habitation this close, and really the important thing about these pictures is they speak to the fact that we re what s going to happen is we re about to go into this new orbit, you know, this special orbit that nasa is going to try out and no one s ever done that before. no one s ever tried to explore this part of sort of the space, you know, transit system. humanity is raight now at this stage where we re trying to flesh out just like it took us awhile to try to build bridges and highway overpasses, nasa is circling around the moon, taking those pictures and now he s getting those distant, retrograde orbit, and it s something that s never been tried before, and it s essential to have human deep space capacity. it look forever to build the skyway in jersey which is aening lo, elevated highway, the same thing is going on with nasa. they re about to try a new part of space to see how will it
around the country servicing the most important sectors. hospitals, public transport, and so on. the russians know every time they launched these mass missile attacks they can degrade it that little bit further. winter has not really set in, in earnest. they could plummet the temperatures at any moment. we could expect it to go down by a very significant level. thank you, sam. we re getting a fresh look at the moon. na nasa released incredible close-up images thanks to the artemis mission. and a major matchup happening at the world cup. the u.s. facing off against england. we are live at pubs inengland.
nasa has just released new pictures of the moon. this is the first look we have had at the surface in 50 years. the images were taken as part of the artemis 1 mission where the orion spacecraft is expected to travel more than 40,000 miles beyond the far side of the moon. adam frank is a professor of astrophysics at the university of rochester and author of light of the stars. that s a heavy title. adam frank, always good to have you on. listen. these pictures, they re fantastic. what are they showing us now that we ve not seen before? well, i mean, the one thing is just that we re able to get close enough with a spacecraft that s rated for human
18th, a giant space rock exploded 16 miles above the earth. it had ten times the centering of the heiroshima atomic bomb. nasa calls it fireballs. it was the second most powerful in 30 years. na nasa s planetary defense officer says fireballs this powerful only happen a few times this century. and this is not the kind of bracket bust espn had in mind. the network apologizing after it accidently aired brackets for the women s basketball tournament hours before the scheduled release. you can see them on the right side of the screen midday monday. espn says in the midst of our preparation the bracket was mistakenly posted on espn democrat accept
observations with any plane at all. it is actually run through a na nasa database, nasa is a third party independent. there are some pilots that issued complaints over the last six months. that said you can type in any plane any model number, you will come up with complaints issued by some pilot somewhere, at least we should make the point that claim they re pilots, right? you can t verify that, they re anonymous. in the case of the max 8 pilots, a few of them did say the nose pitched forward and that they struggled with an automated piloting issue. some of that is similar to what happened in indonesia. but the facts are really so obscure, it s difficult to know exactly what happened, who is reporting it, when did it happen? yes, there is that anonymous database out there. i think what really matters right now is the black box and ethiopia still has the black boxes. to me that s flashing headline. ethiopia still have the black