Tag Archives: speed

Soul Hackers 2 version 1.02 update now available – adds ‘Dash’ function, ‘Speed Up’ battle mode, and four new demons

ATLUS [1,885 articles]” href=”https://www.gematsu.com/companies/atlus”>ATLUS has released the version 1.02 update for Soul Hackers 2 [32 articles]” href=”https://www.gematsu.com/games/soul-hackers-2″>Soul Hackers 2, which adds the “Dash” function, “Speed Up” mode for battles, various adjustment, and four new demons.

Get the details below.

Dash Function

  • A “Dash” function has been added to Ringo’s movement.
  • The user can toggle between “Normal” and “Dash” at will. While in Dash Mode, Ringo’s walking and slashing speeds will increase.
  • Due to the addition of the dash function, the effect of the Summoner Skill “Assassin’s Steps” has been changed to: “For a given distance, enemies will ignore Ringo.”

Fast Battle Mode

  • A “Speed Up” mode has been added to battles. Players may freely toggle between normal and high-speed combat.

Adjustments

  • Adjusted how long loading-screen tips are shown.
  • Changed the flow of on-screen prompts during soul level increase to reduce the risk of incorrect input from accidental button presses.
  • Added the ability to teleport directly to shops from the City Map.
  • Adjusted enemy spawn rate in dungeons.
  • Adjusted skill inheritance rates during demon fusion.
  • Other minor changes.

Other Changes

  • Added four new demons: Pixie (Soul Hackers Ver.), Neko Shogun, Aitvaras, and Isis.
  • Note: The above bonus demons do not count toward the Registration Percentage in the Demon Compendium or the achievement “Compendium Completionist.”

Soul Hackers 2 is available now for PS5 [3,762 articles]” href=”https://www.gematsu.com/platforms/playstation/ps5″>PlayStation 5, Xbox Series [2,927 articles]” href=”https://www.gematsu.com/platforms/xbox/xbox-series”>Xbox Series, PS4 [24,206 articles]” href=”https://www.gematsu.com/platforms/playstation/ps4″>PlayStation 4, Xbox One [11,586 articles]” href=”https://www.gematsu.com/platforms/xbox/xbox-one”>Xbox One, and PC [16,325 articles]” href=”https://www.gematsu.com/platforms/pc”>PC via Steam and Microsoft Store.

Watch a new trailer below.

Version 1.02 Update Trailer

English

Japanese

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Need for Speed Unbound ‘Takeover Events’ trailer, screenshots

Publisher Electronic Arts [1,683 articles]” href=”https://www.gematsu.com/companies/electronic-arts”>Electronic Arts and developer Criterion Games [59 articles]” href=”https://www.gematsu.com/companies/electronic-arts/criterion-games”>Criterion Games have released a new trailer and screenshots for Need for Speed Unbound [5 articles]” href=”https://www.gematsu.com/games/need-for-speed-unbound”>Need for Speed Unbound showcasing Takeover Events, the new replayable precision driving mode led by rap artist A$AP Rocky.

Need for Speed Unbound‘s Takeover Events will have players pulling huge drifts, smashing collectibles, and proving their skills to Lake [2 articles]” href=”https://www.gematsu.com/games/lake”>Lakeshore’s most stylish street racers,” Electronic Arts said in a press release. “It’ll take both speed and style for players to prove they have what it takes to reach The Grand, Lakeshore’s ultimate street Racing [78 articles]” href=”https://www.gematsu.com/genres/racing”>racing challenge.”

Need for Speed Unbound is due out for PS5 [3,673 articles]” href=”https://www.gematsu.com/platforms/playstation/ps5″>PlayStation 5, Xbox Series [2,878 articles]” href=”https://www.gematsu.com/platforms/xbox/xbox-series”>Xbox Series, and PC [16,238 articles]” href=”https://www.gematsu.com/platforms/pc”>PC via Steam, Epic Games Store, and Origin on December 2.

Watch the trailer below. View the screenshots at the gallery.

Takeover Events Gameplay Trailer (feat. A$AP Rocky)

Screenshots

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Monstrous asteroid to speed by Earth next week

A large “potentially hazardous asteroid” is expected to swing fewer than six lunar distances from Earth at the beginning of next month. 

The asteroid, known as 2022 RM4, is expected to pass by Earth on Nov. 1 – about 1.5 million miles away at its closest point.

According to NASA’s Center for Near Earth Object Studies, the asteroid has an estimated diameter of between 330 and 740 meters, or up to over 2,400 feet.

It will pass by the blue planet at around 52,500 miles per hour, according to LiveScience. 

Any space object that comes within 120 million miles of Earth is deemed a “near-Earth object.” 

Any large body within 4.6 million miles of Earth is classified with the astronomical term: a “potentially hazardous asteroid.” 

2022 RM4 is also an Apollo-type asteroid, which is a class of objects named for asteroid 1862 Apollo.

Such asteroids have an orbit that is larger than Earth’s orbit around the sun and their path crosses Earth’s path. 

2002 RM4 orbits the Sun every 1,397 days and its path does occasionally cross Earth’s orbital path around the Sun.

According to NASA, Earth faces no known danger from an apocalyptic asteroid collision for at least the next century.

In addition, the agency’s Double Asteroid Redirection Test (DART) spacecraft recently redirected the non-hazardous asteroid Dimorphos by sending it off course.

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Monstrous asteroid to speed by Earth next week

A large “potentially hazardous asteroid” is expected to swing fewer than six lunar distances from Earth at the beginning of next month. 

The asteroid, known as 2022 RM4, is expected to pass by Earth on Nov. 1 – about 1.5 million miles away at its closest point.

According to NASA’s Center for Near Earth Object Studies, the asteroid has an estimated diameter of between 330 and 740 meters, or up to over 2,400 feet.

It will pass by the blue planet at around 52,500 miles per hour, according to LiveScience. 

STUDY SAYS ASTEROID THAT KILLED THE DINOSAURS ALSO CAUSED A GLOBAL TSUNAMI

An asteroid over Earth
(iStock)

Any space object that comes within 120 million miles of Earth is deemed a “near-Earth object.” 

Any large body within 4.6 million miles of Earth is classified with the astronomical term: a “potentially hazardous asteroid.” 

In this image made available by NASA, debris ejects from the asteroid Dimorphos, right, a few minutes after the intentional collision of NASA’s Double Asteroid Redirection Test (DART) mission on Sept. 26, 2022, captured by the nearby Italian Space Agency’s LICIACube. On Tuesday, Oct. 5, 2022l, NASA said the spacecraft succeeded in shifting its orbit. 
(ASI/NASA via AP)

2022 RM4 is also an Apollo-type asteroid, which is a class of objects named for asteroid 1862 Apollo.

NASA’S DART MISSION SUCCESSFULLY HITS ASTEROID INTO NEW ORBIT

Such asteroids have an orbit that is larger than Earth’s orbit around the sun and their path crosses Earth’s path. 

2002 RM4 orbits the Sun every 1,397 days and its path does occasionally cross Earth’s orbital path around the Sun.

This imagery from NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope from Oct. 8, 2022, shows the debris blasted from the surface of Dimorphos 285 hours after the asteroid was intentionally impacted by NASA’s DART spacecraft on Sept. 26. 
(NASA/ESA/STScI/Hubble)

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According to NASA, Earth faces no known danger from an apocalyptic asteroid collision for at least the next century.

In addition, the agency’s Double Asteroid Redirection Test (DART) spacecraft recently redirected the non-hazardous asteroid Dimorphos by sending it off course.

Read original article here

Monstrous asteroid to speed by Earth next week

A large “potentially hazardous asteroid” is expected to swing fewer than six lunar distances from Earth at the beginning of next month.

The asteroid, known as 2022 RM4, is expected to pass by Earth on Nov. 1 – about 1.5 million miles away at its closest point.

According to NASA’s Center for Near Earth Object Studies, the asteroid has an estimated diameter of between 330 and 740 meters, or up to over 2,400 feet.

It will pass by the blue planet at around 52,500 miles per hour, according to LiveScience.

STUDY SAYS ASTEROID THAT KILLED THE DINOSAURS ALSO CAUSED A GLOBAL TSUNAMI

An asteroid over Earth

Any space object that comes within 120 million miles of the sun is deemed a “near-Earth object.”

READ ON THE FOX NEWS APP

Any large body within 4.6 million miles of Earth is classified with the astronomical term: a “potentially hazardous asteroid.”

2022 RM4 is also an Apollo-type asteroid, which is a class of objects named for asteroid 1862 Apollo.

NASA’S DART MISSION SUCCESSFULLY HITS ASTEROID INTO NEW ORBIT

Such asteroids have an orbit that is larger than Earth’s orbit around the sun and their path crosses Earth’s path.

2002 RM4 orbits the Sun every 1,397 days and its path does occasionally cross Earth’s orbital path around the Sun.

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

According to NASA, Earth faces no known danger from an apocalyptic asteroid collision for at least the next century.

In addition, the agency’s Double Asteroid Redirection Test (DART) spacecraft recently redirected the non-hazardous asteroid Dimorphos by sending it off course.

Read original article here

‘Potentially dangerous’ asteroid nearing Earth is increasing in speed

Another replay of Armageddon? The earth isn’t the only celestial body in space, although a large planet it is still surrounded by many celestial elements that might potentially bring harm to it. One such space element is the asteroid Phaethon which, according to scientists, might become a threat to our planet in future.




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‘Potentially dangerous’ asteroid is near earth

The strange ‘behaviour’ of Phaethon

A giant 6 km long asteroid is attracting scientists’ attention. The cause? It seems that its speed of rotation is increasing dramatically. Phaethon, as it is known, is a potentially dangerous near-Earth asteroid. It is the origin of the Geminids, the famous meteor shower.

Its orbit, which brings it periodically close to the sun, earned it the name of Phaethon, son of the sun god Helios in Greek mythology. It is considered ‘potentially dangerous’ by astronomers. Because it also passes close to the Earth, it is in the eye of the Destiny+ probe, which should reach it by 2028. But lately, the rotation speed of the unusual cosmic stone has been accelerating strangely.

An abnormal speed

According to planetary scientist Sean Marshall:

The model’s predictions do not match the data. The times when the model was brightest were clearly out of sync with the times when Phaethon was actually observed to be brightest. It is due to the fact that Phaethon’s rotation period changed slightly at some point.

The likely explanation would be related to cometary activity at the time when it was closest to the sun. Radiation effects from the sun could also be delaying its course. This is not the first time that Phaethon has behaved strangely. Indeed, the asteroid has rather strange characteristics, as its orbit (curve of displacement in space) resembles that of a comet rather than an asteroid, hence its nickname of ‘rocky comet’.

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In any case, thanks to the various observations produced on its deviation from the analysed data, we now know that Phaethon increases its rotation speed by four milliseconds per year.

This article was translated from Gentside FR.

Sources used:

Futura-Sciences: L’astéroïde potentiellement dangereux Phaédon a un comportement qui intrigue les astronomes

SciencePost: l’astéroïde “potentiellement dangereux” Phaethon se comporte étrangement

ASTÉROÏDEASTRONOMIE

Read more:

⋙ A massive asteroid will hit Earth in November, according to ‘time traveller’

⋙ NASA’s going to crash its spacecraft into an asteroid and you can actually watch it happen: Here are all the details

⋙ Asteroid larger than the Tower of Pisa is coming close to Earth

Continue Reading



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Apple introduces new iPad and iPad Pro with speed enhancements

Apple Inc. quietly announced upgrades to two of its iPad models Tuesday, through announcements lacking the fanfare of the company’s recent iPhone 14 debut.

Instead of hosting an event to reveal the iPad updates as it did for the iPhone, Apple
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simply announced the refreshed devices in a series of press releases. The company is enhancing its iPad Pro with the inclusion of its faster M2 chip and also delivering speed upgrades in its new base-level iPad.

The M2 chip seems to be the biggest change in the new iPad Pro. Apple says the chip has a central processing unit (CPU) that’s up to 15% faster than what was on the prior-generation M1 chip, while the graphics processing unit (GPU) can bring up to 35% faster graphics performance.

Apple suggests the chip will prove helpful to power users, such as “photographers editing massive photo libraries and designers manipulating complex 3D objects.”

The iPad Pro also supports a “hover” feature for the Apple Pencil, which detects the pencil up to 12 millimeters above the display so that users can see a preview of their mark before they touch the screen to draw or write.

The 11-inch iPad Pro will begin at $799 for the Wi-Fi version and $999 for the cellular version, while the 12.9-inch iPad Pro starts at $1,099 with just Wi-Fi and $1,299 with the cellular option.

Apple also updated its base iPad model, this time moving the front-facing camera to the landscape edge of the device in what Apple says is a first for any of its iPads.

“Whether users are on a FaceTime call or recording a video for social media, they will always be looking right toward the camera,” Apple said in the release. The camera has a 12-megapixel sensor and a 122-degree field of view.

Apple is putting its A14 Bionic chip in the new base-level iPad, which the company says will bring improvements in CPU and graphics performance. Apple is also moving the Touch ID reader to the top button on the iPad.

The device will come in blue, pink, yellow, and silver color options. The Wi-Fi version starts at $449 and the cellular-connected version begins at $599.

Both refreshed models are currently up for preorder, with availability beginning Oct. 26.

The upgrades come as Apple looks to once again drive growth in the iPad category. The device proved popular during the pandemic as people sought new electronics that would help them work and study from home, but now momentum is harder to come by: Apple posted $7.22 billion in iPad revenue during its June quarter, down from $7.37 billion a year before.

The company refreshed its 4K Apple TV as well on Tuesday, giving a performance boost with the A15 Bionic chip that the company says will make gameplay faster.

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Epstein-Barr: Researchers speed efforts for vaccine against virus linked with mono, MS

Maybe you’ve never heard of the Epstein-Barr virus. But it knows all about you.

Chances are, it’s living inside you right now. About 95% of American adults are infected sometime in their lives. And once infected, the virus stays with you.

Most viruses, such as influenza, just come and go. A healthy immune system attacks them, kills them, and prevents them from sickening you again. Epstein-Barr and its cousins, including the viruses that cause chickenpox and herpes, can hibernate inside your cells for decades.

This viral family has “evolved with us for millions of years,” said Blossom Damania, a virologist at the University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill. “They know all your body’s secrets.”

Although childhood Epstein-Barr infections are typically mild, exposure in teens and young adults can lead to infectious mononucleosis, a weeks-long illness that sickens 125,000 Americans a year, causing sore throats, swollen glands, and extreme fatigue. And while Epstein-Barr spends most of its time sleeping, it can reawaken during times of stress or when the immune system is off its game. Those reactivations are linked to a long list of serious health conditions, including several types of cancer and autoimmune diseases.

Scientists have spent years trying to develop vaccines against Epstein-Barr, or EBV. But recently several leaps in medical research have provided more urgency to the quest — and more hope for success. In just the past year, two experimental vaccine efforts have made it to human clinical trials.

What’s changed?

First, the Epstein-Barr virus has been shown to present an even greater threat. New research firmly links it to multiple sclerosis, or MS, a potentially disabling chronic disease that afflicts more than 900,000 Americans and 2.8 million people worldwide.

The journal Science in January published results from a landmark 20-year study of 10 million military personnel that offers the strongest evidence yet that Epstein-Barr can trigger MS. The new study found that people infected with Epstein-Barr are 32 times as likely as people not infected to develop MS.

And shedding new light on the mechanisms that could explain that correlation, a separate group of scientists published a study in Nature describing how the virus can cause an autoimmune reaction that leads to MS. The disease, which usually strikes between ages 20 and 40, disrupts communication between the brain and other parts of the body and is often marked by recurring episodes of extreme fatigue, blurred vision, muscle weakness, and difficulty with balance and coordination. At its worst, MS can lead to impaired speech and paralysis.

Amplifying that newfound urgency, several new studies suggest that reactivation of the Epstein-Barr virus also is involved with some cases of long covid, a little-understood condition in which patients experience lingering symptoms that often resemble mononucleosis.

And just as crucial to the momentum: Advances in vaccine science spurred by the pandemic, including the mRNA technology used in some covid vaccines, could accelerate development of other vaccines, including ones against Epstein-Barr, said Dr. Peter Hotez, dean of the National School of Tropical Medicine at Baylor College of Medicine. Hotez co-created a low-cost, patent-free covid vaccine called Corbevax.

Some researchers question the need for a vaccine that targets a disease like MS that, while debilitating, remains relatively rare.

Eliminating Epstein-Barr would require vaccinating all healthy children even though their risk of developing cancer or multiple sclerosis is small, said Dr. Ralph Horwitz, a professor at the Lewis Katz School of Medicine at Temple University.

Before exposing children to the potential risks of a new vaccine, he said, scientists need to answer basic questions about MS. For example, why does a virus that affects nearly everyone cause disease in a small fraction? And what roles do stress and other environmental conditions play in that equation?

The answer appears to be that Epstein-Barr is “necessary but not sufficient” to cause disease, said immunologist Bruce Bebo, executive vice president for research at the National MS Society, adding that the virus “may be the first in a string of dominoes.”

Hotez said researchers could continue to probe the mysteries surrounding Epstein-Barr and MS even as the vaccine efforts proceed. Further study is required to understand which populations might benefit most from a vaccine, and once more is known, Hotez said, such a vaccine possibly could be used in patients found to be at highest risk, such as organ transplant recipients, rather than administered universally to all young people.

“Now that we know that Epstein-Barr is very tightly linked to MS, we could save a lot of lives if we develop the vaccine now,” Damania said, “rather than wait 10 years” until every question is answered.

Moderna and the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases launched separate clinical trials of Epstein-Barr vaccines over the past year. Epstein-Barr vaccines also are in early stages of testing at Opko Health, a Miami-based biotech company; Seattle’s Fred Hutchinson Cancer Center; and California’s City of Hope National Medical Center.

Scientists have sought to develop vaccines against Epstein-Barr for decades only to be thwarted by the complexities of the virus. Epstein-Barr “is a master of evading the immune system,” said Dr. Jessica Durkee-Shock, a clinical immunologist and principal investigator for NIAID’s trial.

Both MS and the cancers linked to Epstein-Barr develop many years after people are infected. So a trial designed to learn whether a vaccine can prevent these diseases would take decades and a lot of money.

Moderna researchers initially are focusing on a goal more easily measured: the prevention of mononucleosis, which doubles the risk of multiple sclerosis. Mono develops only a month or so after people are infected with Epstein-Barr, so scientists won’t have to wait as long for results.

Mono can be incredibly disruptive on its own, keeping students out of class and military recruits out of training for weeks. In about 10% of cases, the crippling fatigue lasts six months or more. In 1% of cases, patients develop complications, including hepatitis and neurological problems.

For now, the clinical trials for Epstein-Barr immunizations are enrolling only adults. “In the future, the perfect vaccine would be given to a small child,” Durkee-Shock said. “And it would protect them their whole life, and prevent them from getting mono or any other complication from the Epstein-Barr virus.”

The NIAID vaccine, being tested for safety in 40 volunteers, is built around ferritin, an iron-storage protein that can be manipulated to display a key viral protein to the immune system. Like a cartoon Transformer, the ferritin nanoparticle self-assembles into what looks like a “little iron soccer ball,” Durkee-Shock said. “This approach, in which many copies of the EBV protein are displayed on a single particle, has proved successful for other vaccines, including the HPV and hepatitis B vaccine.”

Moderna’s experimental vaccine, being tested in about 270 people, works more like the company’s covid shot. Both deliver snippets of a virus’s genetic information in molecules called mRNA inside a lipid nanoparticle, or tiny bubble of fat. Moderna, which has dozens of mRNA vaccines in development, hopes to learn from each and apply those lessons to Epstein-Barr, said Sumana Chandramouli, senior director and research program leader for infectious diseases at Moderna.

“What the covid vaccine has shown us is that the mRNA technology is well tolerated, very safe, and highly efficacious,” Chandramouli said.

But mRNA vaccines have limitations.

Although they have saved millions of lives during the covid pandemic, the antibody levels generated in response to the mRNA vaccines wane after a few months. It’s possible this rapid loss of antibodies is related specifically to the coronavirus and its rapidly evolving new strains, Hotez said. But if waning immunity is inherent in the mRNA technology, that could seriously limit future vaccines.

Designing vaccines against Epstein-Barr is also more complicated than for covid. The Epstein-Barr virus and other herpesviruses are comparatively huge, four to five times as large as SARS-CoV-2, the coronavirus that causes covid. And while the coronavirus uses just one protein to infect human cells, the Epstein-Barr virus uses many, four of which are included in the Moderna vaccine.

Earlier experimental Epstein-Barr vaccines targeting one viral protein lowered the rate of infectious mononucleosis but failed to prevent viral infection. Targeting multiple viral proteins may be more effective at preventing infection, said Damania, the UNC virologist.

“If you close one door, the other door is still open,” Damania said. “You have to block infection in all cell types to have a successful vaccine that prevents future infections.”

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‘Impossible’ space object moving seven times the speed of light spotted by scientists

NASA scientists have found two objects traveling ‘impossibly’ fast through space.

The objects appeared to be traveling seven times the speed of light after a collision of two neutron stars blasted a jet of radiation in 2017.

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NASA scientists have found two objects traveling ‘impossibly’ fast through spaceCredit: NASA Hubble Site

The collision event, known as GW170817, was a neutron star merger.

After two neutron stars collapsed into a black hole post-explosion, a spinning disk was created around it, which beamed fast jets of matter into space.

The jets collected debris in the expanding explosion debris.

NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope was initially used to gather data, but nearly 70 foundations and observatories witnessed the event.

Originally, it looked like jets were traveling seven times the speed of light, but that seemed to be impossible.

Researchers combined their data from all of the relevant telescopes find a more accurate answer.

Scientists identified this discrepancy as a superliminal motion, which means that the light jets emit has a shorter distance to travel at later points.

In other words, what seemed to be objects traveling seven times the speed of light was based on the angle of observation during the event.

Therefore, it may seem like the jets are traveling faster than they really are.

It was impossible that the objects were traveling seven times the speed of light, so with more calculations, scientists found the real speed, as reported by Futurism.

The objects were traveling at least 99.97 percent of the speed of light, which is still traveling at a very high speed.

With the new information in mind, scientists hope to use their findings to make more accurate and detailed observations of neutron star mergers.



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Scientists Spotted Something That Appeared to Be Moving 7 Times the Speed of Light

That can’t be right.

Speed Demon

Back in 2017, scientists observed a spectacular collision of two neutron stars that blasted a jet of radiation so powerful that NASA says the energy it released was “comparable to that of a supernova,” according to a press release by the agency.

But it’s taken scientists until now to unpack all the data that was gathered because of its complexity. Among other intriguing findings: stuff appearing to travel faster than light — which, of course, is impossible. But don’t worry. There’s a perfectly reasonable explanation.

Joint Effort

The event, designated GW170817, is what’s known as a binary neutron star merger. Neutron stars are the collapsed cores of once-massive stars and some of the densest objects in the universe. According to NASA, just a single teaspoon of one would weigh four billion tons on Earth.

With that sort of unfathomable density comes great gravity — enough to draw two of these neutron stars together in an explosive collision that launched gravitational waves and gamma radiation into space, making it the first time scientists have detected both from a neutron star merger, NASA says.

The Hubble Space Telescope observed the two neutron stars collapse into a black hole in the aftermath of the explosion. A spinning disk then formed around the black hole, which beamed incredibly fast jets of matter into space. Combining their findings with that of the National Science Foundation, scientists were able to piece together the event with extreme precision — including how fast the jets were moving.

Breaking the Law

Initially, from the Hubble observations, it appeared the jets were traveling at seven times the speed of light. Of course, that’s impossible. The scientists attribute this discrepancy to a phenomena known as superliminal motion. Essentially, since the jet approaches our planet at nearly the speed of light, NASA says, the light it emits at later points has a shorter distance to travel each time, making it seem like it’s moving faster than it really is.

With some additional calculations, scientists found the real speed: at least 99.97 percent the speed of light — which, to be fair, is still pretty damn fast.

The scientists hope their findings, published in a paper this week in Nature, will allow for even more precise observations of neutron star mergers in the future, which could potentially help calculate the rate of the universe’s expansion.

More on stars: Huge Graveyard of Stars Surrounds Our Galaxy, Scientists Say

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