Moviewebflipped into Movieweb16 hours agoJordan Peele's Nope: What's Lurking in the Cloud?movieweb.com - Liz YoungJordan Peele's next horror film, Nope, hits theaters this summer. It follows Jill Haywood (Keke Palmer) and James Haywood (Daniel Kaluuya) on the …
13 hours agoDC’s Dark Knight Takes On a World-Wide Blackout in Batman: Fortress #1cbr.com - Sayantan GayenThe DC Comics universe has experienced many crisis events over the years, and Batman has always been able to keep up with the heavy hitters of the …
Newsyflipped into Videos4:261 day agoWhy Space Junk Is A Compounding Issue For Missions, AstronautsNewsyWhen it comes to UFOs and extraterrestrial life, it's not clear all that's out there.But we do know a good bit about one thing in space: trash.From the moment humankind began space exploration, with the launch of Sputnik One in 1957, the term orbital debris came to be known also known as space junk.Space junk is mostly made up of used-up space shuttle parts, defunct satellites and loose fragments from each of those. By 2020, the roughly 2,200 operational satellites in space were joined by hundreds of thousands of pieces of satellite and shuttle debris of various sizes.The mass of debris in Earth orbit totals nearly 7 million kilograms, and it ranges from obsolete satellites to tiny flecks of paint. While the debris can re-enter Earths atmosphere and burn up, that process can take years.In space, it creates new problems and poses risks to space missions and astronauts."They're bolts, they're nuts, they're scraps of metal," said Ed Lu, vice president of strategic projects at LeoLabs. "There are pieces of satellites... those are the dominant things in space. That hasn't changed."Lu was an astronaut at NASA for 12 years and now works for LeoLabs, a company that provides satellite and space debris tracking services."We knew that the the number one risk to dying, per NASA's own estimations for a space station astronaut, is being hit by orbital debris," Lu said. "It was then, and it is today."More than 27,000 pieces of space junk are currently being tracked by the U.S. Department of Defenses global Space Surveillance Network sensors. But this debris is special its too small to be tracked but large enough to get in the way of missions near Earth. Since both the debris and spacecraft are zooming at extremely high speeds, the impact of even a tiny piece of debris with a spacecraft could pose a big threat. Like in 2016, a fleck of paint floating through space damaged a window on the International Space Station. ESA said debris up to one centimeter could cause critical damage, and anything larger than 10 centimetes could "shatter a satellite or spacecraft into pieces."The more collisions there are, the more debris is created, and then that junk can cause even more crashes. The problem can keep compounding.It's an uncontrollable phenomenon known as Kessler syndrome, named after retired NASA engineer Don Kessler, who first observed it in 1978. "It has the effect of just about breaking up anything into a catastrophic explosion due to the energy of that collision," …
Eurasia Reviewflipped into Eurasia Review8 hours agoPlanets Of Binary Stars: Targets In The Search For Alien Lifeeurasiareview.com - Eurasia ReviewPlanetary systems around stars the size of our sun are obvious targets for astronomers trying to locate extraterrestrial life forms, and nearly every …
Derwin Frittsflipped into Ancient Knowledge9:164 days agoDid Scientists Just Discover The Oldest Fossil Of All Time? | UnveiledWatchMojoIs this the oldest fossil ever found?? Join us... to find out!
18 hours agoOlliOlli World's Void Riders expansion puts an extraterrestrial twist on one of 2022's finesteurogamer.net - Christian DonlanMy daughter has a question about OlliOlli World. Simply put: in a game where you die and restart a lot, maybe ten, fifteen, twenty times a level, …