Did an alien vessel just pass by? The mystery of Oumuamua.

Fascinating piece today at Spaceweather:

DID AN ALIEN LIGHT SAIL VISIT THE SOLAR SYSTEM?:

It sounds like a tabloid headline, but in this case it could be real. Mainstream researchers from the Harvard Center for Astrophysics have made the case that interstellar asteroid ‘Oumuamua could in fact be an alien light sail. Their original research was posted Oct. 31st on the moderated preprint server arXiv.org.

The story of ‘Oumuamua begins in October 2017 when it was discovered by Robert Weryk using the Pan-STARRS telescope atop Hawaii’s Haleakal? volcano. Astronomers quickly realized that ‘Oumuamua was something special: The object was hurtling through the Solar System on an unbound “hyperbolic” orbit. It came from the stars. Dramatic changes in the object’s brightness suggested that it was tumbling and asymmetric–thin and wide like a cigar or perhaps a pancake.


Above: This artist’s concept shows how ‘Oumuamua is usually depicted: as a cigar-shaped asteroid.

On its way out of the Solar System, something unexpected happened. ‘Oumuamua accelerated as if jets of gas were pushing it forward. Astronomers who initially thought ‘Oumuamua was an asteroid now turned their attention to the comet hypothesis. Comets naturally develop jets after close approaches to the sun, and such jets could explain ‘Oumuamua’s behavior.

Just one problem: “Despite its close Solar approach of only 0.25 AU (inside the orbit of Mercury), ‘Oumuamua shows no sign of any cometary activity, no cometary tail, nor gas emission/absorption lines,” point out the Harvard researchers Shmuel Baily and Abraham Loeb. Moreover, “if outgassing was responsible for the acceleration, then the associated torques would have driven a rapid evolution in ‘Oumuamua’s spin, incompatible with observations.”

So if it’s not an asteroid, and it’s not a comet, what could it be? Loeb, who is the chair of the astronomy department at Harvard University and also chairs the advisory board for the Breakthrough Starshot light sail project, realized that the acceleration profile was key. The non-gravitational acceleration of ‘Oumuamua scaled with distance from the sun (r) as r-2 — just like a light sail would behave.


Above: The comet hypothesis. Credit: NASA/JPL [more]

Modeling ‘Oumuamua as a thin object pushed by solar radiation pressure, Baily and Loeb found that it would fit the observations if it were a sheet of material 0.3 mm to 0.9 mm in thickness with a mass surface density of ~0.1 grams per square cm. “Although extremely thin, such an object would survive an interstellar travel over Galactic distances of  about 5 kiloparsecs, withstanding collisions with gas and dust-grains as well as stresses from rotation and tidal forces,” they wrote.

The researchers are now calling for more observations to look for ‘Oumuamua-like visitors to the Solar System. “A survey for lightsails as technosignatures in the Solar System is warranted, irrespective of whether ‘Oumuamua is one of them,” they conclude.

Although technical, Baily and Loeb’s paper is well written and unusually readable for nonspecialists. Check it out.

I checked out the paper, in PDF form.  “Unusually readable” means that there is some prose in it.  I followed part of it and a little of the math, but most of it was beyond me.   Still, this is really cool stuff.

And, if we prescind from this spinning, gas-jetting object zooming towards void and the brains of democrats that it resembles, this story has NOTHING to do with election day!

Posted in Global Killer Asteroid Questions, Look! Up in the sky! |
25 Comments

My While For Awhile: Election Day Edition

I’m off to southern regions to visit my mother for a few days.   Florida is hotly contested.  I hope that my mere presence in the state will tip the election.

My flight is delayed.

Most Delta lounges these days have FNC on the screens.  Not this one in Chicago: CNN.  It’s like the bad end of the multiverse on the other side of the tracks.  Brrrrrr.

UPDATE

I tracked our delayed flight into ORD …

… and when I saw it was taxiing, I turned to look and there it was about to pull up to the gate.

Ah the things we do to amuse ourselves when on the road.

UPDATE

I slept through the first flight, long delayed. I normally build in extra time in my layovers now because of delays and such. This delay was long enough that I reached my next gate a couple minutes after boarding commenced. It’s a good thing that I didn’t check a bag.

Posted in On the road, What Fr. Z is up to |
3 Comments

JUST TOO COOL! Move to rename Hubble’s Law… for a priest

A reader alerted me to something for a Just To Cool entry, or perhaps Look! Up In The Sky!

There has been a recommendation to rename, or rather amplify the name of Hubble’s Law after Fr. Georges Lemaître.   HERE

The statement reads, ““To honour the intellectual integrity and the supremely significant discovery by Georges Lemaître, the IAU (International Astronomical Union) is pleased to recommend that the expansion of the Universe be referred to as the Hubble–Lemaître law,” the association stated Oct. 29”.

So much for the misguided and ignorant view of (sadly) many today that The Church is “anti-scienc.

Some of the piece:

 

Fr. Georges Lemaître, who died in 1966, was a physicist and mathematician who is widely credited with developing the big bang theory to explain the physical origin of the universe.

Hubble’s law describes how objects in the expanding universe move away from each other with a velocity proportional to their distance apart.

[…]

Of Lemaître interest:

US HERE – UK HERE

And…

Evidence for God from Physics and Philosophy: Extending the Legacy of Monsignor George Lemaître and St. Thomas Aquinas (The University of Dallas Aquinas Lectures)

US HERE – UK HERE

Posted in Just Too Cool, Look! Up in the sky! | Tagged ,
2 Comments

Contrasts of projected visions of the Church

At Church Militant, Michael Voris posted a sort of summary video commentary in the aftermath of the Synod (“walking together”).  What caught my eye comes at the end of his video commentary.  Michael juxtaposed images of the Summorum Pontificum procession to St. Peter’s (which I was in) and a truly bizarre, frankly demonic, digital projection light show on the facade of the Basilica of Santa Maria sopra Minerva, in the heart of Rome near the Pantheon.  This is the church with the famous elephant, and the tombs of St. Catherine of Siena and of Beato Angelico.

You decide.

Posted in SESSIUNCULA | Tagged
11 Comments

VIDEO: A reaction to a first Traditional Latin Mass

This is pretty interesting. Here is a thoughtful young man with his observations about participating at a Traditional Latin Mass for the first time.

YouTube thumbnailYouTube icon

Posted in Hard-Identity Catholicism, Liturgy Science Theatre 3000, SUMMORUM PONTIFICUM, The Coming Storm, The future and our choices | Tagged ,
4 Comments

GREAT NEWS! Baronius Press “Roman Breviary” AVAILABLE AGAIN!

This is great news for all those who have been seeking out the wonderful reprinting of the The Roman Breviary by Baronius Press. It is at long last back in print. I wrote about it in 2012.

This is a terrific set, with Latin and English in side by side, good binding, slip covers, and ribbons and commentaries.

Anyone seeking to use the older, traditional office, but perhaps don’t have the strongest Latin – this is helpful. Heck, my Latin is really strong and, from time to time, I use it so as to keep English in my head, too, rather than just the Latin.

As a matter of fact, mine is right here by me as a I write!

Don’t dawdle. It isn’t cheap, but it is a superb set.  If you have been wanting this, stick a crowbar into your wallet and get one before these sell out entirely and you have to wait again.

US HERE – UK HERE

Posted in Just Too Cool, Liturgy Science Theatre 3000, The Campus Telephone Pole | Tagged ,
16 Comments

Birettas and Berettas

This is different.

I have a problem with both of these guys, who don’t seem ever to have held guns in their lives.  This should be part of seminary training: you never know when you are going to be asked to bless a new shooting range, after all.

And that guy on the right?  He’s got it all wrong.  He has handled his biretta incorrectly.  C’mon, Fathers!  The middle “point” goes to the right.

And, given the angles of those weapons, that may be the bravest or the dumbest photographer in the world, I can’t decide which.

Seriously, hurray for them!

If anyone wants a shooting range blessed, I’m your guy.

St. Gabriel Possenti, pray for us.

[Imagine this part read really fast, like at the end of some commercials: NO ONE – should either open carry or concealed carry without understanding the consequences of that decision.  Training – lots of training – is the prudent path before carrying.  Instruction about all the legal ramifications is a must.  Even then, even after training and instruction, not everyone is cut out for carrying a weapon beyond the confines of one’s castle.  And you have to be in control of that weapon all the times and alert within your surroundings.  This isn’t a game or a matter of frivolous motives.  It’s deadly serious.  I have taken concealed carry weapon license classes for multiple states. I have taken defensive hand gun classes. I have been shot numerous times in role-playing scenarios, as a matter of fact. This is sobering stuff, once you get into it.  In these classes a lot of time is spent on the law and the consequences of displaying, brandishing, discharging a weapon in a self-defensive or home invasion situation. They impress on you that one you do this, your life changes. Also, they go over very carefully what the “castle doctrine” is a about. They hammer away that you don’t shoot a guy because he is walking out the door with your flat screen TV. A human life is not worth it. Could you shoot him? Yes, and you would legally be within your rights. But it would be just plain wrong to shoot a guy over property like that. A lot of the training focuses on trying de-escalate conflicts so that it is not necessary to defend yourself physically. My experience in taking these classes is that the other people in them leave with their eyes rather widened and with serious expressions.  Even if you choose never to carry a weapon, the training is valuable.]

Posted in Going Ballistic, Lighter fare | Tagged ,
12 Comments

“It is just a building.” – UPDATE: Like Planned Parenthood selling off baby parts.

UPDATE 5 Nov 2018:

Here’s the deal.  I’ve been thinking about this demolition thing.  It’s not just a matter of demolishing a church and then selling the property.

What happens is that scavenger experts come in and inventory all the beautiful architectural elements, all the carved stone, columns, decorations, etc.  These things can be taken out before the structure is brought down and then sold off separately for HUGE MONEY.

So, you can see why some who really want lots of money would prefer to keep the church from being repaired.  Instead they would make a lot of money by stripping its bones and selling the parts… sort of like what Planned Parenthood does to babies.  Remember that?  The video of gal talking about selling off the baby parts to make even more money?

Get it?

In many cases – I’m not saying that that is the case here – the powers that be will keep lay people from fixing their church.  They know what the lay people don’t know.  The bits and pieces of their beautiful church are of great value.

I can’t imagine them doing that to THIS church.  Can you?   Nothing much.  Architectural elements?  Meh.

Originally Published on: Nov 4, 2018

One of the long-time readers here sent a copy of the document of the suppression (obliteration) a parish in the Diocese of Fall River.  The Church and Parish of St. Anne are no more.

My correspondent wrote:

It is just a building.  Just like the original Penn Station was just a train shed.

We’re so quick to jettison history for the sake of the almighty dollar.  The diocesan almoner is probably counting the bills as we speak.

I wish you had a chance to see the interior, marvel at the statuary, frescoes, gold leaf, ambulatory shrines…and a 4,000 pipe Casavant organ.

The rose marble high altar.  Stacks of crutches and other medical devices left at the statue of Good Ste Anne.

Yeah, it’s just a building.

In the meantime, another correspondent wrote on the same day about something going on in nearby Providence, RI.

From Rhode Island Catholic:

Traditional Latin Mass a draw at St. Mary’s on Broadway

PROVIDENCE — Two months after it has started offering the Extraordinary Form of the Roman Rite, St. Mary’s Church on Broadway is drawing more than 250 people to its two Sunday Masses.

At the end of August, the Priestly Fraternity of St. Peter (FSSP), a religious society which offers the Extraordinary Form, assumed leadership of the parish. The fraternity was invited to the Diocese of Providence by Bishop Thomas J. Tobin.

During a visit to the parish on Sunday Oct. 21, Bishop Tobin told the Rhode Island Catholic he was pleased with how the parish was progressing.

“I think they’re off to a terrific start. I think the response among the people has been very strong,” Bishop Tobin said.

[…]

We have to think “outside the box” about our old churches and the way we are doing things.

In order to think outside the box, maybe we need to get back into the box.  After all, just about every crazy thing outside the Catholic box has been tried, to no avail.  Maybe by getting back into the box we’ll find what will work, because it worked before.  Inside is the new outside.

Posted in Si vis pacem para bellum!, The Coming Storm, The future and our choices | Tagged ,
20 Comments

Screaming Man Charges Priest During Live EWTN Mass

From Gateway Pundit:

BREAKING: Deranged Man Charges Priest on Altar Screaming Profanities During Live EWTN Broadcast (VIDEO)

Posted in SESSIUNCULA | Tagged
26 Comments

Your Sunday Sermon Notes

Was there a good point made in the sermon you heard during your Mass to fulfill your Sunday Obligation?

Let us know.

You were paying attention, weren’t you?

Posted in SESSIUNCULA |
14 Comments