Wagner's global operations: War, oil and gold
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Micah Parsons goes berserk on media being Cowboys, Dak Prescott haters
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Earth hit by powerful ‘X-1’ solar flare, after fears of ‘cannibal’ blast
The Earth narrowly avoided being hit by a “cannibal” solar flare – but has been lashed by powerful enough blasts to disrupt communications. In recent days, space weather forecasters had warned that the Earth could be hit by a range of powerful flares that have been ejected from the Sun. Particular warnings focused on the “cannibal” flare, which was forecast to potentially glance Earth. “Cannibal” solar flares are formed when a later blast catches up with one that was ejected earlier, and consumes it. The energy of the two is combined, which can make them far more powerful than flares that are released on their own. The latest cannibal flare appears to have missed Earth, however. Forecasts had suggested that it was only expected to glance the planet, and so a miss was perhaps likely. The Earth was struck by an X-class flare, however. That is the most potent category of solar flares, and can cause considerable disruption on Earth. This time around, space weather experts warned that the blast was enough to disrupt radio and navigation signals in North America. It was measured as an R3 blackout – on a scale that runs from 1 to 5 – which meant that areas in the US and Canada as well as on the Pacific Ocean were at risk of having radio signals and navigation disrupted. The Sun moves through a cycle of activity every 11 years, during which it releases more and less “coronal mass ejections” or CMEs, and it is currently in a particularly busy part of that cycle. Those CMEs can bring energetic flares that hit Earth – and could one day cause considerable problems on the planet, disrupting energy grids and other important infrastructure. The latest flare was measured at X1.5 and is the 20th such X flare to have hit the Earth in its current period. It came out of a particularly active part of the Sun, and followed other, weaker flares, the UK’s Met Office said. Nonetheless, experts said the “minor ongoing solar radiation storm” was “waning” and that it did not expect significant disruption in the coming days. Read More Giant space ‘umbrella’ tethered to asteroid could protect Earth from climate crisis James Webb Space Telescope captures new images of the Ring Nebula Massive solar storm strikes Earth, Moon and Mars together for first time in history
2023-08-09 23:19
IShowSpeed's father apologizes to YouTuber over controversial 'IShowMeat' remark: 'They're clipping out the wrong part'
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2023-08-26 13:58
These Are the World’s Most Liveable Cities in 2023
It was a long time coming, but a shift back to normality after the years-long Covid pandemic is
2023-06-22 16:15
Zuckerberg: Actually, Threads Is Great, Approaching 100M Monthly Active Users
Despite what you may have heard, Threads is doing just fine, thank you very much.
2023-10-27 06:14
Steelers, Browns renew heated rivalry with both in thick of division race, playoff picture
Longtime rivals, the Steelers and Browns meet again with more than just the usual bad blood as a backdrop
2023-11-18 04:54
UK to charter flights for Afghan refugees stuck in Pakistan
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2023-10-26 05:33
Former BOE Hawks Say UK Interest Rates Headed to 6% Pain Level
Hawkish former Bank of England rate-setters warned that interest rates will need to soar as high as 6%
2023-05-27 13:00
Erik ten Hag seeking solution to Manchester United’s defensive dilemma
Erik ten Hag admits he is at a loss to explain Manchester United’s poor defensive performances. The Red Devils have conceded 14 goals in their last five games and 10 in the last three, with three goals against Bayern Munich in the Champions League on Wednesday not enough even to earn them a point. United boss Ten Hag said: “We have shown that we can do it because last year we had the most clean sheets in the Premier League because of the team, because we defended very good as a team, so we have to get back to that standard. “Of course I am pushing the team and demanding from the team, and from the start of the season, but they are human beings, not robots, so, why they are not doing it, I try to find out and I try to give the solutions and try to motivate the players to do the job. “When you are in a period like we are in always as a manager you are asking yourself these questions. My job is to get them to do the job.” On United’s tendency to concede goals soon after a restart, Ten Hag added: “(We’re) not concerned but we are aware of it. Of course you can’t close your eyes for things like this so we coach the players, we coach the team in that fact.” Question marks have been raised about the attitude of United’s squad, with clips from the Bayern game apparently showing players not chasing back as hard as they might. Ten Hag does not believe a lack of willingness was to blame, though, saying: “It’s always a concern when we didn’t run but I think against Bayern it was not the case. “In certain situations yes so it’s also to recognise in which situation is it about they didn’t recognise it and didn’t make the right decisions or is it about willingness? “Against Spurs, we didn’t run too much. But I think against Bayern we did our best from physical outputs but we didn’t always run in the right moment. “If we bounced back like we did in Munich, you can’t say the spirit isn’t right. I think we have other problems than that.” Read More Charity boss speaks out over ‘traumatic’ encounter with royal aide Ukraine war’s heaviest fight rages in east - follow live
2023-09-23 05:30
IMF, World Bank to proceed with annual meetings in Morocco in October
By Andrea Shalal WASHINGTON The International Monetary Fund (IMF), the World Bank and Morocco on Monday announced the
2023-09-19 07:12
US judge temporarily suspends six creditors from joining Citgo auction
By Marianna Parraga HOUSTON A U.S. court of appeals has granted Venezuela a temporary stay preventing six companies
1970-01-01 08:00
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