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November 07, 2025

Buckle up, space fans—Japan's space agency just dropped a mind-bending image of 3I/ATLAS, the solar system's latest guest from the stars, and it's exploding across social media like a supernova! Discovered on July 1, 2025, by NASA's ATLAS telescope in Chile, this speedy comet (clocking 210,000 km/h) is the third confirmed interstellar wanderer after 'Oumuamua and Borisov, zipping through on a one-way ticket out of our cosmic neighborhood after its October 30 perihelion flyby.

Unbound by the Sun's pull, 3I/ATLAS hails from some distant stellar system, packed with clues like carbon dioxide and icy secrets from frigid alien worlds. NASA's ESA teams are devouring spectrum data for breakthroughs on how these rogue rocks form far beyond home, while this "shocking" (and unverified) visual—possibly the sharpest yet—has astronomers geeking out and the public glued to their screens.

No Earth-threat here, but grab your telescope for November-December stargazing: Spot this generational gem pre-dawn in the east under dark skies. Who knows what interstellar whispers it's carrying? The universe just got a whole lot more thrilling!

What clues can we takeaway on the nature of 3I/Atlas based on this image alone? Share your thoughts below. ⬇️

Link to article: https://m.economictimes.com/news/international/us/3i/atlas-image-released-by-japanese-space-agency-interstellar-comets-shocking-visual-sparks-global-interest-researchers-visitor-object-nasa-esa-data-and-spectrum-analysis/articleshow/125172976.cms

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November 05, 2025

In the fading twilight of a Louisville evening, a weary 1991 MD-11 cargo jet—its wings heavy with the ghosts of endless deliveries—lurched into the sky from UPS's bustling Worldport, bound for distant Honolulu. But barely had it cleared the runway's edge when betrayal struck: flames erupted in its left wing, the engine tore free like a heart ripped from its chest, and the plane plummeted into a nightmare of twisted metal and fire. Debris rained across a half-mile scar of earth, igniting smaller blazes at a petroleum yard and an auto graveyard, sparing a nearby restaurant by cruel whim alone.

Aboard, two pilots and a jumpseater—nameless heroes of the night shift—fought in vain, their final moments captured in black boxes now scarred by heat but whispering secrets yet untold. On the ground, the toll climbed to 12 souls lost. "The plane itself is almost acting like a bomb," an aviation expert mourned, evoking the specter of past CF6 engine horrors.

One can't help but ache for the "what-ifs": a bolt too loose, a check too rushed, turning routine skies into a requiem. In this hollow echo of progress's price, Louisville weeps not just for the wreckage, but for the quiet lives extinguished in a heartbeat's fury.

How can society take greater precautions to prevent such tragedies from occurring? Share your ideas below. 👇

Link to article: https://www.cbsnews.com/news/ups-plane-engine-fell-off-louisville-kentucky-crash-ntsb/

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