Anonymous ID: 8f7712 Oct. 11, 2025, 6:55 a.m. No.23722992   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3079 >>3233 >>3298 >>3416 >>3498

This Week in Orbit | Incredible 4K Views of Earth’s Storms, Cities & Landscapes

Oct 11, 2025

 

Watch our planet from space in This Week in Orbit, a weekly 4K journey around Earth — filmed from Sen’s 4K cameras aboard the International Space Station.

 

Relax to music as you witness breathtaking storms, glowing cities, and natural wonders captured from orbit between October 2–8, 2025.

 

🌍 Locations featured this week:

⚡ Electrical storms over Colombia & Brazil

☁️ Sri Lanka and the coasts of South Asia

🏜️ Ras Al Khair, Saudi Arabia

🌊 Portugal & Spain, including Lisbon

🏔️ The majestic Alps, Switzerland

🌀 Typhoon Matmo near Taiwan

🌾 Rivers and lakes of Mali, West Africa

🔥 Fires near Volgograd, Russia

🏝️ The Canary Islands, Spain

🌪️ Tropical Storm Octave, North Pacific Ocean

🌆 Mexico, USA & Canada – from Baja to Montreal

🌕 Full moon rising over SpaceX Dragon CRS-33

🌎 The Himalayas, Nile River, Sahara, and Lake Manitoba

🚀 Close-up views of Typhoon Halong and SpaceX Dragon in orbit

 

🎶 Sit back, relax, and feel the overview effect — the awe-inspiring realization of Earth’s beauty and fragility as seen from space.

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dEr7ugXVKEg

https://about.sen.com/

Anonymous ID: 8f7712 Oct. 11, 2025, 7:02 a.m. No.23723005   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3010 >>3013 >>3019 >>3041 >>3127 >>3233 >>3298 >>3416 >>3498

The Gravity of 3I/ATLAS

October 11, 2025

 

As the interstellar object 3I/ATLAS passes through our cosmic backyard, bounded by the orbits of Mars and Earth around the Sun during the month of October 2025, the time is ripe to evaluate its gravity.

A good way to gauge the depth of a gravitational potential well is through the speed needed to escape from it. Consider the Moon for example.

The escape speed from the lunar surface is 2.4 kilometers per second, about twice faster than the fastest rifle bullet but 125,000 times slower than light.

In contrast, a black hole has an escape speed that exceeds the speed of light, making it the ultimate gravitational prison. Whatever happens inside a black hole stays there, just as is often said about Las Vegas.

 

In contrast, the escape velocity from a solid-density object, like 3I/ATLAS, is proportional to its diameter.

In a recent paper (accessible here), I calculated a lower limit on the diameter of 3I/ATLAS, about 5 kilometers, based on the lack of recoil from its mass loss towards the Sun.

An upper limit of 46 kilometers was derived from the SPHEREx data based on the brightness of 3I/ATLAS (as reported here). This range of diameters implies that the escape speed from 3I/ATLAS is between 1.3 and 12 meters per second.

 

For comparison, the world record time for a 100-meter dash is 9.58 seconds, set by Usain Bolt in 2009. It corresponds to a running speed of 10.44 meters per second, equal to the escape speed from a 40-kilometer asteroid.

In other words, motion at the record speed of Usain Bolt would lead to a lift off from the surface of space objects smaller than the diameter of 3I/ATLAS or roughly the size of the state of Rhode Island.

Keep in mind that in order to reach his record speed, Usain’s lungs consumed oxygen at atmospheric pressure which can only be supplied within the enclosure of a spacecraft.

Without artificial gravity from the centripetal force induced by a rapid spin of the enclosure, his fast body is destined to bounce off the walls of the spacecraft.

 

3I/ATLAS appears to rotate with a period of 16.16 hours (as reported here).

This corresponds to a surface rotation speed in the range between 0.25 and 2.5 meters per second, about a fifth of the gravitational escape speed for a solid density of 0.5 grams per cubic centimeter, characteristic of comets.

The binding gravitational force is an order of magnitude larger than the centrifugal force for a comet nucleus with this rotation period. Since both the escape speed and the rotation speed scale with the unknown diameter of the object, their ratio is independent of that diameter.

Under these conditions, rotation at a period of 16.16 hours is much slower than the threshold needed for breaking up a comet nucleus bound by gravity. However, for a denser object, gravity is stronger.

In particular, the rotation speed for a period of 16.16 hours is only 4% of the escape speed at the density of iron, similar to the ratio between the surface rotation speed and the escape speed for Earth.

Of course, unlike the Earth — small solid objects are held together by chemical bonds and not gravity.

 

All in all, despite its mass of more than 33 billion tons (as derived here), the gravity of 3I/ATLAS is rather weak.

The gravitational kick it gave to Mars as it passed at a speed of 67 kilometers per second at a minimum separation of 29 million kilometers on October 3, 2025, was a part in 5 trillion of Usain Bolt’s record speed, amounting to an unmeasurable velocity kick of 2x10^{-12} meters per second.

Despite its weak gravity, 3I/ATLAS attracts a lot of public interest. This is a signature of its attention-grabbing gravitas and not its gravitational mass.

 

https://avi-loeb.medium.com/the-gravity-of-3i-atlas-a0f4faa1d858

Anonymous ID: 8f7712 Oct. 11, 2025, 7:08 a.m. No.23723019   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3022 >>3041 >>3043 >>3047 >>3233 >>3298 >>3416 >>3498

>>23723005

https://www.ufonews.co/post/3i-atlas-not-alone-objects-spotted-alongside-it

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dWexibyjsTM

 

3I/ATLAS Not Alone: Objects Spotted Alongside It

October 10, 2025

 

Reports are emerging that 3I/ATLAS, the interstellar visitor racing through our solar system, may not be traveling alone. Amateur astronomers analyzing raw images from NASA’s Perseverance rover claim to see multiple fast-moving objects in the same frames, not just one.

When asked directly on Newsmax whether telescopes on Earth are picking up other objects flying alongside 3I/ATLAS, Harvard astrophysicist Avi Loeb did not dismiss the possibility. Instead, he revealed what his research team is doing about it.

According to Loeb, “There are always objects. The question is whether we see unusual activity. And in fact, I tasked my research team at the Galileo Project to monitor the sky for any unusual activity, because it is possible that if it is an alien probe, that in fact it would release some mini probes that will visit the planets.”

 

Multiple Mars orbiters — NASA’s Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter, the European Space Agency’s Mars Express, and the ExoMars Trace Gas Orbiter — all captured coordinated observations of this object during its October 3rd flyby.

These were pre-planned scientific observations designed to gather the highest resolution data ever obtained of an interstellar object passing within 29 million kilometers of Mars.

The data was collected and the instruments functioned, but some of these images have not been released. When Youtuber Stefan Burns posted his time-lapse animation online, other amateur astronomers immediately began their own analysis.

A German user called NightMonkey claimed to see multiple objects, not just one comet — multiple fast-moving points of light. At the 3-second mark of Burns’ animation, a brief green flash appears that is not a camera artifact.

According to spectroscopic analysis from the Very Large Telescope in Chile, 3I/ATLAS is what astronomers call carbon chain depleted, containing virtually no dicarbon. This means it should not be glowing green, yet the green flash appeared.

 

According to Loeb’s statement on Fox News, the European Space Agency released data from the ExoMars camera on one of its orbiters of Mars, detecting the interstellar visitor 3I/ATLAS that was discovered on July 1st, 2025.

Loeb noted that the object is quite large and aligned in its path with the plane of the planets around the sun, calling it “a rare gift of a highly visible object that many of our space probes can look at.”

As more data emerges, 3I/ATLAS is breaking rules that comets are not supposed to break. Its chemistry is wrong, its behavior is anomalous, and its trajectory through our solar system aligns with multiple planets in ways that statistical models say should not happen by chance.

In contrast to its two interstellar predecessors, 3I/ATLAS is thought to be much faster, traveling at 58 kilometers per second and older, with estimates placing it between 3 and 11 billion years old.

 

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Anonymous ID: 8f7712 Oct. 11, 2025, 7:08 a.m. No.23723022   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3041 >>3233 >>3298 >>3416 >>3498

>>23723019

The mystery deepens with a connection to one of astronomy’s most famous unexplained signals. On August 15th, 1977, Ohio State University’s Big Ear radio telescope detected a signal so strong and unusual that astronomers wrote the word “wow” on the printout.

The 72-second signal came from the direction of Sagittarius at a frequency of 1420 megahertz — the hydrogen line, a frequency so fundamental to radio astronomy that any civilization capable of radio technology would monitor it.

According to Loeb’s analysis on Newsmax, working backwards from 3I/ATLAS’s current trajectory revealed that it came from about the same direction in the sky as the WOW Signal, within nine degrees.

The chance for a random alignment of the two directions is just 0.6 percent.

 

NASA’s Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter carries an instrument called HiRISE — the High Resolution Imaging Science Experiment.

According to Loeb’s statement on Fox News, the best data is yet to come from this camera, which is half a meter in diameter and can provide 30-kilometer resolution of 3I/ATLAS.

The data was taken, but because of a government shutdown in the United States, it has not been seen.

NASA’s official statement has been minimal, noting that Mars orbiters successfully conducted their observations and data is being processed, but this statement was issued over three weeks ago.

Mars orbiters routinely make their images public within days, yet nothing from the 3I/ATLAS flyby has appeared.

 

Right now, 3I/ATLAS is behind the sun from Earth’s perspective. Ground-based telescopes cannot see it against solar glare, and space-based observatories like Hubble and Webb need to avoid pointing too close to the sun to protect their sensitive instruments.

We go blind for approximately three weeks — three weeks where the object experiences maximum solar heating, maximum radiation pressure, and maximum stress on any structural components.

According to Loeb’s statement on Fox News, when people asked whether NASA’s delay in releasing data might indicate evidence for alien intelligence, he responded that “this shutdown and the delay is not a sign of extraterrestrial intelligence, but more a sign of terrestrial stupidity.”

The European Space Agency’s JUICE spacecraft will observe 3I/ATLAS in late November, just after perihelion, though the data will not be available until February 2026.

Overall, 3I/ATLAS remains anomalous — its mass, chemistry, trajectory, and possible alignment with the WOW Signal individually have potential natural explanations, but collectively, the picture becomes increasingly difficult to fit into comfortable categories.

 

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Anonymous ID: 8f7712 Oct. 11, 2025, 7:16 a.m. No.23723041   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3057 >>3233 >>3298 >>3416 >>3498

>>23723010 >ANON WAS PROMISED ALIENS!

>>23723005

>>23723019

>>23723022

 

Dobsonian Power

@DobsonianPower

 

There are now 17 comets while 3I/ATLAS makes it's passage in the Solar System.

 

Above average. Interestingly they seem to concentrate and then get more distant when 3I/ATLAS goes away. Simulation goes until June 2026. I wonder if there's any connection with these and 3I/ATLAS "visit

 

12:56 PM · Oct 10, 2025

 

https://x.com/DobsonianPower/status/1976738754195779983

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mZMQhxG8LFY (3I/ATLAS HAS A FLEET! Octo 10, 2025)

Anonymous ID: 8f7712 Oct. 11, 2025, 7:31 a.m. No.23723088   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3093 >>3233 >>3298 >>3416 >>3498

>>23723057

>>23723061

3I/Atlas Pictures Missing as World Interest Grows

Oct 11, 2025

 

Exopolitics Week In Review

 

00:00:00 - Topics

00:01:40 - Introduction

00:02:21 - Is it just a coincidence that NASA shuts down as 3I/Atlas approaches Mars and all data captured by NASA's Mars orbiters is not being released? https://t.co/gXHsF4lvu4

00:03:29 - Could President Trump really have become de facto King of the British Commonwealth, as evidenced by his recent trip to Windsor Castle, England https://x.com/davidjsorensen/status/1…

00:08:10 - Here's my interview on Redacted on Medbeds & how they are based on EM medical principles developed in the 1960s by Dr. Robert Becker & secretly used in SSPs. • Why Did Trump Suddenly Post THIS About Med…

00:11:35 - Currently, no images of 3I/Atlas taken from European Space Agency or NASA orbiters as it passed closest to Mars on Oct 3 have been released. https://x.com/MichaelSalla/status/197…

00:12:11 - Humanity’s Off-World Origins, Interplanetary Wars, and Soul Evolution: Interview with Dr. Scott Mandelker https://exopolitics.org/humanitys-off…

00:13:26 - Disclosure Truth Apocalypse Coming: The Exopolitical Big Picture https://exopolitics.org/disclosure-tr…

00:15:31 - Total blackout continues from six Mars orbiters of what's really happening with 3I/Atlas as it passes its perihelion with Mars. https://x.com/MichaelSalla/status/197…

00:16:49 - Are you ready for whats coming? https://x.com/MichaelSalla/status/197…

00:17:33 - In addition to delaying the release of images from its Mars orbiters, NASA has just declared that its Juno probe won't be able to take photos of 3I/Atlas as it approaches Jupiter. https://x.com/MichaelSalla/status/197…

00:18:53 - NASA's image of the week from the Perseverance rover Navcam showed an elliptical object which many observers have confused with 3I/Atlas. https://x.com/MichaelSalla/status/197…

00:21:05 - First image has been released by one of the European Space Agency Mars orbiters of 3I/Atlas, which is approximately 30 million km away https://x.com/MichaelSalla/status/197…

00:22:32 - Multiple Perspectives on 3I/Atlas Origins, Activities and Agenda - Exopolitics Commentary https://exopolitics.org/multiple-pers…

00:27:28 - Prof Avi Loeb examines the possibility that as 3I/Atlas reaches solar perihelion on Oct 29, it will break apart either like a traditional comet approaching the sun, or due to it being a mothership releasing exploratory probes/craft. https://x.com/MichaelSalla/status/197…

00:29:08 - Christopher Mellon is saying no UFOs are ours (no US SSPs) based on his first hand knowledge. Is he lying? https://x.com/MichaelSalla/status/197…

00:31:47 - A new whistleblower, Daniel, says he saw a football field-sized triangle-shaped UFO at Eglin AFB in 2006 while recuperating from an accident during his Ranger Training. https://x.com/MichaelSalla/status/197…

00:35:06 - Congressman Burchett shares what he knows about 5/6 underwater UFO bases/civilizations that whistleblowers have privately revealed. https://tuckercarlson.com/tucker-show…

00:36:37 - The Martians Are Coming https://x.com/MichaelSalla/status/197…

 

https://exopolitics.org/3i-atlas-pictures-missing-as-world-interest-grows/

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Cm-ZNyjPtQw

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IBTFVQJEr3E (3I/Atlas – Origins, Activities, Agenda? Top 11 Answers Oct 9, 2025)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3ejPnNeyKus (Cosmic Agency: Comet 3I/Atlas or Alien/ET Spaceship? My Thoughts Oct 10, 2025)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TDbbsKzHjEw (Joe Rogan & Duncan Trussell ponder whether 3i/Atlas is yet another UFO Psyop - Psicoactivo #643 Oct 10, 2025)

 

extra

 

(https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=as57UwfiI4E JP: More UFO INSIDERS Oct 10, 2025)

Anonymous ID: 8f7712 Oct. 11, 2025, 8:01 a.m. No.23723178   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3179

https://www.planetary.org/the-downlink/a-good-day-to-save-nasa-science

https://www.planetary.org/articles/second-2025-day-of-action-retrospective

https://insideucr.ucr.edu/stories/2025/10/10/ucr-physicist-pushes-nasa-nsf-funding-washington-dc

 

A good day to save NASA science

Oct 10, 2025

 

This week, nearly 300 people from across the country traveled to Washington, D.C., to participate in the Save NASA Science Day of Action.

These advocates met with representatives from nearly 250 congressional offices to speak about the importance of NASA's science program, which is facing its largest proposed cut in history.

Planetary Society members around the country also called and emailed their representatives, sending more than 1,300 messages of support in a single day. Image credit: Jason Dixson for The Planetary Society.

 

Fact Worth Sharing

The Save NASA Science Day of Action was the largest advocacy event in The Planetary Society’s history. With NASA facing unprecedented threats, a show of support like this has never been more important.

 

Mission Briefings

A protoplanet has been directly imaged orbiting inside a ring around a star. The exoplanet, named WISPIT 2b, is embedded in a ring-shaped gap in a disk encircling a young star more than 400 light-years away from Earth.

While planets have been found to exist in gaps like this, this is the first confirmed one in a gap between multiple rings. Pictured: The WISPIT 2 system imaged by the Magellan Telescope in Chile and the Large Binocular Telescope in Arizona.

The protoplanet is the small purple dot to the right of a bright white ring of dust, inside of another, fainter ring. Image credit: Laird Close/University of Arizona.

 

small bodies

Mars spacecraft spotted interstellar comet 3I/ATLAS as it flew by.

The European Space Agency’s ExoMars Trace Gas Orbiter captured an image of the comet as it flew past at a distance of about 30 million kilometers (about 19 million miles).

ESA’s Mars Express orbiter also attempted to image 3I/ATLAS, and NASA’s Perseverance rover may have as well.

 

Saturn

Cassini data support the idea that Enceladus could be habitable. New analysis of data from the mission to the Saturn system has found signs of previously undiscovered kinds of complex organic molecules spewing from geysers in the moon Enceladus, suggesting that complex chemical reactions may be taking place in its subsurface ocean. This may increase the likelihood that Enceladus could be hospitable to life.

 

From The Planetary Society

See (and hear) more from the Day of Action. This week’s Planetary Radio takes you inside the Save NASA Science Day of Action.

Hear from Planetary Society leaders, including CEO Bill Nye, Chief of Space Policy Casey Dreier, and Board Director Britney Schmidt, about what it was like to see hundreds of advocates come together to defend the future of space science, the power of grassroots advocacy, and what comes next for the Save NASA Science campaign.

You can also watch the event’s press conference and see Bill Nye speaking on CBS News about the event.

 

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Anonymous ID: 8f7712 Oct. 11, 2025, 8:02 a.m. No.23723179   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>23723178

Planetary Society logo bullet

STEP Grants are fueling the future of space exploration. Dr. Jacob Buffo of Dartmouth College knows just how impactful these grants can be.

He joined a live virtual event led by Planetary Society Chief Scientist Bruce Betts last week to talk about how the STEP Grant his team won has enabled them to study sites on Earth that can teach us about conditions on Mars and other worlds.

With support from people like you, we can fund promising and innovative projects through this program. Make a gift today to help fund the next round of grant winners!

 

Planetary Society logo bullet

Comet 3I/ATLAS is all over the news. Here’s what you need to know about it. Our guide to the interstellar object covers everything you should know, from its origins to how close it will come to Earth and the science it’s enabling.

 

What's Up

After sunset, find reddish Mars very low in the west and yellowish Saturn in the east. Very bright Jupiter rises around midnight, joining the Moon on Oct. 14, and shines high overhead before dawn. In the early morning,

Venus shines brightly in the east. Learn what else to look for in October’s night skies.

 

Help save space missions. Join today!

If you are not already a member, we need your help. NASA is at a crossroads, and your support is needed today! Funding for space science and exploration is at risk. It needs the support of passionate advocates like you.

NASA is facing major budget cuts for the first time in a decade, and thousands of skilled scientists, engineers, and technicians have already been laid off at NASA centers across the United States.

NASA funding must grow, not shrink, if the agency is to succeed in returning to the Moon, exploring the Solar System, and seeking out life beyond Earth.

 

Wow of the Week

Space advocates come in all shapes and sizes (and species). Harry the dog posed for a photo with his NASA rocket chew toy during a Day of Action meeting in the office of Representative George Whitesides (D-California).

 

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Anonymous ID: 8f7712 Oct. 11, 2025, 8:09 a.m. No.23723203   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3204 >>3298 >>3416 >>3498

https://lawandcrime.com/high-profile/retaliation-for-protected-first-amendment-activity-nasa-workers-union-sues-trump-over-unlawful-and-chilling-effort-to-strip-collective-bargaining-rights/

 

'Retaliation for protected First Amendment activity': NASA workers union sues Trump over 'unlawful' and 'chilling' effort to strip collective bargaining rights

Oct 10th, 2025, 1:20 pm

 

A labor union representing NASA workers filed a lawsuit against President Donald Trump and Acting NASA Administrator Sean Duffy this week in a Washington, D.C., federal court over an executive order stripping collective bargaining rights from federal employees.

On Aug. 28, the 45th and 47th president issued Executive Order 14343, entitled: "Further Exclusions from Federal Labor-Management Programs."

The order, under the auspices of "national security," purports to remove six agencies from the Federal Service Labor-Management Relations Statute, a federal law that has provided collective bargaining rights for most federal employees since 1978.

 

In a 26-page complaint, the International Federation of Professional and Technical Engineers, representing some 6,000 NASA workers, claims the executive order — and attempts to implement it — are "ultra vires and unconstitutional under the First and Fifth Amendments."

The IFPTE says the latest executive order is a prohibited attempt evidencing a "bare . . . desire to harm a politically unpopular group" in line with other documented "efforts to dismantle federal unions—specifically those that speak out against the Administration."

 

Love true crime? Sign up for our newsletter, The Law&Crime Docket, to get the latest real-life crime stories delivered right to your inbox.

The lawsuit notes that the August executive order is a cumulative effort by the Trump administration to dismantle collective bargaining rights for federal employees — following an earlier, similarly worded, order attempting to do the same to 16 other agencies issued in March.

 

In sum, the government claims, the combined 22 agencies have national security "as their primary function," the lawsuit notes.

"NASA does not have national security as its primary function," the lawsuit categorically bristles. "NASA has been collectively bargaining with federal employee unions for decades."

 

The filing also acknowledges it is the latest among a widespread labor union effort to push back against the Trump administration's attacks on collective bargaining rights, becoming the fourth such lawsuit in the D.C. Circuit alone to challenge the August executive order.

"Similarly to these other labor organizations challenging Defendants' unlawful actions, IFPTE challenges defendants and the EO, which exists solely to strip federal employees and their representatives of long-held statutory rights in retaliation for protected First Amendment activity and because they belong to a group disfavored by the Trump Administration," the filing reads.

 

Neither Trump nor Duffy has the power to attack labor unions in the ways they are attempting to do so, the plaintiffs claim.

The plaintiffs make numerous references to the originating statute which says "labor organizations and collective bargaining in the civil service are in the public interest" and gives workers the right to "form, join, or assist any labor organization, or to refrain from such activity" and "to engage in collective bargaining with respect to conditions of employment through representatives chosen by employees."

 

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Anonymous ID: 8f7712 Oct. 11, 2025, 8:09 a.m. No.23723204   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3298 >>3416 >>3498

>>23723203

The lawsuit also refers to what the plaintiffs hope will be a relevant portion of the congressional record which describes the statute as an effort by Congress to create a "Federal labor-management program which cannot be universally altered by any President."

"The President's attempts to unilaterally exclude the majority of the federal workforce from collective bargaining conflict with the statute," the lawsuit argues.

 

On Sept. 11, Duffy moved to implement the executive order by announcing the IFPTE no longer served as the "exclusive representatives for any group of NASA employees," the "termination, abrogation, or repudiation of collective bargaining agreements (CBAs) with labor unions," that NASA would stop "collection of union dues on behalf of labor unions," and various other anti-union actions, including government withdrawal from collaborative process like negotiations, grievance processing and previously-scheduled arbitrations.

 

"Similarly, the actions of Defendant Duffy in terminating collective bargaining agreements between Plaintiff's local affiliate unions and NASA and refusing to participate in the collective bargaining process are also ultra vires, as they rely on and enforce an illegally issued and invalid executive order," the lawsuit goes on.

More Law&Crime coverage: 'They're going to lose lots of dues': Judge appears skeptical of government arguments over Trump executive order stripping collective bargaining rights from federal workers

 

To hear the plaintiffs tell it, the latest executive order "was issued in retaliation for IFPTE's protected speech and petitioning activities, including among other things, participating in a lawsuit to challenge" the earlier anti-union executive order and for "making public statements strongly condemning the President's actions."

This alleged campaign of retribution is a clear violation of the First Amendment, according to the lawsuit.

 

"[The August executive order] aims to chill such protected speech and petitioning activity not just by Plaintiff, but by all federal unions," the lawsuit goes on.

"Indeed, as the [Office of Personnel Management] guidance makes clear, [the August executive order] is intended as a supplement to [the March executive order], which was patently issued for the purpose of targeting labor organizations that stand up to President Trump."

 

The filing goes on like this, at length:

Plaintiff IFPTE and its affiliated local unions have exercised their First Amendment rights to criticize the actions of the Trump Administration and to petition the government by filing lawsuits to challenge these policies.

Such First Amendment activity is a core part of our democratic system, memorialized in this Country's founding documents.

 

By issuing EO 14343 in retaliation for IFPTE's protected activity and for the purposes of chilling the rights of labor organizations more broadly, President Trump has violated the First Amendment.

Defendant Duffy and NASA's implementation of EO 14343 share in the unlawful executive order's retaliatory purpose and effects, so such actions also violate the First Amendment.

 

And, in what may become a flash point of motions practice and litigation, the union claims the negation of contracts amounts to unconstitutional takings under the Fifth Amendment.

The plaintiffs are asking the court to enjoin the Trump administration "from implementing or otherwise giving effect" to the August order as well as declaratory relief and attorneys fees.

 

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Anonymous ID: 8f7712 Oct. 11, 2025, 8:31 a.m. No.23723271   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3298 >>3416 >>3498

Japanese astronaut eyes typhoon from orbit | On the International Space Station

Oct. 6 - 10, 2025

 

Science and maintenance work continued this week aboard the International Space Station, but updates regarding those activities have been all but halted by the U.S. government shutdown.

Japanese astronaut Kimiya Yui's social media posts were the exception…

 

Orbital observation

Expedition 73 flight engineer Kimiya Yui of JAXA (the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency) saw not one but two typhoons this week from aboard the International Space Station.

(Typhoons are the same weather phenomenon as hurricanes: both are tropical cyclones. This type of powerful storm is called a hurricane in the Atlantic and central and eastern North Pacific regions, and a typhoon in the Northwest Pacific.)

 

"The eye of Typhoon 22 has become somewhat unclear, but it still appears to be maintaining its strong intensity as before," wrote Yui on social media on Thursday (Oct. 9).

"Typhoon 23 is a bit distant, but it is swirling with thick rain clouds on its southern side." "Stay safe while keeping up with the latest typhoon information!" he said.

 

Astronaut activity

Yui worked with his Expedition 73 crewmates and ground controllers to check out PROX, a device that will be used when Japan's next-generation cargo vehicle, the HTV-X, approaches the International Space Station for berthing.

"Preparations to welcome HTV-X to the ISS are steadily progressing," wrote Yui in a social media post on Oct. 8, 2025. "Here's the news: just like with Kounotori-kun, I've been assigned to operate the arm and grasp it this time as well.

The responsibility is significant, but I'll cooperate with everyone to reliably carry out the mission!"

 

By the numbers

As of Friday (Oct. 10), there are 7 people aboard the International Space Station:

Expedition 73 commander Sergey Ryzhikov of Roscosmos; fellow cosmonauts Alexey Zubritsky and Oleg Platonov; Jonny Kim, Zena Cardman and Mike Fincke of NASA; and Kimiya Yui of JAXA, all flight engineers.

There are two docked crew spacecraft: SpaceX's Dragon "Endeavour" attached to the zenith port of the Harmony module and Roscosmos' Soyuz MS-27 attached to the Earth-facing port of the Prichal node.

There are four docked cargo spacecraft: Roscosmos' Progress MS-31 (92P) docked to the space-facing port of the Poisk module and Progress M-32 (93P) docked to the aft port of the Zvezda service module, SpaceX's CRS-33 Dragon spacecraft docked to the forward port of Harmony Node 2 and Northrop Grumman's NG-23 Cygnus XL, the "SS William C. 'Willie' McCool," berthed to the Unity node.

 

https://www.space.com/space-exploration/international-space-station/japanese-astronaut-eyes-typhoon-from-orbit-on-the-international-space-station-oct-6-10-2025

https://x.com/Astro_Kimiya/status/1976905010085872143

Anonymous ID: 8f7712 Oct. 11, 2025, 8:40 a.m. No.23723294   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3296 >>3416 >>3498

https://mashable.com/article/orbiting-black-holes-first-image

https://www.utu.fi/en/news/press-release/scientists-capture-an-image-of-two-black-holes-circling-each-other-for-the-first

https://iopscience.iop.org/article/10.3847/1538-4357/ae057e

 

Scientists snap first photo of two black holes in an epic staredown

October 11, 2025

 

Astronomers have captured a radio image showing two black holes orbiting each other for the first time, just six years after the release of the first-ever photo of a single black hole.

The discovery confirms that pairs of supermassive black holes really do exist — something scientists have suspected for decades but never directly seen until now.

 

The system lies at the heart of a brilliant space object called quasar OJ 287, about 3.5 billion light-years from Earth.

Quasars, a portmanteau for "quasi-stellar objects," are extremely bright galaxy cores powered by black holes feasting on surrounding gas and dust.

OJ 287 has long stood out because its brightness rises and falls every 12 years. That pattern was a clue that two giant black holes might be circling one another like in a cosmic do-si-do.

 

The new observations are among the sharpest radio images ever made to explore what’s happening deep inside a quasar — and offers evidence that both black holes may be producing their own powerful jets of energy.

"The image of the two black holes was captured with a radio telescope system that included the RadioAstron satellite," said Mauri Valtonen of the University of Turku in Finland, in a statement.

"In recent years, we have only been able to use Earth-based telescopes, where the image resolution is not as good."

 

Black holes rank among the most mind-boggling objects in the cosmos. They are regions in space where gravity is so intense that nothing, not even light, can escape.

About 50 years ago, astronomers weren't entirely convinced these invisible giants were even real.

 

Today, black holes aren't just accepted, they're being photographed by a collection of enormous, synced-up radio dishes.

In 2019, the Event Horizon Telescope produced the first-ever image of a black hole, located 53 million light-years away in the galaxy Messier 87.

Three years later, the same group captured another historic image: the black hole at the center of our own Milky Way, called Sagittarius A, or Sgr A for short.

 

This new history-making radio image is part of a broader OJ 287 study led by Valtonen, which appears in The Astrophysical Journal.

The host galaxy is thought to have one enormous black hole — about 18 billion times the weight of the sun — and a smaller companion roughly equal to 150 million suns in mass.

As the smaller one orbits, it periodically crashes through the larger black hole’s disk of gas and dust, creating predictable bursts of light.

 

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Anonymous ID: 8f7712 Oct. 11, 2025, 8:41 a.m. No.23723296   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3416 >>3498

>>23723294

The first hints that something weird was happening in OJ 287 emerged in the late 1800s, according to the paper, when the quasar appeared unexpectedly in early sky photographs — long before scientists even knew black holes existed.

In the 1980s, Finnish astronomer Aimo Sillanpää noticed its repeating light pattern and proposed the idea of two black holes. Since then, researchers around the world have tracked the system, trying to map out the pair’s motion.

More recently, scientists have calculated how they think the pair ought to appear.

 

The confirmation of this duo came from a powerful radio telescope network that included the Russian RadioAstron satellite, which operated until 2019.

Its antenna once orbited about 120,000 miles from Earth, about halfway to the moon. When combined with ground-based radio dishes, this setup achieved extremely high resolution.

 

The approach differed from how the previous images of black holes were made, which used the Event Horizon Telescope, a virtual Earth-sized telescope that links radio dishes around the world.

Instead, the new OJ 287 image used a space-based technique that "achieved a much longer observing baseline, and hence a higher-resolution image," said Daniel Reichart, a University of North Carolina professor and one of the study's co-authors.

 

The method has its drawbacks: It uses longer radio wavelengths that blur as they travel through space, making it impossible to see a black hole's edge.

The tradeoff, Reichart explained to Mashable, is that the Event Horizon Telescope "has a slightly lower resolution, but a higher fidelity," delivering clearer images.

But with the space-based technique, the team was able to see enough detail to separate the two black holes within OJ 287. Without that resolution, the pair would otherwise appear as a single light.

 

"For the first time, we managed to get an image of two black holes circling each other," Valtonen said. "The black holes themselves are perfectly black, but they can be detected by these particle jets or by the glowing gas surrounding the hole."

The team also saw something new: a twisting jet from the smaller black hole, which seems to whip back and forth as it moves through its orbit. Future studies may observe the jet changing direction over time.

 

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Anonymous ID: 8f7712 Oct. 11, 2025, 8:54 a.m. No.23723332   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3416 >>3498

The Dawn of Iran’s Space Services Era

11 October 2025 5:51 PM

 

The head of Iran’s Space Research Institute has announced the beginning of the country’s “satellite services era,” stating that Iran has moved beyond the phase of “launching for the sake of launching” and entered the stage of “launching for service.”

Vahid Yazdanian declared that Nahid-2, a fully domestically built communications satellite, has been successfully placed into a 500-kilometer orbit, and the first satellite phone call has been made through it.

According to him, this connection involved both sending and receiving messages using Store & Forward technology and testing the KU band for telephony relay.

 

Yazdanian added that the second model of Nahid-2 and Pars-1 will be launched into space by the end of December using an indigenous launcher. Meanwhile, Nahid-3, an upgraded version of the satellite, is being designed for placement in geostationary orbit.

He also revealed that Pars-3, with a one-meter imaging resolution, is under design—marking a step toward full localization of advanced Earth observation satellites.

 

According to Yazdanian, a series of research satellites (Research-1 to Research-5) are being developed in collaboration with universities and knowledge-based companies to test and indigenize various space subsystems. The launch of this satellite constellation is expected by the end of next year.

The institute’s director stressed that the private sector will play a central role in the future of Iran’s space industry, and satellite data must be transformed into practical services in fields such as agriculture, environmental monitoring, mining, and urban management.

 

Regarding international cooperation, Yazdanian said Iran is expanding its space partnerships with Russia, China, Oman, Turkmenistan, and Armenia, emphasizing that the country’s overarching policy is to transfer technical knowledge rather than merely sell products.

He also announced the start of feasibility studies for a domestic navigation system, which is expected to become operational within two to five years. The system, using five to six satellites, will provide positioning accuracy within a few meters.

 

In another part of his remarks, Yazdanian highlighted efforts to commercialize spin-off technologies from the space industry.

Technologies such as the production of solar panels, lithium-ion batteries, brushless motors, and polymer coatings have now been transferred to non-space sectors, including transportation and home appliances.

Despite the adverse effects of sanctions on component procurement and rising costs, Yazdanian stressed that Iran now possesses the full capability to manufacture satellites domestically and continues to advance its space program through reliance on national expertise.

 

https://wanaen.com/the-dawn-of-irans-space-services-era/

Anonymous ID: 8f7712 Oct. 11, 2025, 9:21 a.m. No.23723396   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3416 >>3498

Teen Shot Near Smithsonian Air and Space Museum

October 10, 2025

 

Police reports are indicating that a teenager was the victim of a shooting near the Smithsonian Air and Space Museum in Washington, D.C.

“Alert: Shooting investigation in the 200 block of 6th Street, Southwest. The scene is secure,” said a 1:49 p.m. post on X from the police department,” adding, “1 teenaged male victim was located conscious and breathing.”

 

A crime alert on the Washington Police Department’s website from 1:56 p.m. reads, “MPD Units are investigating a shooting at 600 Maryland Avenue, SW.”

That is just around the corner from the museum, which is at 650 Jefferson Drive SW. Freelance reporter Andrew Leyden posted a photo to X claiming to show a bullet hole in a window at the museum.

 

According to a popular X account, The DC MD VA Live, “The shooting appears to have stemmed from some sort of dispute at Richard Wright Public Charter high school, which sits just a few blocks away from the crime scene on 6th Street SW.”

NBC’s D.C. affiliate reported that the museum’s Independence Avenue entrance was closed, as well as 6th Street SW between Maryland Avenue and E Street, according to police.

The press department at the museum referred inquires to the Police Department.

 

“On Friday, October 10, 2025, at approximately 1:27 p.m., First District officers responded to the 600 block of Maryland Avenue, Southwest, for a report of a shooting,” police department public affairs specialist Freddie Talbert said in an email.

“Upon arrival, officers located a juvenile teenage male, conscious and breathing, suffering from gunshot wounds. DC Fire and EMS arrived and transported the victim to an area hospital for treatment.

The lookout is for two Black males wearing dark clothing. Anyone with information is urged to call 202-727-9099 or text 50411.”

 

This is a developing story and will be updated as events warrant.

 

https://news.artnet.com/art-world/shooting-near-smithsonian-air-and-space-museum-2698932

https://twitter.com/PenguinSix/status/1976725775584805186

Anonymous ID: 8f7712 Oct. 11, 2025, 9:26 a.m. No.23723403   🗄️.is 🔗kun

Private firm launches world's mightiest solid-fueled rocket

Updated: 2025-10-11 11:40

 

The Gravity 1 rocket model features three core stages and four boosters, all powered by solid-propellant engine and equipped with flexible swinging nozzles.

 

With a liftoff weight of 405 metric tons and a thrust of 600 tons, the rocket can carry a spacecraft weighing up to 6.5 tons to a low-Earth orbit, or 4.2 tons to a typical sun-synchronous orbit at an altitude of 500 kilometers, according to Orienspace, which was founded in 2020 by a group of veteran researchers from State-owned space enterprises.

 

Since its debut, Gravity 1 has become the world's mightiest solid-fueled launch vehicle and also the most powerful private rocket in China.

 

Its liftoff weight and thrust surpass those of the European Space Agency's Vega-C, previously the world's most powerful solid-propellant rocket.

 

In addition, Gravity 1 is the first and currently the only private rocket in China that has side boosters and the largest fairing, or nose cone — the top structure on a rocket that contains satellites or other payloads.

 

https://www.chinadaily.com.cn/a/202510/11/WS68e9d1b6a310f735438b4603_2.html

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XhakYpGuXg8