Anonymous ID: 36bdf8 Jan. 22, 2020, 4:33 p.m. No.7880590   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>7880285

Missing Malaysia plane: The passengers on board MH370

 

17 January 2017

 

Dr Yuchen Li recently finished his doctoral engineering degree from Cambridge University.

 

The university confirmed that he had recently begun working in a prominent "geotechnical position" in Beijing.

 

"Yuchen was a hugely talented and likeable person with a brilliant career ahead of him," a spokesman at Cambridge said.

 

Dr Li had only recently married, but his wife, Mingei Ma, was not on the flight with him, Cambridge News says.

 

A Facebook page from Churchill College congratulated the couple on their recent marriage in Hubei, China, adding: "We think they look fabulous!"

 

Dr Li previously studied civil engineering at Tsinghua University in Beijing, reports say.

 

IBM executive Philip Wood, 50, originally from Texas, was one of three Americans on the plane.

 

Mr Wood - an avid traveller - had just been transferred to Malaysia and was excited about the new beginning, his younger brother James told the Wall Street Journal.

 

It was his last planned trip to Beijing before settling in Kuala Lumpur. He has two sons from a previous marriage who are based in Texas, reports say.

 

"We are all sticking together," his father, Aubrey Wood, told the New York Times. "What can you do? What can you say?"

 

Another passenger on the way to a new job was mechanical engineer Paul Weeks from New Zealand.

 

The former soldier moved his family to Perth, Australia, after the devastating earthquakes in Christchurch, reports say.

 

Before he left home, he took off his wedding ring and watch and gave them to his wife for his two young sons.

 

The co-workers

Also on the plane were 20 staff members from a US technology company, Freescale Semiconductor, which makes powerful microchips for industries, including defence.

 

Twelve employees were from Malaysia and eight were from China. The company said it was "deeply saddened" by the news, in a statement on its website.

 

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-26503469

Anonymous ID: 36bdf8 Jan. 22, 2020, 4:35 p.m. No.7880630   🗄️.is 🔗kun

Looking Glass?

 

A burst of gravitational waves hit our planet. Astronomers have no clue where it's from.

By Yasemin Saplakoglu 13 hours ago

 

A mysterious cosmic event might have ever-so-slightly stretched and squeezed our planet last week. On Jan. 14, astronomers detected a split-second burst of gravitational waves, distortions in space-time … but researchers don't know where this burst came from.

 

The gravitational wave signal, picked up by the Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory (LIGO) and the Virgo interferometer, lasted only 14 milliseconds, and astronomers haven't yet been able to pinpoint the burst's cause or determine whether it was just a blip in the detectors.

 

Gravitational waves can be caused by the collision of massive objects, such as two black holes or two neutron stars. Astronomers detected such gravitational waves from a neutron star collision in 2017 and from one in April of 2019, according to new findings that were presented at the meeting of the American Astronomical Society on Jan. 6.

 

But gravitational waves from collisions of such massive objects typically last longer and manifest in the data as a series of waves that change in frequency over time as the two orbiting objects move closer to each other, said Andy Howell, a staff scientist at Los Cumbres Observatory Global Telescope Network and an adjunct faculty member in physics at the University of California, Santa Barbara. He was not part of the LIGO research.

 

The new signal was not a series of waves but a burst, Howell said. One more likely possibility is that this short-lived burst of gravitational waves comes from a more transient event, such as a supernova explosion, the catastrophic ending to a star's life.

 

Indeed, some astronomers have hypothesized that this could have been a signal from the Betelgeuse star, which mysteriously dimmed recently and is expected to undergo a supernova explosion. But the Betelgeuse star is still there so it's not that scenario, Howell said. It's also unlikely to be another supernova because they happen in our galaxy only about once every 100 years, he added.

 

What's more, the burst still "seems a little too short for what we expect from the collapse of a massive star," he said. "On the other hand, we've never seen a star blowing up in gravitational waves before, so we don't really know what it would look like." In addition, the astronomers didn't detect any neutrinos, tiny subatomic particles that carry no charge, which supernovas are known to release.

 

Another possibility is that the merging of two intermediate-mass black holes caused the signal, Howell said. Merging neutron stars produce waves that last longer (around 30 seconds) than this new signal, while merging black holes might more closely resemble bursts (that last around a couple of seconds). However, intermediate black hole mergers might also release a series of waves that change in frequency.

 

LIGO came across this signal while specifically looking for such bursts. But "that doesn't mean that what it found is an intermediate-mass black hole merger," Howell told Live Science. "We don't know what they found," especially since LIGO hasn't yet released the exact structure of the signal, he added.

 

It's also possible that this signal was just noise in the data from the detector, Howell said. But this burst of gravitational waves was found by all three LIGO detectors: one in Washington state, one in Louisiana and one in Italy. So the probability of the LIGO detectors finding this signal by chance (meaning it's a false alarm) is once every 25.84 years, which "gives us some indication that this is a pretty good signal," Howell said.

 

There could be other explanations for this mysterious burst, too. For example, a supernova could have directly collapsed into a black hole without producing neutrinos, though such an occurrence is very speculative, Howell said. Astronomers are now pointing their telescopes to that region to try to pinpoint the source of the waves.

 

"The universe always surprises us," he added. "There could be totally new astronomical events out there that produce gravitational waves that we haven't really thought about."

 

https://www.space.com/mysterious-gravitational-burst.html