM) shown as a blue dot over Wagoner county,” the department wrote. 

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According to the meteorologist, an explosion of the fireball took place in the atmosphere which led to a sonic boom that woke up the civilians.

(With inputs from agencies)

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2023 Quadrantids Meteor Shower Peaks in a Flurry of Fire

The early months of every year have a relative dearth of meteor showers, so the Quadrantids during the first week often lure diehard shooting star spotters outside. They delivered the show some skywatchers hoped for on Tuesday night and Wednesday evening. 

While December is packed with opportunities to catch abundant Geminid and Ursid meteors, the Quadrantid meteor shower is the sole major shower in the first quarter of the year, and it peaked briefly Tuesday night and Wednesday morning this week. 

Like the Geminids and Ursids, the Quadrantids are often among the strongest showers of the year, but these meteors don’t get nearly as much hype as the northern summertime Perseids in August that hit during summer vacation time for many skywatchers. Also, the window of opportunity to see Quadrantids is very narrow, with a peak of intense activity that was just six hours long this year, according to the American Meteor Society. 

Other showers may have peaks that last a day or two, with a lesser but still decent amount of activity stretching for days before and after the actual peak. 

To catch the Quadrantids, there are two factors to consider: what time the shower peaks in a given location and how high the quadrant of the night sky where Quadrantid meteors appear to originate from is at that time. 

Predicting the exact moment of peak activity for a meteor shower offers no guarantees, but the target range for best viewing times this year was between 3:40 a.m. and 6:40 a.m. UTC on Jan. 4 (7:40 p.m. to 10:40 p.m. PT on Tuesday). That said, the area of the sky that Quadrantids radiate outward from is in the area of the constellation of Bootes the herdsman, and this radiant was highest in the sky between about 2 a.m. and 6 a.m. local time. 

Where these two windows overlap in the Northern Hemisphere you’ve got the best spots on the planet for observing the Quadrantids. This week it looked to be just about any locale in or near the North Atlantic. 

Predictions called for about 25 Quadrantids per hour under ideal conditions, including plenty of fleeting shooting stars and a few fireballs. A lucky outburst of Quadrantids that produces up to 120 meteors per hour was also possible, according to some predictions. 

By Wednesday evening the International Project for Radio Meteor Observations was already reporting detections of up to 120 meteors per hour, although it’s unlikely anyone was able to see every single one of these with the naked eye, thanks in large part to the moon, which was 92% full last night. 

What you’re actually seeing when a Quadrantid meteor streaks across the sky is a mote or pebble-size piece of the Asteroid 2003 EH1, which some astronomers believe may be an extinct comet or a new type of object sometimes called a “rock comet.” Over the centuries, EH1 has left a trail of debris in its path and our planet passes through that stream of detritus each January. 

If you missed it, mark your calendar for the next major meteor shower, which unfortunately isn’t until the Lyrids become active in late April. 

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