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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
3/17/2018 10:14:52 AM
Nasa draws up plans for huge spacecraft to blow up doomsday asteroid


The Hammer mission would take more than seven years to reach a devastating asteroid CREDIT:MARK GARLICK

By Sarah Knapton, SCIENCE EDITOR

15 MARCH 2018 • 7:43PM


Nasa has drawn up plans for a huge nuclear spacecraft capable of shunting or blowing up an asteroid if it was on course to wipe out life on Earth.

The US space agency published details of its Hammer (Hypervelocity Asteroid Mitigation Mission for Emergency Response) deterrent, an eight tonne spaceship which could deflect a giant space rock.

Nasa has said previously that Earth is overdue a huge asteroid strikeand programmes are in places across the globe to map dangerous rocks as they move through the Solar System.

Last year an 100 foot asteroid named
2012TC4 passed within 27,000 miles of Antarctica, a distance that astronomers described as 'damn close.'


In detailed plans published in the journal
Acta Astronautica, Nasa and the National Nuclear Security Administration, calculated the time and payload it would take to move or destroy the 1,600-foot-wide asteroid Bennu.

Nasa's Osiris-Rex mission is already heading to Bennu to take samples CREDIT: NASA

Nasa already has a space probe on route to Bennu to take samples and has been monitoring the asteroid since it was discovered in 1999.

Although there is little risk it could hit the Earth, it is still considered as an NEO, or Near Earth Object, which would hit the planet with 1,450 megatons of TNT.

The Atomic Energy Commission has shown that a one gigaton warhead detonated about 10 miles up could be expected to start fires over an area of more than 430,000 square miles, an area more than four times the size of Britain.

Dante Lauretta, professor of Planetary Science in the Lunar and Planetary Laboratory at the University of Arizona, said Bennu’s impact would release “three times more energy than all nuclear weapons detonated throughout history”.

"The impact would release energy equivalent to 1,450 megatons of TNT," he said.

“For comparison, the fission bombs used in World War II had an energy release of roughly 20 kilotons of TNT each and the most powerful nuclear weapon ever detonated, the Russian Tsar Bomba, had a yield of 50 megatons."


The Hammer spacecraft within a Delta-IV rocket
CREDIT: NASA

H
owever the study showed that Earth would need years of warning to be able to put a deterrent plan in action.

The experts calculate that 7.4 years would be needed from building Hammer, to the craft hitting the asteroid.

Earth is hit by asteroids with surprising regularity but most are too small to do much damage or fall in unpopulated areas. In 2013, a meteor airburst over Chelyabinsk, Russia, broke shattered windows for over 300 miles.

Closest asteroid approaches per year

YearDate of closest approachSize (metres)

2029

2029-04-13

325

2028

2028-10-30

12

2020

2020-09-01

32

2017

2017-04-04

4.5

2017

2017-10-20

3

2017

2017-10-22

10

2017

2017-03-02

3

2017

2017-11-26

2

2017

2017-11-14

8

2017

2017-11-08

9

2016

2016-02-25

3.5

2016

2016-09-11

3

2016

2016-01-12

5

2016

2016-03-11

23.5

2016

2016-11-05

4.5

2016

2016-01-14

3.5

2015

2015-09-22

8.5

2015

2015-11-15

6.5

2014

2014-06-03

6

2013

2013-12-23

3

2013

2013-02-15

30

2012

2012-05-29

9

2011

2011-02-04

1

2011

2011-06-27

14

2010

2010-11-17

4

2009

2009-11-06

8.5

2008

2008-10-09

1.05

2008

2008-10-20

2.5

2007

2007-10-17

7.5

2006

2006-02-23

21

2005

2005-11-26

4.5

2004

2004-03-31

8

2003

2003-09-27

4

2002

2002-12-11

33

2001

2001-01-15

26.5

1999

1999-03-12

7.5

1994

1994-12-09

10.5

1993

1993-05-20

7

1991

1991-01-18

8.5

1990

1990-09-19

6.5

1984

1984-01-10

28

1982

1982-11-04

234.5

1979

1979-09-02

5.5

1976

1976-10-17

148

1971

1971-04-11

257.5

1965

1965-10-27

21.5

1959

1959-01-27

13.5

1957

1957-12-10

46.5

1955

1955-06-19

22.5

1954

1954-03-13

2.5

1949

1949-01-01

6.5

1938

1938-11-02

15.5

1936

1936-01-06

102

1935

1935-03-08

37.5

1925

1925-08-30

455

1918

1918-09-17

1175

1914

1914-12-31

589.5

1910

1910-05-09

37.5

Center for Near Earth Object Studies


N
asa’s Centre for Near-Earth Object Studies now lists 73 asteroids which have a 1 in 1,600 chance of hitting the Earth.

Teams from across the world are working on similar deterrents.


E
arlier this week a team of Russian researchers from Rosatom, the state nuclear energy corporation, and Moscow Institute of Physics and Technology (MIPT), announced they had constructed and blown up tiny asteroids in the lab to calculate how much power it would take to prevent a devastating impact.

Using laser pulses to simulate the effect of a nuclear bomb they found that to eliminate a 650 foot wide asteroid, the blast would need to deliver the energy equivalent of three megatons of TNT - the equivalent of 200 Hiroshima bombs.

The most powerful explosive device ever detonated was the Tsar Bomba, or “king of bombs,” built by the Soviet Union in 1961 which had an energy output of about 50 megatons of TNT.

“At the moment, there are no asteroid threats, so our team has the time to perfect this technique for use later in preventing a planetary disaster,” says study co-author Vladimir Yufa, an associate professor at the departments of Applied Physics and Laser Systems and Structured Materials, MIPT.

“We’re also looking into the possibility of deflecting an asteroid without destroying it and hope for international engagement.”


(telegraph.co.uk)

"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
3/17/2018 10:34:20 AM

BRIEFLY

Stuff that matters


UP IS DOWN

Blame the Arctic for your wild winter weather, New Yorkers.

There’s new evidence out this week that disruptions in the Arctic linked to climate change are fueling severe winter weather along the East Coast, especially during February and March.

This year certainly fits the bill. Back-to-back-to-back nor’easters havepummeled the Northeast in recent weeks, dropping nearly 100 inches of snow in Vermont and roughly double that in parts of western Pennsylvania and New York State.

The study, published in the journal Nature, adds more support to scientists claiming that what happens in the Arctic doesn’t stay in the Arctic. It finds that “when the Arctic is warm both cold temperatures and heavy snowfall are more frequent” in the eastern United States. That squares with strong evidence that nor’easters are getting worse, bringingmore coastal flooding and more snow.

The broader context, though, shows that even while big snowstorms during the late winter are getting increasingly common in the Northeast, there’s no trend toward more total snowfall over the full winter season. Winter is the fastest-warming season, and it’s likely that in many places, especially the deep south and mid-Atlantic, what would have been small snowstorms a few decades ago now fall as rain. In Arkansas, Tennessee, and North Carolina, snow totals have plunged by more than 50 percent over the past 30 years.






"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
3/17/2018 10:48:04 AM

Britain points at Putin in poisoning attack as gulf widens

By ANGELA CHARLTON and JILL LAWLESS


Britain's Prime Minister Theresa May fist bumps a member of the public as she greets people after viewing the area where former Russian double agent Sergei Skripal and his daughter were found critically ill, in Salisbury, England, Thursday, March 15, 2018. May on Wednesday expelled 23 Russian diplomats, severed high-level contacts and vowed both open and covert action following the incident. (Toby Melville/Pool Photo via AP)


MOSCOW (AP) — The gulf between Russia and Britain widened on Friday as they cranked up pressure over a nerve agent attack and a suspected murder in Britain that have deepened Western worries about alleged Russian meddling abroad.

Britain's foreign secretary accused Russian President Vladimir Putin of personally ordering the poisoning of ex-Russian spy Sergei Skripal and his daughter, Yulia, describing it as the most brazen such move since World War II.

Putin's spokesman denounced the claim as "shocking and inexcusable."

As relations between the two nations sank to a new post-Cold War low, nearly two dozen Russian diplomats in London were packing their bags to leave Tuesday after an expulsion order from Britain. British diplomats in Moscow were bracing for a retaliatory order from the Kremlin and were just waiting to be told who had to leave and when.

Geopolitical tensions have been mounting since the poisoning of the Skripals in the English city of Salisbury on March 4, in what Western powers see as the latest sign of increasingly aggressive Russian interference in foreign countries. The tensions threaten to overshadow Putin's expected re-election Sunday for another six-year presidential term.

But that's not all.

New concerns surfaced Friday about the death this week of a London-based Russian businessman, Nikolai Glushkov, found dead at his south London home on Monday. British police said Friday that he died from compression to the neck and opened a murder investigation.

Russia also suspects foul play in Glushkov's death and opened its own inquiry Friday. Russia's top agency for major crimes was also investigating the attack on Yulia Skripal, who is a Russian citizen. Her father has British citizenship. Both are in critical condition.

British police said there is no apparent link to the attack on Glushkov and the poisoning of the Skripals.

But to the West, they are raising similar concerns.

While Britain has accused the Russian state of ordering the poisoning of the Skripals, Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson took it a step further Friday and said it's "overwhelmingly likely" that Putin himself ordered the attack.

Top EU diplomats were expected to discuss next steps at a meeting Monday, with some calling for a boycott of the upcoming World Cup in Russia. British Prime Minister Theresa May is seeking a global coalition of countries to punish Moscow, and the U.S., France and Germany have already lined up against Russia over the Skripal attack.

Britain is expelling 23 Russian diplomats and taking other steps against Russian interests as the two nations' relations plummet.

"Our quarrel is with Putin's Kremlin, and with his decision, and we think it overwhelmingly likely that it was his decision, to direct the use of a nerve agent on the streets of the U.K., on the streets of Europe, for the first time since the Second World War," Johnson said.

Putin spokesman Dmitry Peskov was quoted by Russian news agencies as calling Johnson's statement a "shocking and inexcusable breach of diplomatic propriety." Peskov reiterated Russian denials of involvement in the attack on the Skripals.

"We have never encountered this level of discussion on the global stage," Peskov told reporters.

Russia ordered a halt to high-level meetings with the U.K. and prepared Friday to expel British diplomats.

Lithuanian Foreign Minister Linas Linkevicius told The Associated Press that the Salisbury attack was a direct challenge to Europe. He said Russia's recent provocations need a tough response, including action against Russian oligarchs with questionable ties who have used London as a safe haven.

The source of the nerve agent — which Britain says is Soviet-made Novichok — is unclear, as is the way it was administered.

Russia has demanded that Britain share samples collected by investigators.

Russia's envoy to the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons told The AP that his country has no stocks of the Novichok group of nerve agents, insisting that Soviet-era research into the agents was totally dismantled before Russia joined the organization.

Ambassador Alexander Shulgin also sought to shift possible blame, saying Western special agents spirited Russian chemical weapons experts out of the country in the 1990s and work continued on their research.

He said even the name Novichok was a "Western invention" and that Russia never gave it a name.

Hamish de Bretton-Gordon, former commander of the British Army's chemical and biological weapons regiment, called the claim that U.S. or British agents could have developed Novichok "complete hogwash."

Speaking to the AP, he called it unlikely that some of the nerve agent could have gone missing in the years after the 1991 collapse of the Soviet Union. He also cast doubt on the possibility that the nerve agent was sent through the mail or was placed in luggage that Skripal's daughter brought with her from Russia to Britain.

An 83-year-old Russian whistleblower who helped develop Novichok told the AP on Friday that no other country could have used that particular nerve agent to poison a former spy.

Vil Mirzayanov, who now lives in New Jersey, said that if the substance is Novichok, as Britain claims, it's "100 percent" clear it came from Russia.

Mirzayanov revealed details of Russia's chemical weapons in the 1990s because he said he was afraid of their impact.

While many British politicians have backed the government in blaming Moscow for the nerve agent attack, the U.K.'s main opposition leader has cautioned against a rush to judgment. Labour Party leader Jeremy Corbyn said in the Guardian that it's possible that "Russian mafia-like groups," rather than the Russian state, were responsible.

___

Lawless reported from London. Associated Press writers Mike Corder in The Hague, Michael Catalini in Princeton, N.J., Danica Kirka and Greg Katz in London, and Vladimir Isachenkov and Nataliya Vasilyeva in Moscow contributed to this report.

(Yahoo)

"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
3/17/2018 4:00:57 PM

US troops in Syria prepare for more Russian attacks after crushing up to 300 mercenaries in February battle

US Marines firing a howitzer in Syria.
US Marine Corps

  • US troops in Syria are digging in and preparing for future attacks after a massive battle played out in the country's east
  • The US Brig. Gen. in charge of the US-led fight against ISIS confirmed that around 300 Russian mercenaries were killed in a massive battle with US forces on February 7, though the Kremlin denies it.
  • Russian websites have been seen as advertising jobs for more mercenaries, and a recruiter reportedly said Russians were now joining up to take revenge on the US after losing the fight in February.

US troops in Syria are digging in and preparing for future attacks after a massive battle played out in the country's east that ended with up to 300 Russian mercenaries killed by US artillery and airpower.

Reporting from the ground in Syria, NBC News' Richard Engel and Kennet Werner spoke to Brig. Gen. Jonathan Braga, whose forces beat back the pro-Syrian government advance on a well known US position near valuable oilfields.

The Pentagon said the pro-Syrian forces, including many Russians hired by private military contractors, made an "unprovoked attack" on their positions with artillery fire. The US response included airstrikes and artillery shelling that sources say wiped out much of the advancing column in just minutes.

"Those artillery rounds could have landed and killed Americans, and that's why we continue to prepare our defenses," Braga, who directs the US-led operations against ISIS, told NBC News.

Braga also confirmed that it was largely Russian nationals that took part in the fighting, though the Kremlin denies this.

But despite the overwhelming victory that saw zero casualties on the US side, Braga said he's "absolutely concerned" about further clashes in the future.

After the massive battle, Russian job listing sites were seen as advertising security work in Syria, in what is likely a recruitment play for more mercenaries. A man claiming to recruit Russians to work as private military contractors said that the recruits he now met were joining up to take revenge on the US, after the battle shook their national pride.

Possible round two


An AH-64D Apache attack helicopter flies in front of a wall of fire during the South Carolina National Guard Air and Ground Expo at McEntire Joint National Guard Base, South Carolina.
Reuters/Jorge Intriago/Courtesy Air National Guard/Handout



Now, according to NBC News, the forces that once attacked the US sit just three miles away, and Braga is uneasy.

"There is no reason for that amount of combat power to be staring at us this closely," Braga said. "I don't think that's healthy for de-escalation."

As a result Braga's forces are digging in and preparing for what could be a future clash.

Russia stands accused of using military contractors, or Russian nationals without proper Russian military uniforms, to conceal the true cost of fighting in places like Ukraine and Syria.

But when the Russian mercenaries were
crushed by US airpower, they reportedly had no anti-aircraft weaponry.

It's unclear how the Russian mercenaries and pro-Syrian government forces expect to stand a chance against the US without the involvement of the proper Russian military, or at least weapons that can take down the
US Apache helicopters that are said to have strafed and mopped up the mercenaries towards the end of the battle.




"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
3/17/2018 5:43:05 PM

‘Unforgivable’: Kremlin blasts Boris Johnson for blaming Putin for Skripal poisoning

Edited time: 17 Mar, 2018 08:04


Britain's Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson © Peter Nicholls / Reuters

Blaming Vladimir Putin for Sergei Skripal’s poisoning is “shocking and unforgivable,” the Kremlin said, after UK Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson claimed the Russian president likely ordered the attack.

“Russia has nothing to do with this affair,” Dmitry Peskov, presidential press secretary, told Interfax. “Any references to our president (in connection with the Skripal case) are nothing but shocking and unforgivable behavior from the diplomatic point of view.”

Earlier on Friday, Johnson told journalists that “our quarrel is with Putin’s Kremlin, and with his decision – and we think it overwhelmingly likely that it was his decision – to direct the use of a nerve agent on the streets of the UK, on the streets of Europe for the first time since World War II."

The statement was a “diplomatic blunder” on the part of the UK foreign secretary, Peskov said, adding that the Kremlin remains“puzzled” by the conduct of the British authorities during the Skripal crisis.

“Frankly speaking, in international practice we never encountered such behavior at the state level when very serious accusations are being brought up against a country – our country in this case – with such wording as ‘apparently,’ ‘most likely’ and so on,” the press secretary said. Such an approach “contradicts not only international law, but common sense as a whole,” he added.

The press secretary also expressed belief that "sooner or later the British side would have to present some kind of comprehensive evidence [of Russia’s involvement], at least, to their partners [France, the US, Germany], who declared solidarity with London in this situation.” Moscow earlier asked the UK to provide materials in the Skripal case, but received a negative answer.

Johnson’s claims of Putin’s personal involvement weren’t the only example of over-the-top rhetoric by UK officials during the Skripal crisis. UK Defence Secretary Gavin Williamson said on Thursday that Russia “should go away and shut up” when asked about Moscow’s possible response to British sanctions.

READ MORE: Russian ambassador to UK confirms expelled diplomats will leave on March 20

Following the comment, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov described 41-year-old Williamson as “a nice young man,” who is trying to get his place in history, but “lacks upbringing.” Russia’s Defense Ministry pulled no punches, saying that “fishwife’s rhetoric” revealed the “extreme intellectual impotence” of the UK official.

REAd MORE: 'Nice young man seeks place in history but lacks upbringing': Lavrov on Williamson 'shut up' remark

Sergei Skripal and his daughter Yulia remain in critical but stable condition after being discovered slumped on a bench in Salisbury in early March. Authorities in the UK claim a Soviet-era nerve agent called Novichok was used in the attack on the former Russian-UK double agent, which led to UK Prime Minister Theresa May accusing Russia of being behind the plot. Moscow has denied its involvement, saying that it’s ready to cooperate with London on investigating the incident if it’s treated as an equal partner.


(RT)


"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

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