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We know what 'foo fighters' that buzzed Second World War pilots really were, say scientists

In the 1940s, Allied pilots during the Second World War reported being hounded by fast-moving blobs, which they dubbed “ foo fighters ”. Shaped like clouds,...

Hiroshima , Japan , Germany , Arizona , United-states , California , University-of-arizona , Japanese , German , Ed-white , Buzz-aldrin , James-mcdivitt

BBC News

by the james webb space telescope. from the tarantula nebula, where stars are born amidst the dust, to a dying star, the ring nebula, throwing off its outer layers as it runs out of fuel. and the phantom galaxy, with 100 billion stars amongst its spiral arms. these images are stunning — but they're also transforming what we thought we knew about the cosmos. the telescope can look back to the very dawn of the universe, and it's revealing game—changing galaxies that are breaking all the rules. it can see the cosmos 13.5 billion years ago, just after the big bang. scientists thought the first galaxies would be primitive structures — but in fact they're forming far faster and earlier than astronomers ever thought possible. we certainly thought that we'd be seeing things that were, you know, i might call them fuzzy blobs of stars, collections of stars. and what we're actually seeing is fully—formed galaxies. and when you look

Stars , The-ring-nebula , James-webb-space-telescope , To-a-dying-star , Layers , Fuel , Dust , Tarantula-nebula , Images , Telescope , Cosmos , Arms

Newsday

breaking all the rules. it can see the cosmos 13.5 billion years ago, just after the big bang. scientists thought the first galaxies would be primitive structures — but in fact they're forming farfaster and earlier than astronomers ever thought possible. we certainly thought that we'd be seeing things that were, i might call them fuzzy blobs of stars, collections of stars. and what we're actually seeing is fully—formed galaxies. and when you look at them, they have sort of perfect spiral arms. you can see that these galaxies in the early universe already have those mature structures. so, in that sense, it's really changing scientific thinking. this isn't the only discovery that's shaking up the early cosmos. the telescope is also spotting a surprising abundance of giant black holes. black holes are scattered throughout the universe. this is the one at the centre of our own milky way. they form when a massive star dies and collapses in on itself.

Galaxies , Astronomers , Scientists , Structures , Rules , Fact , Big-bang , 13-5-billion , Things , Stars , Arms , Collections

BBC News

and the phantom galaxy, with 100 billion stars amongst its spiral arms. these images are stunning — but they're also transforming what we thought we knew about the cosmos. the telescope can look back to the very dawn of the universe, and it's revealing game—changing galaxies that are breaking all the rules. it can see the cosmos 13.5 billion years ago, just after the big bang. scientists thought the first galaxies would be primitive structures — but in fact they're forming far faster and earlier than astronomers ever thought possible. we certainly thought that we'd be seeing things that were, you know, i might call them fuzzy blobs of stars, collections of stars. and what we're actually seeing is fully—formed galaxies. and when you look at them, they have sort of perfect spiral arms. you can see that these galaxies in the early universe already have those mature structures. so, in that sense, it's really changing scientific thinking.

Images , Telescope , Cosmos , Arms , Galaxy , Very-dawn-of-the-universe , 100-billion , Galaxies , Scientists , Structures , Rules , Fact

Why Is This Happening Live With Chris Hayes Rachel Maddow

glasses, so you're all just little blobs. i can see what all. which is helpful. >> yes. can we, i want to start, in your way into this material. because i have to say, it is an incredible talent that you have, and this is been through a new television show for years, of sort of finding these sort of unexplored nuggets in american history, the stories that people don't know, and then you tell them, and you're like, what? really? this actually happened? and ultra was an incredible example of that. where i literally -- i knew who father coughlin was. he's a right-wing antisemitic populist preacher. i knew that. i knew that there was, you know, there's this america first movement that lindbergh -- i read the philippe brought novel -- >> which is great. >> which is great. but that was kind of my cannon for those things. i knew those things. and nothing else appeared in that podcast. so i wanted to --

Way , Yes , Talent , Material , Blobs , Ultra , Sort , Stories , Television-show , Nuggets , People-don-t-know , Example

Mysterious 'Blobs' in Earth's Mantle Might Be the Remnants From the Protoplanet Collision That Birthed the Moon

An ancient collision with Theia, a Mars-sized object, gave rise to the moon, and scientists now suspect they've found its remnants in Earth's deep mantle. Continue reading for more details.

Iceland , Hawaii , United-states , Pacific-ocean , Nature-climate-change , Remnants-from , Protoplanet-collision-that-birthed , Hidden-legacy , Ojan-yuan , Impacts-might-explain , Large-low-shear-velocity-provinces

Anderson Cooper 360

like we saw, within it's clear that with every storm, we are entering a new normal where things are more extreme. >> i remember when we were reporting about those temperatures. people are thinking about the coral. you certainly. were you are sounding the, alarm have been for sometime. to draw these diffractions, to really see this come together. and you have it be so long in the making. intensity is rapidly intensification that we are seeing in hurricanes, is that intensification also a symptom of climate change? >> exactly, because you have these sort of warm blobs. the heat wave on land. it does happen in the marine world is. well so right now, average temperature around the whole of the gulf of mexico is about 80 degrees. but if you get closer to the coast where it is shallow, or get to the 90s. when that water hits, there it charges up. big picture of, course fossil

Storm , People , Things , Temperatures , Reporting , Coral , Extreme , We-saw , Hurricanes , Intensity , Intensification , Symptom

BBC News at One

are in store for some high level of tennis. any fan would want a front row seat. which brings me nicely to talk about how technology is being used here to improve the fan experience. i have been to meet a 17—year—old. i have contemplated coming to wimbledon in the past to watch it. and i've always come to the same conclusion of it's not really worth it, because i won't be able to experience the full package of what wimbledon has to offer. ivan, if you had to describe your vision to me, what can you see? it's kind of like a camera that's out of focus. so what a normal person would be able to see at 40 feet, i would have to be six feet away to be able to see the same thing. if i'm watching tennis, for example, it would just be blobs moving side to side, and up and down on a tennis court. so, we developed a headset that brings images closer to the user�*s eyes and allows them to see like they�*ve never before. we use the cameras

Technology , Fan-experience , Level , Tennis , Store , Fan , Front-row-seat , It , Wimbledon , Conclusion , Package , Ivan

CNN Newsroom With Fredricka Whitfield

we have people talking about ufos and it's always fuzzy blobs and look at the chinese spy balloon and it's a selfie and you can see exquisite detail and you can see the cargo package underneath it. with ufos it's always a fuzzy blob. >> i was looking forward to this, but i have to admit. i'm kind of bummed. i thought you would give us something -- i don't know, a little more interesting to allow us to all believe and think that, yeah, there is a ten foot creature out there that comes with these. >> what i can tell you is science -- science is boring, but it has to be boring. it's long and it's slow, but it's the only way that you get to know truly amazing things and the amazing things are right outside your door. they're the ant colony and the leaves and science is a way, and you have to listen to the process. follow the process. wonders will be removed.

People , Ufos , Blobs , Spy-balloon , Selfie , China , U-s- , Detail , Something , Blob , Cargo-package , Bummed

The Context

the weather is going to be turning warmer over the next couple of days, also turning more humid by day and by night. i think the humid nights will be particularly noticeable as a change from what we've had of late. and with that humidity, the chance of some thunderstorms. now, on the earlier satellite picture, you can see these big blobs of cloud down to the south—west of us. these storm clouds gathering, and these will move quite slowly north—eastwards over the next couple of days. with that, a feed of warm and humid air which will be wafting its way northwards across all parts of the uk, a very, very different feel to the weather. but as we head through tonight, across eastern scotland and eastern england, a familiar tale of this cloud rolling in from the north sea, maybe even getting in across the midlands into east wales, just as it did this morning. but some showers down towards the south—west of england and the channel islands, where it is going to be a very, very warm night compared with some we've had lately. 13—14 degrees is the overnight lows. and then into friday, well,

Way , Change , Weather , Humidity , Us , Chance , Thunderstorms , Feed , Satellite-picture , Cloud , South-west , Blobs