Yahoo! News: Iraq
Yahoo! News: Iraq |
- 'Not looking good': How Trump has responded to mass shootings
- Parkland Survivors React To Santa Fe High School Shooting In Texas
- New California Law Protects Undocumented Immigrants In Court
- More than 100 people killed as passenger plane crashes in Cuba
- New documents suggest Las Vegas shooter was conspiracy theorist – what we know
- China air force lands bombers on South China Sea island
- All Chilean bishops quit over child abuse scandal
- Young father imprisoned in Iran: An American dream turned nightmare
- Protesters Throw A Fiesta To Razz Lawyer Who Ranted At Spanish Speakers
- FBI used informant to investigate Trump Russia contacts, not spy
- Santa Fe Shooting: Teacher Killed Left One Last Note For Her Family
- Prince Harry And Meghan Markle's Insane Wedding Cake Will Have 200 Lemons In It
- Monitor: 11 killed in blasts inside Syria weapons warehouse
- Cuba in mourning after deadliest air crash in nearly 30 years
- Farm bill fails in U.S. House as immigration spat roils Republican Party
- 10 Most-Reliable Luxury SUVs For 2018
- Hannity Flips Out: Mueller Probe 'Is A Direct Threat To This American Republic'
- Cleric Moqtada al-Sadr's bloc wins Iraq election
- Blake Lively Teases Ryan Reynolds And Hugh Jackman's Bromance
- Istanbul summit urges international force to protect Palestinians
- Chevrolet Silverado Adds Turbo Four-Cylinder
- Raj Nair Is Now President and COO of Multimatic
- 2019 Corvette ZR1s With Weird Exhausts Caught Lapping The 'RIng
- Meek Mill Backs Out Of Trump Event On Prison Reform
- Exclusive: In run-up to Venezuelan vote, more soldiers dissent and desert
- Two-Tone Trends: 15 Cars With Contrasting Roofs
- Four dead in eastern Ukraine in fighting uptick
- Iran can resume 20 percent enrichment if EU fails to retain nuclear deal
- Meghan Markle's on-screen husband Patrick Adams arrives in England - and heads straight to the pub
- Chevy Camaro SS Vs. Ford Mustang GT: Top-Down Tussle
- Grimes is legally changing her name, thanks to Elon Musk
- Saudi Arabia detains women's rights activists weeks before female driving ban comes to an end
- Trump knew a 'scary' amount about Bill Gates' daughter’s looks, says Microsoft founder
- Ukraine leader enacts new sanctions against Russia
- BMW X8 Allegedly Coming As Early As 2020
- Fujifilm set to sue Xerox soon for scrapping takeover deal
- Harry and Meghan's Wedding Is a Reminder That Britain Doesn't Need the Royals
- The first photo from NASA's planet-hunting TESS satellite is full of so many stars
- 2020 Mid-Engined Chevy Corvette Spied Up Close
- The Web's Coolest Cars For Sale This Week
- Dixon High School shooter used mother's gun; students return for graduation rehearsal
- N. Korea unlikely to return to talks with South over drills
- Yanny vs Laurel explanation: Why people hear different names when they listen to same audio clip
- Mourinho says Conte feud over ahead of FA Cup final
- AP source: Cowboys' Gregory seeks return after yearlong ban
'Not looking good': How Trump has responded to mass shootings Posted: 18 May 2018 09:53 AM PDT |
Parkland Survivors React To Santa Fe High School Shooting In Texas Posted: 18 May 2018 10:06 AM PDT |
New California Law Protects Undocumented Immigrants In Court Posted: 17 May 2018 05:48 PM PDT |
More than 100 people killed as passenger plane crashes in Cuba Posted: 18 May 2018 06:26 PM PDT An ageing airliner carrying 110 people crashed shortly after take off from Havana airport in Cuba on Friday, leaving just three survivors in the country's worst aviation disaster in three decades. The 39-year-old Boeing 737 had taken off on an internal flight when it went down into a cassava field not far from the end of the runway just after midday, bursting into flames and leaving huge plumes of black smoke. A local resident told Granma, the Cuban state newspaper, that the plane crashed after it attempted to return to the airport – making a turn and clipping electricity cables, then plummeting to the ground. Miguel Diaz-Canel, the Cuban president, visited the scene immediately and said: "There is a high number of people who appear to have died. "Things have been organised, the fire has been put out, and the remains are being identified." Granma reported there was a baby aged under two on board, plus four children. The Cubana Airlines Boeing 737 had just left the Jose Marti airport when the accident happened Credit: ADALBERTO ROQUE/ AFP The paper also said that the crew was "foreign" and that there were foreigners on board, but did not give details. The three survivors were taken to the Calixto Garcia hospital, in the Vedado district of Havana. Families of those on board were asked to bring photos of their loved ones to the scene, to assist with identification. The Boeing 737 had just left the Jose Marti airport en route to the town of Holguin – a flight of around an hour and a half. The plane crashed near a school and lay in a farm field, heavily damaged and burnt, with firefighters spraying water on its smouldering remains. Miguel Diaz-Canel, visiting the crash site Credit: AFP What appeared to be one of the wings of the plane was wedged among scorched tree trunks, but the main fuselage appeared to have been entirely destroyed. Firefighters and rescue workers combed through the wreckage, but there seemed little chance of finding survivors. The plane was believed to be a Cubana airlines flight. Mercedes Vazquez, director of air traffic, told Prensa Latina that the plane was owned by Damojh - a Mexican company which operates under the name Global. At a glance | Cuba A Global employee told AP that the plane was theirs. Cuban state television had earlier claimed that the plane was owned by Blue Panorama, an Italian firm, but they denied involvement. The Cuban state carrier had suspended its own domestic flights in March owing to a shortage of aircraft, according to security site Garda World. Cubana has also taken many of its aging planes out of service in recent months due to mechanical problems. The airline is notorious among Cubans for its frequent delays and cancellations, which Cubana blames on a lack of parts and airplanes due to the US trade embargo on the island. Friday's crash was Cuba's third major fatal accident since 2010. A survivor is loaded into an ambulance Credit: AFP Last year, a Cuban military plane crashed into a hillside in the western province of Artemisa, killing eight troops on board. In November 2010, an AeroCaribbean flight from Santiago to Havana went down in bad weather as it flew over central Cuba, killing all 68 people, including 28 foreigners, in what was Cuba's worst air disaster in more than two decades. The last Cubana accident appears to have been on Sept. 4, 1989, when a chartered Cubana plane flying from Havana to Milan, Italy, went down shortly after takeoff, killing all 126 people on board, as well as at least two dozen on the ground. Cubana's director general, Capt. Hermes Hernandez Dumas, told state media last month that Cubana's domestic flights had carried 11,700 more passengers than planned between January and April 2018. It said that 64 per cent of flights had taken off on time, up from 59 per cent the previous year. "Among the difficulties created by the US trade embargo is our inability to acquire latest-generation aircraft with technology capable of guaranteeing the stability of aerial operations," he said. "Another factor is obtaining part for Cubana's aircraft." |
New documents suggest Las Vegas shooter was conspiracy theorist – what we know Posted: 19 May 2018 03:00 AM PDT Stephen Paddock was the gunman who killed 58 people and wounded hundreds more last October, when he opened fire from the window of his room at the Mandalay hotel on the Las Vegas Strip. Yesterday, following legal action from news organizations, the Las Vegas police department released a trove of documents on the investigation, including statements from witnesses and victims. Mostly the documents contain harrowing accounts from victims of Stephen Paddock's shooting spree. |
China air force lands bombers on South China Sea island Posted: 19 May 2018 12:10 AM PDT China's air force has landed bombers on islands and reefs in the South China Sea as part of a training exercise in the disputed region, it said in a statement. "A division of the People's Liberation Army Air Force (PLAAF) recently organized multiple bombers such as the H-6K to conduct take-off and landing training on islands and reefs in the South China Sea in order to improve our ability to 'reach all territory, conduct strikes at any time and strike in all directions'," it said in the statement issued on Friday. It said the pilot of the H-6K bomber conducted assault training on a designated sea target and then carried out take-offs and landings at an airport in the area, describing the exercise as preparation for "the West Pacific and the battle for the South China Sea". |
All Chilean bishops quit over child abuse scandal Posted: 18 May 2018 08:58 AM PDT Thirty-four Chilean bishops announced their resignation Friday over a child sex abuse scandal within the Church in Chile that has come to haunt the reign of Pope Francis. "We, all the bishops present in Rome, have tendered our resignation to the Holy Father so that he may decide freely for each of us," the bishops said in a statement after three days of intense meetings with Francis at the Vatican. "We want to ask forgiveness for the pain caused to the victims, to the Pope, to God's people and to our country for the serious errors and omissions we have committed," the statement continued. |
Young father imprisoned in Iran: An American dream turned nightmare Posted: 18 May 2018 04:00 AM PDT Xiyue Wang, a husband, father and Princeton University doctoral student, has been imprisoned in Iran since August 2016 on charges of espionage. He was invited to study at a foreign language institute in Tehran and was granted permission by Iran's Foreign Ministry to further his dissertation research. But President Trump's decision to withdraw the U.S. from the Iran nuclear agreement has complicated his case, along with the cases of four other Americans detained in Iran. Meanwhile back home in Princeton, N.J., his wife, Hua Qu, has been juggling her career and taking care of their 5-year-old son, all while trying to focus on her husband's case, appealing to President Trump for his release. Qu sat down with Yahoo News' Stephanie Sy to talk about her imprisoned husband and what it's like raising a son on her own. |
Protesters Throw A Fiesta To Razz Lawyer Who Ranted At Spanish Speakers Posted: 18 May 2018 09:32 PM PDT |
FBI used informant to investigate Trump Russia contacts, not spy Posted: 18 May 2018 11:53 AM PDT |
Santa Fe Shooting: Teacher Killed Left One Last Note For Her Family Posted: 19 May 2018 12:45 PM PDT |
Prince Harry And Meghan Markle's Insane Wedding Cake Will Have 200 Lemons In It Posted: 18 May 2018 12:14 PM PDT |
Monitor: 11 killed in blasts inside Syria weapons warehouse Posted: 18 May 2018 12:05 PM PDT |
Cuba in mourning after deadliest air crash in nearly 30 years Posted: 19 May 2018 01:39 PM PDT Cuba observed a weekend of national mourning for victims of its worst crash in nearly three decades that killed 110 passengers and crew. An investigation has been launched into Friday's crash of the nearly 40-year-old Boeing 737-200 leased to the national carrier Cubana de Aviacion by a Mexican company. The Boeing crashed shortly after taking off from Havana, coming down in a field near the airport and sending a thick column of acrid smoke into the air. |
Farm bill fails in U.S. House as immigration spat roils Republican Party Posted: 18 May 2018 11:08 AM PDT By Amanda Becker and Susan Cornwell WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. House of Representatives rejected a sweeping $867 billion farm bill on Friday after Republican leaders failed to appease conservative lawmakers who had asked them not to hold the vote until they were given the chance to consider a bill to clamp down on immigration. The next steps are unclear for the farm bill, which failed in a 198-to-213 vote. The farm bill's passage through the House has been entangled in the debate over immigration, as the conservative House Freedom Caucus sought to pre-empt a move by moderate Republicans and Democrats to use procedural tactics to force a wide-ranging immigration debate on the House floor. |
10 Most-Reliable Luxury SUVs For 2018 Posted: 19 May 2018 08:00 AM PDT |
Hannity Flips Out: Mueller Probe 'Is A Direct Threat To This American Republic' Posted: 17 May 2018 11:38 PM PDT |
Cleric Moqtada al-Sadr's bloc wins Iraq election Posted: 19 May 2018 05:24 AM PDT By Raya Jalabi and Michael Georgy BAGHDAD (Reuters) - A political bloc led by populist Shi'ite cleric Moqtada al-Sadr, a long-time adversary of the United States who also opposes Iranian influence in Iraq, has won the country's parliamentary election, the electoral commission said on Saturday. Sadr himself cannot become prime minister because he did not run in the election, though his bloc's victory puts him in a position to have a strong say in negotiations. The Victory Alliance, headed by incumbent Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi, trailed in third place with 42 seats, behind the Al-Fatih bloc, which won 47 seats. |
Blake Lively Teases Ryan Reynolds And Hugh Jackman's Bromance Posted: 18 May 2018 03:51 AM PDT |
Istanbul summit urges international force to protect Palestinians Posted: 18 May 2018 02:32 PM PDT A summit in Istanbul of Muslim heads of state on Friday called for the creation of an international peacekeeping force to protect the Palestinians, as host Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan accused Israel of "brutality" comparable to the Nazis. The 57-member Organisation of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) -- seeking to bridge severe differences within the Muslim world -- said in a final communique that Israel had carried out the "wilful murder" of some 60 Palestinians on the Gaza border Monday. It called "for the international protection of the Palestinian population, including through dispatching of international protection force". |
Chevrolet Silverado Adds Turbo Four-Cylinder Posted: 18 May 2018 05:00 AM PDT |
Raj Nair Is Now President and COO of Multimatic Posted: 18 May 2018 06:30 AM PDT |
2019 Corvette ZR1s With Weird Exhausts Caught Lapping The 'RIng Posted: 18 May 2018 06:09 AM PDT |
Meek Mill Backs Out Of Trump Event On Prison Reform Posted: 18 May 2018 09:31 AM PDT |
Exclusive: In run-up to Venezuelan vote, more soldiers dissent and desert Posted: 18 May 2018 11:34 AM PDT By Girish Gupta and Anggy Polanco CARACAS/SAN CRISTOBAL, Venezuela (Reuters) - Arrests for rebellion and desertion are rising sharply in Venezuela's armed forces, a mainstay of President Nicolas Maduro's Socialist government, amid discontent within the ranks at food shortages and dwindling salaries, according to documents and interviews with army personnel. Internal military documents reviewed by Reuters showed that the number of soldiers detained for treason, rebellion and desertion rose to 172 in the first four months of the year, up three-and-a-half times on the same period of 2017. Former military officials said the figures reflected a dramatic increase in the level of dissent within Venezuela's once-proud armed forces. |
Two-Tone Trends: 15 Cars With Contrasting Roofs Posted: 18 May 2018 12:24 PM PDT |
Four dead in eastern Ukraine in fighting uptick Posted: 18 May 2018 04:42 AM PDT At least four people, including a child, were killed in Ukraine's separatist east, pro-Russian rebel authorities said Friday as fighting intensified in the region. The news came the same day Russian President Vladimir Putin and German Chancellor Angela Merkel were set to meet in Russia to discuss the long-running conflict. Rebel authorities reported two of their fighters were killed and a third wounded in the clashes with the Ukrainian army. |
Iran can resume 20 percent enrichment if EU fails to retain nuclear deal Posted: 19 May 2018 09:22 AM PDT TEHRAN (Reuters) - Iran could resume its 20 percent uranium enrichment if the European signatories of the 2015 nuclear deal failed to keep it alive following Washington's withdrawal, the head of Iran's Atomic Energy Organisation said on Saturday. "If the other side keeps itself committed to its promises we also will be keeping ourselves to our promises... Our policy is wait and see now ... for just the few weeks time ... There are all kind of possibilities, we can ... start the 20 enrichment," Ali Akbar Salehi told reporters. (Writing by Parisa Hafezi, Editing by William Maclean) |
Posted: 18 May 2018 01:26 AM PDT Suits fans have been eagerly awaiting the arrival of Patrick Adams, Meghan Markle's close friend and confidant, who played her husband in the show. The star, who plays Mike Ross in the show, has kept a low profile in recent days, keeping fans guessing as to whether he would come to the wedding. However, it appears he will indeed be there on the big day, as he has arrived in England. He headed straight to the pub, sampling the ale at The Royal Standard of England in Beaconsfield. Appearing to enjoy himself in the traditional British tavern, he said it was his "new favourite bar", and confirmed he had tried the pints on offer. Enjoying the history the UK has to offer, he posted a picture of the sign denoting the pub's age on Instagram. The pub claims to be the oldest freehouse in England. Happy 18th birthday, @clare.stephenson_ - thanks for taking us to our new favorite bar. A post shared by Patrick Adams (@halfadams) on May 17, 2018 at 1:00pm PDT He celebrated their engagement after it was announced, writing: "Playing Meghan's television partner for the better part of a decade uniquely qualifies me to say this: Your Royal Highness, you are a lucky man and I know your long life together will be joyful, productive and hilarious. "Meghan, so happy for you, friend. Much love." Mr Adams said he is likely to get the couple a kitchen implement for their wedding gift. "We were trying to choose between like a blender or bread maker. You know something classy, like a good blender," he told ET. "Like a Vitamix, yeah. She's gonna need a Vitamix for sure." Other co-stars who have arrived in the UK include Sarah Raffetry, who plays Donna Paulson, and Rick Hoffman, who plays Louis Litt. Jacinda Barrett, who appears on the show and her husband Gabriel Macht, who plays lead character Harvey Spector, were in London earlier in the week - but confusingly they spent last night in Cannes, leading some to wonder whether they would jet back for the wedding. Royal wedding | Read more |
Chevy Camaro SS Vs. Ford Mustang GT: Top-Down Tussle Posted: 18 May 2018 06:00 AM PDT |
Grimes is legally changing her name, thanks to Elon Musk Posted: 18 May 2018 02:03 PM PDT Elon Musk and Grimes are being the world's nerdiest couple, again. SEE ALSO: Of course Elon Musk and Grimes spawned a beautiful new meme Originally born Claire Boucher, Grimes announced on Thursday that she's legally changing her name to just c, which is the measurement for the speed of light in a vacuum. She tweeted a screenshot of the Wikipedia article about it, adding "this will be much better." Grimes also specified the name c will be lowercase and italicized. i'm legally changing my name from claire to 'c' , as in the speed of light. {☄️ lowercase and italics ��} ___ this will be much better pic.twitter.com/nOG5kNEU9O — Grimes (@Grimezsz) May 17, 2018 Grimes/ c said that she's wanted to change her name "4ever" but her friends already call her c. Musk pointed out that her nickname "actually rox" and that she didn't need to look for another. well he's the one who pointed out that my working nickname (c) actually rox and i don't need to look further (been trying 2 change name 4ever but couldn't find a gud 1, but my friends call me c } — Grimes (@Grimezsz) May 17, 2018 She added that she hasn't liked her given name since she "became sentient" (confirming that Musk is into manic pixie dream robots) and that her speech impediment makes it difficult to say. if u like ^_^ claire has been the bane of my existence since i became sentient... i can barely say it w my speech impediment altho c is technically worse 4 lisp haha , omg nice quiet avatar �� and general font — Grimes (@Grimezsz) May 17, 2018 The tech mogul and indie pop artist made their relationship official at the Met Gala earlier this month after weeks of awkward Twitter flirting. Apparently they got together because of a niche joke that blended artificial intelligence and French baroque art. The couple's debut at the Met Gala — with Grimes dressed as a goth fairy queen and Musk dressed as a standard rich guy — had people wondering if we really are in a simulation. Grimes went from tweeting Elon Musk to being his date at the #MetGala SOMEBODY END THIS SIMULATION pic.twitter.com/MvKm1aZzWL — �� (@moonlightzenty) May 8, 2018 With her name change, coming up with couple names will be a little more challenging. Space C? Elon Mus c? cElon Musk? But don't worry, everyone — professionally speaking, Grimes is staying Grimes. of course, i'm just changing my legal name not the band haha �� — Grimes (@Grimezsz) May 17, 2018 She also announced that she's releasing new music "soon ish" — we're either getting a "super dark heavy ballad about fighting balrog in the center of earth that is a sex metaphor" or a "very not pg13 ethereal shadow of colossus demon nu metal song abt insomnia." Musk, being the supportive AI enthusiast boyfriend that he is, can add a few more jams to his list of favorite Grimes songs. Want more clever culture writing beamed directly to your inbox? Sign up here for the twice-weekly Click Click Click newsletter. It's fun – we promise. |
Saudi Arabia detains women's rights activists weeks before female driving ban comes to an end Posted: 18 May 2018 07:58 AM PDT Saudi Arabia has detained several prominent female activists who campaigned for women's right to drive, taking them into custody just weeks before the decades-long driving ban finally comes to an end. Human rights groups said Loujain al-Hathloul, Eman al-Nafjan and Aziza al-Yousef - three of the most prominent voices demanding women be free to drive - were all detained on Thursday. Two male advocates for women's rights were also detained, activists said. The activists were detained as Saudi Arabia prepares for the driving ban to come to an end on June 24. The policy shift has become a symbol of the modernising drive of Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, and the Saudi government is eager for positive media coverage of the move. The detentions appear to be an effort by Saudi authorities to make sure they do not have to share credit for the end of the driving ban with activists who spent years campaigning for it. They may also be concerned that the women right's campaigners would use the end of the driving to call for further advances in women's freedom - like an end to the male guardianship system that severely limits Saudi women's ability to travel independently. A woman in a black niqab drives in Saudi Arabia Neither Ms Narfjan nor Ms Hathloul could be reached for comment. Ms Hathloul told The Telegraph earlier this year that shortly before Saudi authorities announced the end of the driving ban in September she was warned not to speak publicly about it. Instead, she Tweeted just the word "Alhamdulillah" in Arabic, or "Praise be to God". "Shutting up or submitting to these threats is unacceptable to me, it is not an option to stay quiet any more," she said, breaking her silence in January. "We have been quiet for too long." Ms Hathloul had been detained twice before for her activism. She and other Saudi women sometimes filmed themselves driving in defiance of the ban and published the videos online, to the fury of the government. Ms Hathloul was voted the third-most powerful Arab woman by Forbes in 2015, but was forced to quit her job that same year because of driving restrictions. Her husband, a well-known Saudi comedian who acts as her male guardian, was often out of the country meaning she had to pay for taxis to and from work. Saudi women tour a car showroom for women on January 11, 2018, in the Saudi Red Sea port city of Jeddah. Credit: AFP "The Uber and Careem applications would take more than 30 per cent of my salary. For instance I would pay 2,000-3,000 riyals (£375-560) a month to get around, while my salary was 6,000 riyals," she said. "At the end of the month I basically had nothing." It was not clear if she or any or any of the other activists had been charged with a crime. Prisoners of Conscience, a human rights group, said that two men - Mohammed al-Rabjah and Ibrahim al-Mdmyegh - had also been arrested. The driving ban has been in place since 1979 and women's rights activists have been fighting it against for it for decades. In 1990, around 50 women launched the first high profile protest by driving in a convoy around Riyadh. They were eventually stopped by police. The Saudi government under the leadership of Crown Prince Mohammed has shown itself willing to use detention as a tool against political rivals. Dozens of princes and prominent businessmen were arrested in November and detained at the Ritz-Carlton hotel in Riyadh on allegations of corruption. Most were released only after agreeing to pay large sums as part of a settlement with the authorities. |
Posted: 18 May 2018 02:00 AM PDT Bill Gates has claimed Donald Trump twice asked him if there was a difference between HIV and HPV, knew a "scary" amount about the Microsoft founder's daughter's looks, and once left an event so he could arrive back 20 minutes later in a helicopter. The remarks were caught on camera at a recent Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation event, where the billionaire philanthropist took questions from staff, according to MSNBC, which obtained the footage. Having "avoided" Mr Trump at an event earlier in 2016, Gates said he met him for the first time at a Trump Tower meeting that December. |
Ukraine leader enacts new sanctions against Russia Posted: 17 May 2018 10:53 PM PDT Ukraine President Petro Poroshenko has signed a decree to enact the recently adopted decision to expand sanctions on Russian companies and entities, according to information published on the presidential website on Friday. Ukraine's council of security and defense approved in early May the sanctions that mirror those of the United States, which has blacklisted tycoons and allies of Russian President Vladimir Putin. Kiev has also extended existing sanctions it introduced against hundreds of Russian companies and entities in response to the annexation of Crimea in 2014 and Kremlin support for a pro-Russian separatist uprising in eastern Ukraine. |
BMW X8 Allegedly Coming As Early As 2020 Posted: 18 May 2018 03:53 AM PDT |
Fujifilm set to sue Xerox soon for scrapping takeover deal Posted: 18 May 2018 01:18 AM PDT Fujifilm Holdings Corp is planning to sue Xerox Corp soon deeming that the U.S. photocopier company has no legal right to unilaterally scrap their $6.1 billion merger, a senior Fujifilm executive said on Friday. "We are currently in talks with lawyers on the schedule for filing the lawsuit and plan to go to court as soon as possible," Chief Operating Officer Kenji Sukeno said at an earnings briefing. In January, Fujifilm and Xerox agreed to a complex deal to merge Xerox into their 56-year-old Asia joint venture Fuji Xerox and give Fujifilm control. |
Harry and Meghan's Wedding Is a Reminder That Britain Doesn't Need the Royals Posted: 18 May 2018 03:54 AM PDT |
The first photo from NASA's planet-hunting TESS satellite is full of so many stars Posted: 18 May 2018 11:01 AM PDT A new NASA telescope, sailing toward its assigned orbit, took a moment to look around before it starts its ultimate mission: searching the galaxy for alien planets. NASA's TESS spacecraft — short for Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite — beamed home one of its first photos taken from space, and it's a doozy. SEE ALSO: Here's how NASA's TESS will hunt for alien planets The photo, which effectively amounts to a test of one of the satellite's four cameras, contains more than 200,000 stars, NASA said. But that's only a fraction of the number of stars it will eventually study in order to find alien worlds out there circling them. A test image from NASA's TESS.Image: NASA/MIT/TESS"TESS is expected to cover more than 400 times as much sky as shown in this image with its four cameras during its initial two-year search for exoplanets," NASA said in a statement. The satellite is designed to hunt for new worlds by using the transit method, meaning that TESS will watch for minute dips in a star's light as a planet passes in front of its host star. By detecting these transits, TESS can piece together a bit about the orbits of these worlds and whether or not they might be friendly to life. In total, the satellite's field of view will include about 20 million stars that could all play host to worlds unknown. Researchers hope that TESS will be able to find at least 50 planets that are around the size of Earth during its quest. "TESS is kind of like a scout," TESS scientist Natalia Guerrero said in a statement. "We're on this scenic tour of the whole sky, and in some ways we have no idea what we will see. It's like we're making a treasure map: Here are all these cool things. Now, go after them." TESS still has a bit of a ways to go before it begins its hunt for planets outside of our solar system in earnest. It should start its search in June after scientists check to make sure that its instruments are in working order. Scientists hope that NASA's James Webb Space Telescope, expected to launch in 2020, will be able to follow up on some of the results sent back to Earth by TESS. The powerful telescope — designed as the successor to the Hubble Space Telescope — is expected to be able to scope out the atmospheres of alien worlds, learning more about their composition and possible habitability. WATCH: NASA's TESS planet-finder satellite just rode a Falcon 9 to space |
2020 Mid-Engined Chevy Corvette Spied Up Close Posted: 18 May 2018 12:00 PM PDT |
The Web's Coolest Cars For Sale This Week Posted: 18 May 2018 04:57 AM PDT |
Dixon High School shooter used mother's gun; students return for graduation rehearsal Posted: 17 May 2018 08:39 PM PDT |
N. Korea unlikely to return to talks with South over drills Posted: 17 May 2018 05:45 PM PDT |
Yanny vs Laurel explanation: Why people hear different names when they listen to same audio clip Posted: 17 May 2018 09:44 PM PDT The question is seemingly a straightforward one: Do you hear Yanny or Laurel? Yet the answer for the millions of people who have listened to the short clip since it appeared on Twitter on Monday is proving as divisive as the infamous gold and white dress debate of 2015. The seconds-long soundbite has provoked intense discussion on social media as well as in offices and living rooms across continents, as people adamantly insist that their version is indeed what the synthetic voice is saying. Academics have also offered a number of explanations for the baffling phenomenon. Theories range from the way our hearing changes as we age, to people's brains being primed by seeing the written word first, to accent variation between British and American listeners influencing what they pick up. The debate started after the clip was first posted on social media site Reddit by user RolandCamry after he looked up the word "laurel" in the online dictionary, Vocabulary.com. RolandCamry, who wished to remain anonymous, told the Telegraph that after hitting the website's audio pronunciation function to hear how the word should sound his sister told him she heard it as "Yanny". To settle the debate he posted the audio clip on a Reddit forum, posing the simple question: "What do you guys hear?" The comments soon blew up with posters arguing about whether it was saying Yanny or Laurel. One commented: "I hear Laurel and everyone is a liar". The clip then went viral when it was tweeted on Tuesday by YouTuber Cloe Feldman and has since been listened to more than five million times. What do you hear?! Yanny or Laurel pic.twitter.com/jvHhCbMc8I— Cloe Feldman (@CloeCouture) May 15, 2018 The conundrum has even reached the White House, which released a video featuring various members of the staff weighing in. Senior adviser Ivanka Trump says, "So clearly Laurel." Strategic-communications director Mercedes Schlapp says, "Yanny's the winner, Laurel's the loser." #Laurel? #Yanny? Or... pic.twitter.com/5hth07SdGY— The White House (@WhiteHouse) May 17, 2018 White House counsellor Kellyanne Conway pokes fun at her endless willingness to spin and bend the truth for the president, saying, "It's Laurel. But I could deflect and divert to Yanny if you need me to." The video ends with President Donald Trump deadpanning, "I hear covfefe" - a reference to a botched tweet he wrote last year that was never explained. Other celebrities have joined the debate, including talk show host Ellen DeGeneres and American model Chrissy Teigen, who have both weighed in with their thoughts. Literally everything at my show just stopped to see if people hear Laurel or Yanny. I hear Laurel. https://t.co/efWRw1Gj0L— Ellen DeGeneres (@TheEllenShow) May 15, 2018 it's so clearly laurel. I can't even figure out how one would hear yanny.— christine teigen (@chrissyteigen) May 15, 2018 Neuroscientist Dr Hannah Critchlow of Cambridge University, whose new book Consciousness discusses how the brain alters perception, said a number of factors could influence what people hear, including recent experiences. She said: "The brain is trying to make sense of the world all the time, and everyone has a unique perception on what is going on around them, and what they see and hear. "I have just been sent flowers for my birthday, and I hear 'laurel', so that could be because my mind is focused on those flowers. Younger people can also hear higher frequencies so there could be something in that too. There are probably several things going on here." An 'ambiguous figure' Scientists say it highlights the difference between hearing and listening, where hearing happens in the ear, but listening occurs in the brain, where meaning is attributed to sound. Scientifically, the clip is not actually an illusion at all, but rather an "ambiguous figure", or bistable precept, in which the mind is forced to choose between two different states. It is the auditory equivalent of Joseph Jastrow's well known rabbit/duck illustration, or Rubin's vase, where the brain interprets either two vases or two faces. In the word "laurel", the noises made by the throat and mouth to produce the sound are at two different frequencies, creating the ambiguity. For example, a high frequency is needed for the "l" but a low frequency is required for "r". A spectrogram of the clip shows that both the sounds "laurel" and "yanny" are present, but at different ends of the sound spectrum. Thousands have been left stumped as to whether the audio clip is saying Yanny or Laurel Credit: EyeEm Likewise, because the original audio clip is slightly muffled it leaves room for individual interpretation. The way people make sense of sound is influenced by what they hear regularly, so people who have closer friends called "Danny" or "Annie" would be more likely to pick up the sound "yanny". Trevor Cox, professor of acoustic engineering at the University of Salford said: "If you look at the spectrogram you can see both sounds are there, on top of each other. "So the sound that an individual picks up could be based on sounds they hear often, or how words are pronounced in their language or dialect. Or maybe you've got a friend called Laurel, so you are more attuned to hearing that word. "Also if you have noise-induced hearing loss you will struggle to hear sounds in the middle of that range so would only be able to hear 'laurel'. So if you struggle to hear 'yanny' maybe you are getting into that region of hearing loss." Age gap One factor that could be affecting what people hear is age as our ears become less adept at picking up higher frequencies as we get older. Young people find higher frequencies easier to hear, while people suffering age-related hearing loss start to lose the ability to hear sounds around 4,000HZ, exactly the frequency of the "yanny" noise. So if you can't hear "yanny", it could be a sign of increasing years or even hearing damage. Lauren Laverne, the radio broadcaster , tweeted that she was hearing "laurel" whereas her seven-year-old daughter was hearing "Yanny". Laurel for me (no surprise after 20 years in DJ headphones) Yanny for the 7 year old https://t.co/DX23SscQhm— Lauren Laverne (@laurenlaverne) May 16, 2018 Charles Spence, professor of experimental psychology at Oxford, said he could only hear "laurel" and that could be because of his age. He said: "If there was stuff going on at high frequency range maybe you would get young people hearing/and being influenced by that, but not oldies?" Accent variation Jane Setter, a professor of phonetics at the University of Reading, said people may also be hearing different names depending on where they live. "There may well be differences between British and American listeners," she told the Telegraph. "The phenomenon seems to have started off with American listeners' perceptions of a recording of 'Laurel' generated by computer ie synthesized. "Accent differences will predispose the brain to hearing certain patterns so it would be interesting to see if a Brit, Aussie, American pattern emerges – but I'm not sure who's collecting that data, and it will be difficult to do so now with any research rigour." Another factor that could influence what name listeners hear according to Prof Setter was seeing the written word first in the tweet. As English speakers read from left to right this could prime the brain to expect to hear "yanny" for some people. Sound quality Alex Holcombe, a cognitive psychologist at the University of Sydney, has also explained that the audio quality of the clip could be an influence as our brains effectively fill in the blanks when presented with low sound quality. you can hear both when you adjust the bass levels: pic.twitter.com/22boppUJS1— Earth Vessel Quotes (@earthvessquotes) May 15, 2018 He said: "Because our brains are almost every day trying to understand what was said under less than ideal (noisy) conditions, it is in the habit of making strong guesses from ambiguous stimuli. "If the auditory signal is somewhere between the prototypical way of saying 'laurel' and 'yanny', then the brain may tend to force it towards one or the other, as it does with the phonemic restoration effect." |
Mourinho says Conte feud over ahead of FA Cup final Posted: 18 May 2018 03:56 AM PDT (Reuters) - Manchester United manager Jose Mourinho says the sometimes bitter feud between himself and Chelsea counterpart Antonio Conte has ended ahead of the sides' meeting in Saturday's FA Cup final. The duo have been involved in a war of words since the 2016-17 season, when Mourinho criticised Conte for celebrating wildly after Chelsea's 4-0 win over United, while the Italian accused his Portuguese rival of being obsessed with the Blues. |
AP source: Cowboys' Gregory seeks return after yearlong ban Posted: 18 May 2018 09:28 AM PDT |
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