Tag Archives: slightly

NYC air quality slightly worse on Sunday as smoke from Canadian wildfires returns – New York Daily News

  1. NYC air quality slightly worse on Sunday as smoke from Canadian wildfires returns New York Daily News
  2. Massachusetts shouldn’t have wildfire smoke impacts this week, it will ‘feel like summer’ with warm temps and thunderstorms Boston Herald
  3. Much-needed rain in York County should wash away residual Canadian wildfire smoke York Dispatch
  4. Air quality may worsen Saturday night; NYC residents advised to take precautions SILive.com
  5. Long Island weather forecast: Rain could clear smoky air Monday Newsday
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Stock futures are slightly down as investors parse corporate earnings: Live updates – CNBC

  1. Stock futures are slightly down as investors parse corporate earnings: Live updates CNBC
  2. Dow Jones Futures: Tesla Falls As Margins Dive; Why Elon Musk Is Willing To Go For Zero Profit | Investor’s Business Daily Investor’s Business Daily
  3. Netflix earnings breakdown, United Airlines predicts strong travel season, bank earnings takeaways Yahoo Finance
  4. Stocks making the biggest moves premarket: United Airlines, Netflix, Morgan Stanley and more CNBC
  5. LIVE STOCK MARKET UPDATES: Morgan Stanley, Ally Financial, Citizens, and other banks report earnings Fox Business
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Russell Crowe Comments On ‘Gladiator’ Sequel & Says He’s “Slightly Jealous” – Deadline

  1. Russell Crowe Comments On ‘Gladiator’ Sequel & Says He’s “Slightly Jealous” Deadline
  2. Gladiator star Russell Crowe says he’s ‘slightly jealous’ of the upcoming sequel Yahoo Entertainment
  3. Russell Crowe says he’s ‘jealous’ of upcoming Gladiator sequel marca.com
  4. Russell Crowe Credits Cannes Trip with Saving Him from Early Career Typecastings IndieWire
  5. Russell Crowe Admits He’s ‘Slightly Jealous’ Of The Cast Of New ‘Gladiator’ Sequel ETCanada.com
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‘Gladiator’ star Russell Crowe says he’s ‘slightly jealous’ of the upcoming sequel – Entertainment Weekly News

  1. ‘Gladiator’ star Russell Crowe says he’s ‘slightly jealous’ of the upcoming sequel Entertainment Weekly News
  2. Russell Crowe Credits Cannes Trip with Saving Him from Early Career Typecastings Yahoo Entertainment
  3. Russell Crowe Admits He’s ‘Slightly Jealous’ Of The Cast Of New ‘Gladiator’ Sequel ETCanada.com
  4. Russell Crowe Says He’s “Slightly Jealous” of Gladiator 2 Cast ComicBook.com
  5. Russell Crowe Talks ‘Gladiator’ Sequel, Explains Why He’s ‘Slightly Jealous’ of New Cast Just Jared
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Kirby and the Forgotten Land director says final boss difficulty curve was “slightly too steep” – Destructoid

  1. Kirby and the Forgotten Land director says final boss difficulty curve was “slightly too steep” Destructoid
  2. Kirby and the Forgotten Land developer says the game was a “turning point” for the series – just like Breath of the Wild was for Zelda Gamesradar
  3. Kirby Director Fears The Forgotten Land’s Final Boss Was Too Hard TheGamer
  4. Kirby director explains how Kirby and the Forgotten Land was transformative for the series My Nintendo News
  5. Kirby and the Forgotten Land dev says the final battle might have been too challenging GoNintendo
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The universe is slightly hotter than it should be. ‘Dark photons’ could be to blame.

Observations suggest that the intergalactic gas in our universe is a little hotter than it should be. Recently, a team of astrophysicists have used sophisticated computer simulations to propose a radical solution: an exotic form of dark matter known as “dark photons” could be heating the place up.

These strange particles would be the carriers of a new, fifth force of nature that normal matter does not experience, but occasionally these dark photons can flip their identities to become regular photons, providing a source of heat.

Feeling neutral

We could find such dark photons by observing the intergalactic gas using what’s known as the Lyman-alpha forest. When we observe light from a distant, bright object, like a quasar (glowing objects powered by black holes at the centers of distant galaxies), there is a series of gaps in an otherwise smooth spectrum of light from that faraway object. 

Here’s why: that light has to filter through billions of light-years of gas to reach us. Occasionally that light will pass through a relatively dense clump of neutral hydrogen — a type of hydrogen that consists of one proton and one neutron, and which permeates gas clouds throughout the universe. 

Most of that light will pass through unaffected, but a very specific wavelength of light will get absorbed. This wavelength corresponds to the energy difference needed to bump an electron from its first to its second energy level inside the hydrogen atoms.

When astronomers look at the light coming from that object, it will look otherwise unremarkable except for a gap at the wavelength of that specific energy transition, known as the Lyman-alpha line.

The light from the distant object will pass through multiple clouds and clumps of neutral hydrogen. The expansion of the universe causes the gaps to redshift to different wavelengths, with a new gap appearing at a different wavelength depending on the distance to the particular gas clouds.. The end result of this is the “forest”: a series of lines and gaps in the spectrum. 

Getting hot in here

These Lyman-alpha gaps can also be used to measure the temperature of each gas cloud. If the neutral hydrogen were perfectly still, the gap would appear as an incredibly thin line. But if the individual molecules are moving, then the gap will widen because of the kinetic energy of those molecules. The hotter the gas, the more kinetic energy the molecules have, and the wider the gap.

In a paper appearing in November in the journal Physical Review Letters, a team of astrophysicists have pointed out that by using this method, it seems that the clouds of gas that scatter between galaxies are a little too hot. Computer simulations of the evolution of those gas clouds predict them to be just a little bit colder than we observe, and so perhaps something is heating up those clouds that isn’t currently accounted for in our astrophysical simulations.

One possible explanation for this discrepancy is the presence of “dark photons” in our universe, the study authors claim. This is a very hypothetical form of dark matter, the mysterious, invisible substance that accounts for roughly 80% of all the mass in the universe, yet doesn’t seem to interact with light.

Since astronomers do not currently understand the identity of dark matter, the field is wide open with possibilities as to what it could be. In this model, instead of the dark matter being made of invisible particles (like a phantom version of electrons, for example), it would instead be made of a new kind of force carrier — that is, a type of particle that mediates interactions between other particles.

A warm and fuzzy darkness

The familiar photon is the force carrier of electromagnetism – it’s what creates electricity, magnetism, and light. Dark photons would be a force carrier for a new force of nature that does not operate at the usual scales in the usual scenarios (for example, in our laboratories or within the solar system, where we otherwise would have already observed it).

According to the study authors, the dark photons would still have a tiny bit of mass, and hence they could still account for the dark matter. Plus, because they’re force carriers, they may also interact amongst themselves and with other potential dark matter particles. In the models investigated by the team of astrophysicists, the dark photons are capable of one more trick: they can occasionally turn into a regular photon.

In physics terms, the dark photons can “mix” with regular photons, very rarely swapping identities. When they do, the newly created photon goes on to do what regular photons always do: heat things up. The researchers performed the first ever simulations of the evolution of the universe, including the effects of these sneaky shapeshifting dark photons. They found that a particular combination of dark photon mass and the probability of changing into a regular photon could explain the heating discrepancy.

This result is a very far from a slam-dunk case for the existence of dark photons. A range of possibilities could also explain the Lyman-alpha results, like inaccurate observations or a poor understanding of (normal) astrophysical heating between galaxies. But it is an intriguing clue, and the results can be used as a springboard to continue exploring the viability of this exotic idea. 

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Stock futures dip slightly as investors digest Fed minutes, look ahead to labor data

Traders work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) on November 11, 2022 in New York City. 

Spencer Platt | Getty Images

Stock futures were slightly lower early Thursday morning as investors looked beyond the hawkishness of the Federal Reserve’s meeting minutes released in the afternoon toward labor data coming later this week.

Futures tied to the Dow Jones Industrial Average lost 101 points, trading down around 0.3%. S&P 500 and Nasdaq 100 futures both also traded down 0.29% and 0.36%.

The moves follow a choppy trading session. Markets had been down early in the day on the back of a mixed bag of economic data, but stock rose into the closing bell. The Dow ended the day up 133 points, or 0.4%, while the S&P 500 and Nasdaq added 0.8% and 0.7%, respectively.

November’s Job Openings and Labor Turnover, or JOLTS, report showed the job market remained strong, bolstering concerns that the Fed could continue raising interest rates as long as there remained a hot market for workers. But the ISM manufacturing index showed the sector was contracting after 30 months of expansion, which investors saw as a positive indicator that previous rate hikes had the intended impact of cooling the economy.

Stocks were mainly trading up in the afternoon. But gave up some of their gains following the release of minutes from the Fed’s December meeting, which showed the central bank remained committed to higher interest rates for “some time.”

Investors have “wounds that are still fresh” following 2022, which brought the worst year for the stock market since 2008, said Keith Buchanan, a portfolio manager at GLOBALT Investments. He said investors are attempting to balance what each new piece of economic data or Fed commentary can indicate with broader concerns about the future.

“Every day that goes by and we get a data point that’s moving in the right direction, it’s positive,” Buchanan said. “But it’s also quickly followed up with apprehension on how sensitive and delicate this moment is.”

Investors will watch Thursday for more data on jobs, the trade deficit and business activity. Fed speakers Raphael Bostic and James Bullard are also both slated to speak.

On Friday, investors will review data on nonfarm payrolls, the unemployment rate and hourly wages. Since the report could have a big impact on the Fed’s next moves, it has the potential to impact the market. Investors don’t want to see big gains in wage growth.

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Stock futures rise slightly ahead of the first trading week of the new year

Traders on the floor of the NYSE, Oct. 21, 2022.

Source: NYSE

Stock futures rose Monday evening as traders braced themselves for a flurry of economic data and the minutes from the latest Federal Reserve meeting this week to kick off the new year.

Futures tied to the Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 80 points, or 2%. S&P 500 futures climbed 0.2% and Nasdaq 100 futures added 0.2%.

All of the major averages closed 2022 with their worst losses since 2008, each snapping a three-year win streak. The Dow ended the year down about 8.8% at 33,147.25, and 10.3% off its 52-week high. The S&P 500 lost 19.4% for the year and now sits at 3,839.50, more than 20% below its record high. The tech-heavy Nasdaq tumbled 33.1% last year. It’s starting 2023 almost 34% from its record, at 10,466.88.

Inflation sparking “the worst defeat for both stocks and bonds in decades” was the biggest investor narrative for 2022, according to Greg Bassuk, CEO of AXS Investments. The new year kicks off with a cloud of worry that a “harder-than-desired landing” by the Fed and its inflation fighting moves could push the economy into a recession.

“2022 was characterized by an inflation-blindsiding market rout, in part because the year was kicked off with Wall Street and Main Street both anticipating a containment on rising prices and a Federal Reserve that would hold rates at lower levels,” he said. “But a fiercely opposite reality endured as inflation skyrocketed.”

“Moving into 2023, as prices remain materially elevated, investors would be prudent to consider inflation-sensitive assets, as well as cyclical and other stocks that tend to do well in rising price environments,” he added.

Investors are getting a bundle of data in the first trading week of the year and investors will be watching closely, looking for opportunities to adjust their portfolios to recover from the 2022 carnage. Wednesday is a big day with the Job Openings and Labor Turnover Survey, better known as JOLTS, due out in the morning and the minutes of the Fed’s latest policy meeting set to come out in the afternoon.

They’re also looking forward to Friday’s December jobs report, the final employment report the Fed will have to consider before its next meeting on Feb. 1. There are also several speeches by Fed presidents scheduled Thursday and Friday.

First up, however, are S&P Global manufacturing PMI and construction spending, due out at 9:45 a.m. and 10:00 a.m. ET on Tuesday.

Walgreens Boots Alliance and Constellation Brands will also report their quarterly financial results on Thursday, though it’s an otherwise quiet week for earnings reports.

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Stock futures are slightly positive as investors assess risk of an economic downturn

U.S. stock futures were up slightly on Thursday morning following a fifth straight day of losses for the S&P 500 as Wall Street weighed the likelihood of a recession.

Dow Jones Industrial Average futures added 30 points, or 0.09%. S&P 500 futures gained 0.11%, while Nasdaq 100 futures were 0.17% higher.

Shares of Rent the Runway surged more than 27% in extended trading. The online retailer topped revenue expectations in its most recent quarter as shoppers opted to borrow designer clothes amid rising inflation.

During the regular session Wednesday, the S&P 500 declined 0.19% in its fifth straight losing session. The Dow was virtually flat, adding just 1.58 points. Meanwhile, the Nasdaq Composite slipped 0.51%.

The Federal Reserve is expected to issue a 50 basis point interest rate hike next week. It’s a smaller increase than the prior four rate hikes. Still, investors are increasingly concerned whether the central bank can avoid a recession next year in its attempt to squash inflation.

“We’ve been waiting for earnings to come down, we’ve been waiting for CEOs to acknowledge the fact that a recession is more likely than not, and here we are,” Liz Young, head of investment strategy at SoFi, said Wednesday on CNBC’s “Closing Bell: Overtime.”

“It’s hard for me to see how we wouldn’t have one. But I think it would be a good thing if we just got it over with,” Young added.

On the economic front, investors are awaiting the latest data on weekly jobless claims before the bell on Thursday. Economists polled by Dow Jones are anticipating a reading of 230,000, up slightly from the prior week’s total of 225,000.

Traders are expecting the most recent earnings results from Lululemon Athletica, DocuSign, Broadcom and Costco after the bell Thursday.

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Stock futures slightly negative Wednesday morning

Stock futures were just under the flatline Wednesday morning.

Futures tied to the Dow Jones Industrial Average were down 20 points, or 0.06%, while S&P 500 futures were 0.06% lower and Nasdaq 100 futures were down 0.07%.

In regular trading the Dow fell more than 350 points, or 1.03%. The S&P 500 and Nasdaq Composite lost 1.4% and 2%, respectively.

The moves came as investors lost hope that the Federal Reserve will be able to engineer a soft landing. Instead, concerns swirled around the state of the economy and whether an economic downturn is approaching.

“Investors couldn’t decide which they were more worried about: an impending recession, as implied by November declines for the ISM, Chicago PMI and Philly Fed, as well as housing data, or the threat of a more hawkish-leaning FOMC, as a result of stronger than expected employment data and factory orders,” said Sam Stovall, chief investment strategist at CFRA Research. “Stocks sold off across the board, as investors decided to take the profits generated by the last two monthly price gains, the first since August 2021.”

Investors await more economic data this week for clues on what to expect from the Fed. On Wednesday, the Mortgage Bankers Association will release its weekly report of mortgage loan applications.

There are also still several companies set to report earnings. Campbell Soup and GameStop will report results on Wednesday.

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