Tag Archives: object

West Brom vs Wolves suspended amid crowd trouble, ball boy hit by object – The Athletic

  1. West Brom vs Wolves suspended amid crowd trouble, ball boy hit by object The Athletic
  2. FA probe crowd trouble at Wolves’ FA Cup win over West Brom Yahoo Sports
  3. Sunday’s FA Cup LIVE: West Brom v Wolves & Newport v Man Utd – TV, radio & text – Live BBC.com
  4. Football’s day of disgrace: FA Cup derby clash is halted after violence breaks out in the stands between West Brom and Wolves supporters, fans storm the pitch and players are forced to take their children to safety Daily Mail
  5. Crowd trouble mars Wolves’ FA Cup derby victory against West Brom The Guardian

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Chinese Rocket That Crashed Into The Moon Was Carrying A Mystery Object – IFLScience

  1. Chinese Rocket That Crashed Into The Moon Was Carrying A Mystery Object IFLScience
  2. Mystery moon crash due to China’s space ‘blunder’, claim scientists IndiaTimes
  3. Scientists reveal China’s rocket created 100-foot-wide crater on moon after it crashed last year Dunya News
  4. Mystery over UFO that crashed into moon leaving strange 100ft ‘double crater’ has finally been solved by sc… The US Sun
  5. Double Moon crater riddle solved? Spent Chinese rocket booster carrying mystery payload crash landed The Register
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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NASA sun probe becomes the fastest man-made object in history after traveling nearly 400,000mph over the solar – Daily Mail

  1. NASA sun probe becomes the fastest man-made object in history after traveling nearly 400,000mph over the solar Daily Mail
  2. The fastest ever human-made object keeps breaking its own speed record Popular Science
  3. NASA’s Parker Solar Probe becomes the fastest artificial object ever, 180 times faster than our fastest plane! Business Insider India
  4. Kashmir to Kanyakumari In 30 Seconds: Parker Solar Probe Becomes Fastest Human-Made Object | Weather.com The Weather Channel
  5. Parker Solar Probe’s New Speed Record GKToday
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Robert Redford Initially Passed on ‘The Way We Were’ Role, Called His Character ‘Shallow’ and ‘an Object,’ Says Barbra Streisand: ‘I Was Heartbroken’ – Variety

  1. Robert Redford Initially Passed on ‘The Way We Were’ Role, Called His Character ‘Shallow’ and ‘an Object,’ Says Barbra Streisand: ‘I Was Heartbroken’ Variety
  2. Barbra Streisand Details the First Thing She Said to Husband James Brolin When She Met Him Yahoo Entertainment
  3. Inside Barbra Streisand’s World Vanity Fair
  4. Barbra Streisand on How She Convinced Robert Redford to Star in 1973’s ‘The Way We Were’ Hollywood Reporter
  5. Barbra Streisand Tells Stories of Broadway Debut & More in New Memoir, My Name Is Barbra BroadwayWorld
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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An unusual object has been releasing pulses of radio waves in space for decades. Astronomers just discovered it – CNN

  1. An unusual object has been releasing pulses of radio waves in space for decades. Astronomers just discovered it CNN
  2. Astronomers find new type of stellar object that challenges understanding of neutron star physics Phys.org
  3. NRL’s VLITE confirmed magnetar GPM J1839–10 has been pulsing regularly every 22 minutes Interesting Engineering
  4. Are aliens trying to contact Earth? Scientists discover a mysterious stellar object that emits a five-minute p Daily Mail
  5. Scientists spot cosmic object that lights up every 20 minutes Metro.co.uk
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Keira Knightley Claims Being An ‘Object Of Lust’ Wasn’t Easy – OutKick

  1. Keira Knightley Claims Being An ‘Object Of Lust’ Wasn’t Easy OutKick
  2. Keira Knightley Says Lusty ‘Pirates of the Caribbean’ Role Made Her Feel ‘Caged In’ and ‘Stuck’: I Wanted to ‘Break Out of That’ Yahoo Entertainment
  3. Keira Knightley confesses feeling ‘caged’ after being ‘object of lust’ in ‘Pirates of the Caribbean’ role Fox News
  4. Keira Knightley Said She Doesn’t Know the Meaning of Mom-Life Balance InStyle
  5. Keira Knightley Struggled with Fame After Pirates of the Caribbean PEOPLE
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Fighter wing based out of Duluth shot down object over Lake Huron, Gov. Walz says – CBS News

  1. Fighter wing based out of Duluth shot down object over Lake Huron, Gov. Walz says CBS News
  2. US military shoots down unidentified flying object over Great Lakes region; same object spotted over Montana Fox News
  3. US working to identify 3 objects shot down from sky as China concerns escalate FOX 4 Dallas-Fort Worth
  4. Duluth-based fighter wing shoots down unidentified object over Lake Huron, Walz says Duluth News Tribune
  5. US on ‘heightened alert,’ increasing scrutiny of airspace after downing ‘unidentified object’ over Lake Huron Fox News

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Walz: MN National Guard Airmen shot down object over Lake Huron – KARE11.com

  1. Walz: MN National Guard Airmen shot down object over Lake Huron KARE11.com
  2. US on ‘heightened alert,’ increasing scrutiny of airspace after downing ‘unidentified object’ over Lake Huron Fox News
  3. Unidentified object shot down by U.S. military over Great Lakes region CBS Evening News
  4. Cherry Capital Airport Reacts to Unidentified Object Shot Down Over Great Lakes 9&10 News
  5. Lawmakers demand accountability from Biden admin after 4th flying object shot down by military: ‘Unacceptable’ Fox News
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The Comet Interceptor probe could visit a stunning object like the green C/2022 E3 (ZTF)

Comet C/2022 E3 (ZTF) is tantalizing to spot through a telescope, but what would it look like up close?

Scientists don’t have a way to get a spacecraft to the stunning green comet during its swing through the inner solar system — but next decade, they will, thanks to the European Space Agency’s (ESA) Comet Interceptor. That mission, scheduled to launch in 2029, will spend a few years perched nearly 1 million miles (1.5 million kilometers) away from Earth, waiting for an intriguing comet to venture deep enough into the inner solar system to fly past. But if Comet Interceptor were already in space, scientists might have sent it whizzing toward Comet C/2022 E3 (ZTF).

“The Comet ZTF, the currently brightest comet in the sky, is actually so far the most promising virtual target for Comet Interceptor,” Michael Kueppers, ESA’s Comet Interceptor study scientist, told a meeting of NASA’s Small Bodies Assessment Group on Wednesday (Jan. 26).

Related: Amazing photos of gorgeously green Comet C/2022 E3 (ZTF)

Kueppers said that the science team has been preparing for the mission by evaluating “virtual targets” — objects the Comet Interceptor team could consider visiting if the probe were already in space. Whatever comet ends up striking lucky will be subject to a thorough, albeit brief, inspection by the main spacecraft and two smaller probes.

Mission scientists are hoping to aim for an active comet that has never passed by the sun before. Such an object would hail from the icy Oort Cloud far beyond Pluto’s orbit; by catching an object on its first loop of the sun, scientists would be able to see pristine material responding to the sun’s heat.

Or, if Comet Interceptor is particularly lucky, scientists will spot another interstellar object, a successor to ‘Oumuamua and Comet Borisov that’s making a one-time jaunt through our solar system.

It’s an unusual situation for a mission to be in — although plenty of spacecraft gain additional targets after launch, Comet Interceptor will be in space before scientists ever see its prime target.

The spacecraft will hitch a ride with ESA’s Atmospheric Remote-sensing Infrared Exoplanet Large-survey (Ariel) mission, which will spend four years analyzing the atmospheres of as many as 1,000 exoplanets.

After launch, Comet Interceptor will head out to Earth-sun Lagrange point 2 (L2), the same deep-space “parking spot” that the James Webb Space Telescope orbits. At Lagrange points, gravitational tugs balance out, so it will be relatively cheap to keep the spacecraft at its station while waiting for scientists to identify a promising target. The team will need to decide its plans at least six months before heading out from L2 to rendezvous with a comet.

But imagine Comet Interceptor were already at its station in early March 2022, when scientists first spotted Comet C/2022 E3 (ZTF). Intrigued mission personnel might have started playing around with trajectories that Comet Interceptor could use to meet up with the object. They’d find that, if the spacecraft had headed out in late August, it could fly past the comet on Feb. 12, just a month after the snowball’s closest approach to the sun and a little less than a year after the object’s discovery.

But C/2022 E3 is not an ideal target, Kueppers noted. The team would need to prepare for departure pretty quickly, and the flyby would occur a little farther away from the sun than scientists would prefer. And whereas mission personnel are hoping to catch a comet that’s never visited the inner solar system before, C/2022 E3 has done so, albeit some 50,000 years ago.

“It’s probably not dynamically new,” Kueppers said. “It’s reasonably active, so we may take it, but it depends on the activity.”

And if this scenario played out during Comet Interceptor’s real mission, the departure preparation time likely wouldn’t be an issue. That’s thanks to the Vera Rubin Observatory in Chile, which will conduct a 10-year Legacy Survey of Space and Time (LSST) beginning in early 2025. LSST is expected to discover some 6 million solar system objects, and much of what it finds will come relatively early in that survey.

“The discovery is a little bit on the late side, but we are not worried about that because we expect those comets to be discovered significantly earlier with LSST,” Kueppers said of the virtual C/2022 E3 scenario. 

The analysis highlights the sorts of decisions scientists will need to make during the Comet Interceptor mission. They’ll only get one shot, and they don’t know in advance what the solar system will send their way. If they’re too eager, they may end up missing out on a more intriguing target; if they’re too cautious, they may find themselves still at L2 several years after launch, running out of time with no target in sight. While the dream is an active, long-period comet, the team will have to see what happens, and whether an object like C/2022 E3 would snag a visit.

“Statistically, we expect that we will have a few candidate targets, not dozens of them,” Kueppers said. “We also cannot count on a dynamically new comet, so potentially we would use a comet like ZTF.”

Email Meghan Bartels at mbartels@space.com or follow her on Twitter @meghanbartels. Follow us on Twitter @Spacedotcom and on Facebook.



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Mysterious 12-sided Roman object found in Belgium may have been used for magical rituals

A metal detectorist in Belgium has unearthed a fragment of a mysterious bronze artifact known as a Roman dodecahedron that is thought to be more than 1,600 years old. 

More than a hundred of the puzzling objects — hollow, 12-sided geometric shells of cast metal about the size of baseballs, with large holes in each face and studs at each corner — have been discovered in Northern Europe over the past 200 years. But no one knows why or how they were used.

“There have been several hypotheses for it — some kind of a calendar, an instrument for land measurement, a scepter, etcetera — but none of them is satisfying,” Guido Creemers (opens in new tab), a curator at the Gallo-Roman Museum in Tongeren, Belgium, told Live Science in an email. “We rather think it has something to do with non-official activities like sorcery, fortune-telling and so on.”

Creemers and his colleagues at the Gallo-Roman Museum were given the fragment by its finder and identified it in December. It consists of only one corner of the object with a single corner stud, but it is unmistakably part of a dodecahedron that originally measured just over 2 inches (5 centimeters) across.

The fragment found in a field near the town of Kortessem in Flanders is clearly part of a Roman dodecahedron. (Image credit: Kris Vandevorst/Flanders Heritage Agency)

Metal detectorist and amateur archaeologist Patrick Schuermans had found the fragment months earlier in a plowed field near the small town of Kortessem, in Belgium’s northern Flanders region.

Related: Sacred chickens, witches and animal entrails: 7 unusual ancient Roman superstitions

Creemers said the Gallo-Roman Museum already displays a complete ancient bronze dodecahedron found in 1939 just outside Tongeren’s Roman city walls, and the new fragment will go on display next to it in February.

Archaeologists are now investigating the site where the metal detectorist found the dodecahedron fragment; it may have been the site of a Roman villa. (Image credit: Kris Vandevorst/Flanders Heritage Agency)

Mysterious dodecahedrons 

The first Roman dodecahedron to be discovered in modern times was found in England in the 18th century, and roughly 120 have been found since then in Great Britain, the Netherlands, Belgium, France, Germany, Austria and Switzerland.

It’s not possible to date the metal itself, but some dodecahedrons were found buried in layers of earth that date them to between the first and fifth centuries A.D.

The mystery doesn’t end there; archaeologists cannot explain the geometric artifact’s function, and no written record of the dodecahedrons has ever been found. 

A complete Roman dodecahedron found near the ancient Roman walls of the town of Tongeren in Belgium in 1939. (Image credit: Gallo-Romeins Museum Tongeren)

It’s possible they were used in secret for magical purposes, such as divination (telling the future), which was popular in Roman times but forbidden under Christianity, the religion of the later Roman Empire, Creemers said. “These activities were not allowed, and punishments were severe,” he explained. “That is possibly why we do not find any written sources.” 

Several explanations for the mysterious artifacts have been suggested over the years. Initially, they were described as “mace heads” and were thought to be part of a weapon. Other ideas are that they were tools for determining the right time to plant grain (opens in new tab); that they were dice, or other objects for playing a game; and that they were instruments for measuring distance (opens in new tab), possibly for finding the right range for Roman artillery, such as ballistas

A recent suggestion is that dodecahedrons were knitting patterns for Roman gloves (opens in new tab).

But most archaeologists think the objects were probably used in magical rituals. The dodecahedrons have no markings indicating how they were used, as might be expected for measuring instruments, and they all have different weights and sizes, ranging from 1.5 to 4.5 inches (4 to 11 centimeters) across.

Roman dodecahedrons are also found only in the Roman Empire’s northwestern areas, and many were unearthed at burial sites. These clues suggest that the cult or magical practice of using them was restricted to the “Gallo-Roman” regions — the parts of the later Roman Empire influenced by Gauls or Celts, according to Tibor Grüll (opens in new tab), a historian at the University of Pécs in Hungary who has reviewed the academic literature (opens in new tab) about dodecahedrons. 

Related: The 5 craziest ways emperors gained the throne in ancient Rome

Ancient puzzle

Creemers said the dodecahedron fragment found near Kortessem could shed more light on these mysterious metal objects. Many other Roman dodecahedrons were first recognized for what they were in private or museum collections, so their archaeological context is unknown, he said.

But the location of the Kortessem fragment is well documented, he said; and subsequent archaeological investigations have revealed mural fragments at the site, indicating that it may have been a Roman villa.

A translated statement by the Flanders Heritage Agency (opens in new tab) said the fractured surfaces of the fragment indicate that the dodecahedron had been deliberately broken, possibly during a final ritual.

The location will now be monitored for further finds.

“Thanks to the correct working method of the metal detectorist, archaeologists know for the first time the exact location of a Roman dodecahedron in Flanders,” the statement said. “That opens the door for further research.”

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