Tag Archives: Planets

Against all odds, Helldivers 2 community notches a historic win in grueling Major Order many thought impossible – defending 10 planets amid communication breakdowns – Gamesradar

  1. Against all odds, Helldivers 2 community notches a historic win in grueling Major Order many thought impossible – defending 10 planets amid communication breakdowns Gamesradar
  2. Game master Joel cuts an unprecedented deal with Helldivers 2 players: Pull off the ‘Martale Gambit’ and he’ll liberate two planets for the price of one PC Gamer
  3. Helldivers 2 faces “grim projections” after we beat two billion bugs PCGamesN
  4. Chill out, Helldivers 2 hardcores trying to get casual players to stick to the battle plan, Arrowhead’s doing what it can to help out VG247
  5. Helldivers 2’s latest Major Order has finally exhausted players Destructoid

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250000 Helldivers 2 players destroyed the Automatons, so we’re headed back to the bug front to liberate 3 planets and build oil farms [UPDATED] – Windows Central

  1. 250000 Helldivers 2 players destroyed the Automatons, so we’re headed back to the bug front to liberate 3 planets and build oil farms [UPDATED] Windows Central
  2. Some Helldivers 2 Players Are Threatening to Teamkill Anyone Who Wears the New Malevelon Creek Cape — but the Community Is Fighting Back IGN
  3. Helldivers 2 players just wiped out an entire enemy faction, so what on Super Earth happens now? PC Gamer
  4. Helldivers 2 devs “actually expected a lot less players to move to the Automaton front,” but a full 70% of the game’s community was fighting the good fight Gamesradar
  5. How to get the Malevelon Creek Cape in Helldivers 2 PCGamesN

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Helldivers 2 Game Master Joel wants to crush the Automatons once and for all, with a new Major Order tasking players with liberating 3 planets in under 4 days – Gamesradar

  1. Helldivers 2 Game Master Joel wants to crush the Automatons once and for all, with a new Major Order tasking players with liberating 3 planets in under 4 days Gamesradar
  2. Some Helldivers 2 Players Are Threatening to Teamkill Anyone Who Wears the New Malevelon Creek Cape — but the Community Is Fighting Back IGN
  3. ‘Helldivers 2’ Issues Order 66 For Automatons, Extinction To Follow Forbes
  4. Helldivers 2 Celebrates ‘Malevelon Creek’ Holiday With Capes Kotaku
  5. Helldivers 2 honours the lives lost at Malevelon Creek with an official decree from the Super Earth president, plus a cool free cape PC Gamer

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Helldivers 2 Game Master Joel claps back with a tough new major order: liberate 5 planets in 3 days to secure our “economic future” – Gamesradar

  1. Helldivers 2 Game Master Joel claps back with a tough new major order: liberate 5 planets in 3 days to secure our “economic future” Gamesradar
  2. New Helldivers 2 Major Order says it’s time to liberate Zagon and Fori Prime for bug oil, but supply lines are needed — and fast Windows Central
  3. Recent Helldivers 2 Termicide Update Has Serious Implications For The Soldiers Of Super Earth Screen Rant
  4. Helldivers 2’s latest major order gives players the chance to make a sector permanently bug-free with a planet-sized pesticide system PC Gamer
  5. Here’s The Helldivers 2’s New, Surprising Major Order, Live Now Forbes

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After releasing the mechs, Helldivers 2 calls on players to free 4 “high-priority” planets to “activate the Terminid Control System,” and it sounds like a big deal – Gamesradar

  1. After releasing the mechs, Helldivers 2 calls on players to free 4 “high-priority” planets to “activate the Terminid Control System,” and it sounds like a big deal Gamesradar
  2. Helldivers 2 Community Event Could See Big, Permanent Changes To Galaxy GameSpot
  3. Helldivers 2’s new Major Order is a tall one: We have to liberate four planets in a week, but if we do we get to use Super Earth’s deadliest bug spray Windows Central
  4. Helldivers 2’s latest major order gives players the chance to make a sector permanently bug-free with a planet-sized pesticide system PC Gamer
  5. We’ll Keep Failing Helldivers 2 Major Orders Unless Players Do One Thing Screen Rant

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Starfield’s planets were initially much harsher, until Bethesda “nerfed the hell” out of status effects – Rock Paper Shotgun

  1. Starfield’s planets were initially much harsher, until Bethesda “nerfed the hell” out of status effects Rock Paper Shotgun
  2. Todd Howard says exploring planets in Starfield was much more punishing before Bethesda “nerfed the hell out of it” Gamesradar
  3. Todd Howard says that Starfield’s ship AI sucks on purpose so players can actually hit stuff: ‘You have to make the AI really stupid’ PC Gamer
  4. Starfield Is in a Pretty Good Place with Bugs/Optimization Thanks to the Whole Team Testing It Since Late 2022, Says Howard Wccftech
  5. To test Starfield, Bethesda gave the team a build that was “basically done” last year and said “this should be the game you’re playing over the holiday” Gamesradar
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Humans have pumped so much groundwater from the Earth that it’s actually caused the planet’s axis to shift, a new study found – Yahoo News

  1. Humans have pumped so much groundwater from the Earth that it’s actually caused the planet’s axis to shift, a new study found Yahoo News
  2. Overnight News Digest – Science Saturday- Earth, Sharks, Diabetes, Gold Coins, Universe’s age Daily Kos
  3. Humans have shifted Earth’s axis by pumping lots of groundwater: scientists Global News
  4. Groundwater pumping causes Earth’s rotational pole to shift: new study Business Insider
  5. Humans have pumped so much groundwater from the Earth that it’s actually caused the planet’s axis to shift, a new study found msnNOW
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Astronomers discover 2nd-ever ‘Tatooine’ star system with multiple planets orbiting multiple suns – Livescience.com

  1. Astronomers discover 2nd-ever ‘Tatooine’ star system with multiple planets orbiting multiple suns Livescience.com
  2. New Tatooine-like exoplanet discovered orbiting twin suns. Meet BEBOP-1c. Space.com
  3. Direct from `Star Wars`: Tatooine-like planet that orbits twin stars discovered WION
  4. Astronomers Discover BEBOP-1c: Tatooine-Like Exoplanet Orbits Twin Stars in a Multiplanetary System SciTechDaily
  5. New Solar System Found Where Planets Orbit Two Suns—Just like Luke Skywalker’s Home in Star Wars Good News Network
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Incredible Footage Shows Planets Circling a Star Light-Years Away : ScienceAlert

A new video shared on YouTube is one of the most amazing things we’ve ever seen in planetary science.

The video shows four dots of light moving in partial concentric circles around a black disk at their center. What you’re actually looking at is a planetary system.

The four dots are exoplanets, with the black disk obscuring their star, 133.3 light-years away from Earth. The partial circles are their orbital motions, a time-lapse compiled from 12 years of observations.

The star is HR8799, and in 2008 its exoplanets made up the first system (not the first exoplanet, that was 2M1207b in 2004) astronomers had ever seen directly.

Since then, astronomer Jason Wang of Northwestern University has been watching it avidly. He’s compiled those observations into a time-lapse – not for any scientific reason, but just because it’s super awesome.

“It’s usually difficult to see planets in orbit,” Wang says.

“For example, it isn’t apparent that Jupiter or Mars orbit our sun because we live in the same system and don’t have a top-down view. Astronomical events either happen too quickly or too slowly to capture in a movie.

“But this video shows planets moving on a human time scale. I hope it enables people to enjoy something wondrous.”

The current count of confirmed exoplanets – that’s extrasolar planets, or planets outside the Solar System – numbers over 5,200, but we’ve never actually seen most of them.

Astronomers primarily find exoplanets through indirect methods, by studying the effect the exoplanet has on the host star. Regular, faint dips in the star’s light indicate an orbiting exoplanet passing between us and the star; faint changes in the wavelength of the star’s light indicate the gravitational interaction between exoplanet and star.

The reason for this is that it’s actually extremely difficult to see an exoplanet directly. They’re very small, and very dim in comparison to their host star; any light they emit or reflect is usually swallowed up in the blazing light of the star.

Every now and again, however, we get lucky. The exoplanets are large and separated from their star enough, and the system oriented in such a way that, if the star’s light is blocked, or occulted (that’s why HR8799 appears as a black disk), we can see them as small blobs of attendant light.

Even rarer is to see them performing their complex planetary pavane, simply because the timescales of the orbits involved are much longer than the time since scientists directly spotted the first exoplanet.

But Wang and his team now have enough observational data of HR8799 for a time-lapse that shows partial orbits, and that is what he has compiled.

“There’s nothing to be gained scientifically from watching the orbiting systems in a time lapse video, but it helps others appreciate what we’re studying,” Wang says.

“It can be difficult to explain the nuances of science with words. But showing science in action helps others understand its importance.”

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The observations were collected using the W. M. Keck Observatory, and Wang applied adaptive optics to correct for the distorting effect of Earth’s atmosphere.

The time-lapse has also been processed to correct for the temporal jumps between data, showing the smooth orbital motion of the four exoplanets.

The 12 years of observation have been sped up into just 4.5 seconds.

Here’s what you’re looking at. The black circle in the center is the young 30-million-year-old star, around 1.5 times the mass and 4.9 times the brightness of the Sun.

The innermost exoplanet is HR8799e, with a mass of 7.4 Jupiters orbiting at a distance of 16.25 times the separation between Earth and the Sun, or astronomical units, for an orbital period of 45 years. Scientists have been able to analyze the light from this exoplanet to determine that it’s a storm-wracked baby gas giant.

Moving outwards, HR8799d has the mass of 9.1 Jupiters, and orbits at 26.67 astronomical units for an orbital period of 100 years.

HR8799c is 7.8 Jupiters in mass, orbiting at a distance of 41.4 astronomical units (just a little wider than the separation between the Sun and Pluto) for an orbital period of 190 years. It has water in its atmosphere, scientists have found.

Finally, HR8799b clocks in at 5.7 Jupiters, with a separation of 71.6 astronomical units and an orbital period of 460 years.

But we’re a long way from being done with the HR8799 system.

Although, according to Wang, the time-lapse itself may not be scientifically revealing, the Keck data collection sure is.

A paper published in December last year found the possible existence of a fifth exoplanet, smaller and closer to the star than its siblings. The candidate is estimated to be around 4 to 7 times the mass of Jupiter, orbiting at a distance between 4 and 5 astronomical units, making it harder to spot directly.

And Wang and his colleagues are hard at work analyzing the light from the system. They hope that they will be able to obtain detailed information on the composition of not just the star, but the worlds around it.

“In astrophysics, most of the time we are doing data analysis or testing hypotheses,” Wang says.

“But this is the fun part of science. It inspires awe.”

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‘A Bear On Mars?’ NASA Spots Trippy Phenomenon On Planet’s Surface

Scientists looking at the surface of Mars have spotted what looks like a bear staring back at them.

A camera on NASA’s Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter took a photo of the formation on Dec. 12. It was shared Wednesday by the University of Arizona, which operates the camera.

A hill with a V-shaped collapse structure forms the bear’s nose and a circular fracture pattern creates the head, the university’s Lunar and Planetary Laboratory explained in the blog for its High Resolution Imaging Science Experiment (HiRISE) camera.

“The circular fracture pattern might be due to the settling of a deposit over a buried impact crater. Maybe the nose is a volcanic or mud vent and the deposit could be lava or mud flows?” it said.

This is due to a tendency for the human brain to try and see recognizable shapes in objects or data that are otherwise not familiar to us, known as pareidolia.

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