Tag: happened
Banking Crisis: What REALLY Happened?! Hearing Tells All!
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Deadly smart motorway crash ‘would not have happened with hard shoulder’ – inquest
Every video game delay that has happened in 2023 so far
USDC Depeg: What Happened? Safe or Can it Happen Again?
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New T. Rex box set asks, Whatever Happened To The Teenage Dream?
I drive a Rolls Royce ’cause it’s good for my voice
The post New T. Rex box set asks, Whatever Happened To The Teenage Dream? appeared first on UNCUT.
What happened when Femail set Amanda Platell up on a blind date with a man who reads the Guardian?
I wanted to be a model when I was younger so I tried to be proactive about it – then the craziest thing happened
A WOMAN’S dreams were crushed as a child when she realized that her attempts at modeling were going unnoticed.
Heather, whose now 18 years old, has gained a following on TikTok thanks to her videos that recount funny memories from her childhood.
She calls her TikTok account (@officialheathergdawg), her “autobiography.”
In a recent clip, she said that when she was eight years old, she had big plans to become a model.
Rather than sit around and wait for the opportunity to come to her, she did something proactive to make it happen – in the only way a kid can.
“I taped photos of myself around the neighborhood in case a modeling agent found it,” she said.
What happened next, however, was hilariously off point.
“Instead, people thought it was a missing person poster.
“So, when I was walking with my dad someone called the cops and my dad got arrested because they thought he kidnapped me.”
While the initial experience may have been traumatizing, today, Heather clearly laughs the whole thing off.
Viewers thought the story was hysterically unrelatable.
“I think that this is truly an original experience,” one person commented.
“WE NEED TO SEE THE PHOTO OMG,” another begged.
“Listen, can’t say you lacked ambition,” added a third.
“’It’s called exposure, dad,’” a fourth joked.
“And that’s on *manifesting* fame without being specific,” chimed a fifth.
And someone else said it was right out of a comedy script: “This is like a Modern Family episode.”
Pilot that survived Sea World helicopter crash reveals what happened before crash
NASA smacked an asteroid with a spacecraft. Watch what happened next.
The 1998 blockbuster Armageddon was about a fictional last-ditch attempt by NASA to stop a speeding asteroid headed toward Earth.
Now, 25 years later, the U.S. space agency has a movie showing just what asteroid-kicking really looks like.
During the immediate aftermath of the DART mission — NASA’s first asteroid target practice — the Hubble Space Telescope captured the hour-by-hour changes as the space rock cast off over 1,000 tons of debris. The time-lapse, shown below, depicts the rock and dust spraying out into a complex pattern for days after the impact.
“We’ve never witnessed an object collide with an asteroid in a binary asteroid system before in real time, and it’s really surprising,” said Jian-Yang Li, who led a study published in the journal Nature about the mission, in a statement. “Too much stuff is going on here. It’s going to take some time to figure out.”
Hubble was able to record a much wider view than could be seen by the Italian LICIACube satellite, which flew past the wreckage mere minutes after DART’s hit.
NASA deliberately crashed a spacecraft into a harmless asteroid through the Double Asteroid Redirection Test, better known as DART, on Sept. 26, 2022. The exercise tested the space agency’s capability to thwart a hazardous space rock in the future, should one be on a collision course with Earth.
A couple of weeks later, astronomers reported that the experiment was effective, giving Earthlings a bit of peace of mind. Scientists used ground-based telescopes to measure how the impact to Dimorphos, a smaller asteroid orbiting a larger one, Didymos, changed its orbit. They could see that its travel time around Didymos had shortened by about 32 or 33 minutes.
Five papers published in the journal Nature on March 1 confirm the mission worked and begin to answer why the smash was so successful at changing the asteroid’s trajectory. The experiment vastly exceeded their hopes of a 10-minute reduction in the orbit time.
“Too much stuff is going on here. It’s going to take some time to figure out.”
The nameless spacecraft, about 1,300 pounds, carried no explosives. Its “weapon” was its own body and the sheer force of plowing into an asteroid at 14,000 mph. Scientists have likened the mission to running a golf cart into the Great Pyramid of Giza.
But it was the slap heard ’round the solar system.
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The key was that the spacecraft wasn’t the only thing to give Dimorphos a push, according to the new research. When the asteroid flung out pulverized rock, it sustained a kickback like a shooter feels after firing a gun, with almost four times the momentum of the initial hit.
Credit: NASA / Johns Hopkins APL
Hubble’s movie, free of cameos from Bruce Willis and Ben Affleck, shows three primary stages following the crash: the forming of a blast cone, a pinwheel of debris surprisingly tied to the asteroid’s companion, Didymos, and a tail swept behind the asteroid.
The first post-impact snapshot in the time-lapse captures debris flying away over 4 mph — fast enough to break free of the asteroid’s gravitational pull. About 17 hours after the hit, the blast cone begins to morph into different structures, including spiraling pinwheels.
“When I first saw these images, I couldn’t believe these features,” Li said in a statement. “I thought maybe the image was smeared or something.”
Then, the asteroid grows a comet-like tail of debris. In a baffling turn of events, it splits into two tails for a few days.
Scientists say the DART crash will give them many more years of research as they continue to observe the debris and await follow-up missions. The European Space Agency’s Hera spacecraft will show up at Dimorphos in three years to get a close look at the crater.
The mission was an important first step in an international effort to prepare for these types of existential threats, NASA administrator Bill Nelson said last year.
“NASA is trying to be ready for whatever the universe throws at us,” he said.