https://www.afinalwarning.com/518381.html (Natural News) A new study suggests that the gigantic blobs of radio emissions found floating in outer space in 2019 could be the result of two colliding black holes.
Researchers note that the blobs, which they dubbed “odd radio circles” (ORC), are unlike anything seen before. While they have offered other hypotheses, they also raise the possibility that a highly energetic event took place billions of light-years away, creating a blast wave that traveled out as a sphere and took the shape of a ring.
Lead researcher Barbel Koribalski, a galactic astronomer at
Western Sydney University in Australia, and her colleagues are not certain what this high-energy event could possibly be. The team notes that they are not aware of any phenomenon that can produce such strange blobs. But if anything, ORCs may be previously unknown products of a black hole merger, the researchers posit.
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Those eerie lights in the Bay Area s night sky are back. But there s a non-spooky reason why.
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A mysterious string of lights appeared Thursday in the predawn sky over the greater Bay Area. Twitter user @JustTeresa02 captured a photo.Twitter: @JustTeresa02
Fear not, locals. The Bay Area isn t experiencing a close encounter of the third kind.
If you ve looked up at the night or dawn sky lately and spotted a neat line of bright lights, those aren t UFOs. They re very well identified flying objects.
Musk s company SpaceX launched the Starlink satellites on May 4 yes, Star Wars Day from Launch Complex 39A (LC-39A) at Kennedy Space Center. The Falcon 9 booster lofted 60 Starlink satellites into the atmosphere. The most recent sighting in the Bay Area was on Saturday:
See the Super Flower Blood Moon Lunar Eclipse Up-close Through a Virtual Telescope newsweek.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from newsweek.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
At its Annual Meeting, USRA s Council of Institutions elected the following four Board members:
Daniel E. Hastings, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, was elected Region I Trustee
Wayne A. Scales, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University (Virginia Tech), was elected Region III Trustee
Elizabeth A. Lada, University of Florida, was elected Region IV Trustee
General Lester L. Lyles, United States Air Force, (Ret.) was elected At-Large Trustee.
Dr. John A. Montgomery, Chair of the Board of Trustees said, I am pleased to welcome our four newest members to USRA s Board. They each have a unique background, with diverse experiences that make them an asset to USRA.