Tag Archives: Somethings

Amy Schumer, 42, hilariously warns ’20 somethings’ that ‘life is coming for you’ with shocking before-and-after photos – one from 2012 and the other taken recently – Daily Mail

  1. Amy Schumer, 42, hilariously warns ’20 somethings’ that ‘life is coming for you’ with shocking before-and-after photos – one from 2012 and the other taken recently Daily Mail
  2. Amy Schumer Warns ’20 Somethings’: ‘Life Is Coming for You’ PEOPLE
  3. Amy Schumer warns 20-year-olds with before-and-after photos: ‘Life is coming for you’ Page Six
  4. Amy Schumer Shares Hospital Photo With IV in Arm & Warns Younger People: ‘Life is Coming for You’ HollywoodLife
  5. Amy Schumer Shares Shocking Before & After Pics — Warning ’20 Somethings’ That ‘Life Is Coming’! PerezHilton.com
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Travis Kelce on restructuring freeing cap space: I think something’s in the air

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The Chiefs restructured tight end Travis Kelce‘s contract this week in a move that created $3.455 million in cap space by converting some of his salary into a signing bonus.

On the New Heights podcast that Kelce hosts with his brother Jason, the tight end discussed the restructure. Kelce said he didn’t hesitate to say yes when his agent called him about the Chiefs’ plan because it allowed him to get money right away and gave the team cap space to use on getting better this season.

Kelce said he believes the restructuring is “a start to a move” because the team wouldn’t just give him money upfront out of kindness. He said he’s heard the chatter about interest in wide receiver Odell Beckham Jr. and would welcome him as a teammate, before adding that he’s not sure what the team may be planning.

“I want them to come true,” Kelce said, via the Kansas City Star. “I haven’t heard anything. I have not heard anything in the locker room or anything around the facility. “But I think that something’s in the air for sure. And if it means OBJ . . . alright now.”

There’s no deadline to sign free agents, but the NFL’s trade deadline is November 1 and that should spur action for the Chiefs and other teams looking to bolster their rosters ahead of the playoff push.

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Something’s Glowing at The Galactic Core, And We Could Be Closer to Solving The Mystery

Something deep in the heart of the Milky Way galaxy is glowing with gamma radiation, and nobody can figure out for sure what it might be.

Colliding dark matter has been proposed, ruled out, and then tentatively reconsidered.

 

Dense, rapidly rotating objects called pulsars were also considered as candidate sources of the high-energy rays, before being dismissed as too few in number to make the sums work.

A study by researchers from Australia, New Zealand and Japan could breathe new life into the pulsar explanation, revealing how it might be possible to squeeze some serious intense sunshine from a population of spinning stars without breaking any rules.

Gamma radiation isn’t your typical hue of sunlight. It requires some of the Universe’s most energetic processes to produce. We’re talking black holes colliding, matter being whipped towards light speed, antimatter combining with matter kinds of processes.

Of course, the center of the Milky Way has all of these things in spades. So when we gaze into the heavens and consider all of the crashing bits of matter, spiraling black holes, whizzing pulsars, and other astrophysical processes, we’d expect to see a healthy gamma glow.

But when researchers used NASA’s Fermi telescope to measure the intense shine within the heart of our galaxy about ten years ago, they found there was more of this high-energy light than they could account for: what’s known as the Galactic Centre Excess.

 

One exciting possibility involves unseen bits of matter bumping together in the night. These weakly interacting massive particles – a hypothetical category of dark matter commonly described as WIMPs – would cancel each other out as they smoosh together, leaving nothing but radiation to mark their presence.

It’s a fun explanation to consider, but is also light on evidence.

“The nature of dark matter is entirely unknown, so any potential clues garner a lot of excitement,” says astrophysicist Roland Crocker from the Australian National University.

“But our results point to another important source of gamma ray production.”

That source is the millisecond pulsar.

To make one, take a star much bigger than our own and let its fires die down. It will eventually collapse into a dense ball not much wider than a city, where its atoms pack together so tightly, many of its protons are slowly baked into neutrons.

This process generates super-strong magnetic fields that channel incoming particles into fast-flowing streams glowing with radiation.

Since the object is rotating, these streams swivel around from the star’s poles like the Universe’s biggest lighthouse beacons – so it appears to pulse with energy. Pulsing stars that spin hundreds of times a second are known as millisecond pulsars, and we know a lot about the conditions under which they’re likely to form.

 

“Scientists have previously detected gamma-ray emissions from individual millisecond pulsars in the neighborhood of the Solar System, so we know these objects emit gamma rays,” says Crocker.

To emit them, however, they’d need a generous amount of mass to feed on. Most pulsar systems in the center of the Milky Way are thought to be too puny to emit anything more energetic than X-rays, though.

That might not always be the case, however, especially if the dead stars they emerged from are of a particular variety of ultra-massive white dwarf.

According to Crocker, if enough of these heavyweights were to turn into pulsars and hold onto their binary partners, they would provide just the right amount of gamma radiation to match observations.

“Our model demonstrates that the integrated emission from a whole population of such stars, around 100,000 in number, would produce a signal entirely compatible with the Galactic Centre Excess,” says Crocker.

Being a purely theoretical model, it’s an idea that now needs a generous dose of empirical evidence. Unlike suggestions based on dark matter, however, we already know exactly what to look for.

This research was published in Nature Astronomy.  

 

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Morning Bid: Something’s off | Reuters

Raindrops hang on a sign for Wall Street outside the New York Stock Exchange in Manhattan in New York City, New York, U.S., October 26, 2020. REUTERS/Mike Segar/File Photo

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A look at the day ahead in markets from Julien Ponthus.

It’s the final day of trading of April and it does look like despite the fireworks on Wall Street last night, this month bears sombre omens for what’s to come, notably with Asian shares on the verge of their worst month since the COVID-19 March 2020 crash.

It’s even worse for the Nasdaq (.NDX) which is on course for its biggest losses in a month since the financial crisis of 2008.

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For all the enthusiasm surrounding the earnings of Meta Platforms (FB.O), Amazon.com (AMZN.O) delivered a disappointing quarter while Apple (AAPL.O) had dire news to share with the market after the bell, despite record profits and sales. read more

COVID-19 lockdowns snarl production and demand in China and the iPhone maker warned that the war in Ukraine, which led Apple to stop sales in Russia, would cut sales more deeply in the fiscal third quarter.

Overall, the S&P 500 has had a terrible ride so far in 2022, losing roughly 10% of its value, wiping off four trillion dollars in market capitalisation.

And it’s hard to ignore the dotcom bubble flavoured ‘irrational exuberance’ whiff that surrounds Elon Musk’s $44 billion cash deal for Twitter, particularly when the social media reported revenue and ad sales that fell short of expectations. read more

There’s also been plenty of puzzling market moves lately. The dollar enjoyed its best month in a decade and hit its highest level in 20 years but data showed the U.S. economy unexpectedly contracted in the first quarter. read more

Of course, with investors betting on a 50 basis point interest rate hike at the Federal Reserve’s meeting next week, a U.S. aggressive monetary tightening remains the driving force across financial markets for the foreseeable future.

In that light, it is not surprising that a warning from Japan’s Ministry of Finance failed to deter the dollar from cruising above 130 yen for the first time since 2002.

Perhaps not surprising either that the euro, weakened by the Russian gas standoff, also felt the might of the greenback and fell to a five-year low of $1.04 even as 10-year German bund yields rose 10 basis points with German inflation hitting its highest level in more than 40 years.

Key developments that should provide more direction to markets on Friday:

-French economic growth stalls in first quarter, misses forecasts read more

-BASF confirms earnings guidance but flags risks

-Danske Bank Q1 net profit below expectations read more

-Swiss National Bank’s annual general meeting of shareholders

-China to step up policy support to steady economy read more

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Reporting by Julien Ponthus

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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