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Update

UFO Nobbers

Physicist Brian Cox is more than a little annoyed. He keeps seeing online videos of “himself” saying things that he has never said. And he complained on X:

Michio Kaku has even more cause for complaint: false video of him yammering on about 3I/ATLAS appears to have been more numerous. And he, too, protests. See for yourself on his website:

But how much misleading of the public is going on? Isn’t the standard reaction to do a double take the first time you see one of these fakeries, and then spot it out for what it is within half a minute?

AI is not quite that convincing. Yet. There are tells.

And the fact that the videos show these scientists saying outrageous things about our solar system’s third official interstellar visitor is a pretty big clue. (Though it is worth noting that Michio Kaku has scientifically studied UFOs, and may not be quite as negative to “believers” as is Brian Cox.)

Meanwhile, 3I/ATLAS continues to surprise scientists. Just be a bit cautious with media reports. You do not have to use AI or thrill over every UFO rumor to pass for a “nobber.”

Take the New York Post’s recent story by Ben Cost: “Possible alien spacecraft 3I/ATLAS makes unusual shift while hurtling towards the Sun.” Terrible title, for it suggests that, before perihelion, the putative comet was heading towards the Sun. It wasn’t. And isn’t.

“Manhattan-sized comet 3I/ATLAS allegedly executed an unusual maneuver while approaching the Sun earlier this week, fueling theories that it could be an extraterrestrial spacecraft.” Astounding! But is it true?

Oh. That word “allegedly” — who alleges?

Not Harvard astrophysicist Avi Loeb. He writes about the “First Evidence for a Non-Gravitational Acceleration of 3I/ATLAS at Perihelion.”

The non-gravitational acceleration was measured at the perihelion distance of 1.36 times the Earth-Sun separation (defined as an astronomical unit or `au’), equivalent to 203 million kilometers. It had two components in the orbital plane of 3I/ATLAS:

· A radial acceleration away from the Sun of 135 kilometers (=9×10^{-7}au) per day squared.

· A transverse acceleration relative to the Sun’s direction of 60 kilometers (=4×10^{-7}au) per day squared.

If 3I/ATLAS is propelled by the rocket effect of ejected gas, then momentum conservation implies that the object would lose half its mass over a characteristic timescale equal to the ejection speed divided by the measured non-gravitational acceleration.

Ben Cost’s word “maneuver” suggests (to this reader) a purposive act rather than a mere alteration of physical behavior. But that is not what Loeb . . . “alleges.”

We have to have a wait-and-see attitude — which is what Loeb insists upon and what he has been saying all along, even as he also insisted that we must consider the possibility that this ninth-degree anomalous object is artificial in origin.

For the record, these appear to be the list of Avi Loeb’s observed 3I/ATLAS anomalies:

  1. Ecliptic Alignment: Trajectory aligned within 5° of the solar system’s ecliptic plane (0.2% likelihood by chance). 
  2. Sunward Jet (Anti-Tail): A persistent forward-pointing jet toward the Sun, not an optical illusion as in typical comets. 
  3. Extreme Mass: ~1 million times heavier than ‘Oumuamua and 1,000 times heavier than Borisov (>5 km diameter, ~33 billion tons), while moving faster (<0.1% likelihood). 
  4. Fine-Tuned Flybys: Arrival timing optimized for close passes by Mars, Venus, and Jupiter (~tens of millions km), unobservable from Earth at perihelion (0.005% likelihood). 
  5. Nickel-Rich Composition: Gas plume shows excess nickel over iron (resembling industrial alloys) and high nickel-to-cyanide ratio, unlike any known comet (<1% likelihood). 
  6. Low Water Content: Gas plume only 4% water by mass, far below typical comets (which are water-dominated). 
  7. Extreme Negative Polarization: Light shows unprecedented -2.7% negative polarization at small phase angles, unseen in comets or asteroids (<1% likelihood). 
  8. Wow! Signal Coincidence: Arrival direction within 9° of the 1977 “Wow!” radio signal origin (0.6% likelihood). 
  9. Blue Spectral Surge at Perihelion: Unexpected blue glow (bluer than the Sun), defying dust-reddening in comets; possibly from ionized CO or a “hot engine” source. 

Which would make the current observation of trajectory alteration the tenth, wouldn’t it?

Loeb has emphasized that these low-probability coincidences (cumulative odds <1 in 10¹⁶) warrant further scrutiny, though he rates natural origins as most likely. These contribute to its “4/10” ranking on his Loeb Scale (0 = natural; 10 = technological).

But in yesterday’s post, Loeb added the information about course alteration. According to observations, 3I/ATLAS experienced

· A radial acceleration away from the Sun of 135 kilometers (=9×10^{-7}au) per day squared.
· A transverse acceleration relative to the Sun’s direction of 60 kilometers (=4×10^{-7}au) per day squared.

This means, in layman’s language:

3I/ATLAS has demonstrated an extra “push” directly outward, away from the Sun, beyond what gravity alone would cause. (Which means that the pre-perihelion trajectory, which was scheduled to reach its perihelion — closest-to-Sol — point in late October, would now move further outward and definitely not be “hurtling towards towards the Sun.”)

3I/ATLAS has also demonstrated an extra “push” forward as it swings around the Sun, again due to non-gravitational effects (e.g., asymmetric outgassing).

Meanwhile, UFO enthusiasts/nobbers are upset that NASA hasn’t released any recent images of the object. They aren’t buying the “government shutdown” excuse. The complaint seems to be that the summaries of data so far distributed require more editorial work than merely relaying some data. How hard is it to put the most recent photos up on NASA.gov?

Apparently harder than getting an AI to fake videos of Brian Cox and Michio Kaku.

Here is an illustration — that is, a fake photo:

Categories
Thought

Étienne de La Boétie

Men accept servility in order to acquire wealth; as if they could acquire anything of their own when they cannot even assert that they belong to themselves.

Étienne de La Boétie, Discourse on Voluntary Servitude (1548).
Categories
Today

French Revolution

On November 1, 1790, Edmund Burke published his Reflections on the Revolution in France, predicting that the French Revolution would end in disaster. Though many have disputed his premises and reasoning, few dispute his prophecy, which proved spot on.

Categories
folly regulation

Twilight of Electrical Civilization

Paige Lambermont reminds us that Germany’s phase-out of nuclear power has its reasons.

Construction, transport, and other processes involved in making and maintaining a nuclear power plant emit carbon dioxide. But nuclear power itself does not emit carbon dioxide, which is supposed to be terrible for climate and planet. So, “What would prompt a country seeking to sharply reduce CO2 emissions to get rid of its largest source of carbon-free energy?”

Lambermont, a policy associate at the Institute for Energy Research, reviews the history of anti-nuclear sentiments, going back to the 1970s, and various news-driven decisions by the German government. A tsunami in Japan didn’t help, though safety measures were strengthened at the affected nuclear power plant.

Now we seem to be nearing the end of the line. German pubs host “demolition viewing parties” as the country self-destructively continues to destroy another nuclear power plant, specifically the part consisting of two giant cooling towers.

A controlled demolition caused 56,000 tons of concrete to collapse in seconds. The speed is misleading, for the job is far from finished. Further work dismantling the Bavaria-based plant is expected to continue until 2040. Of course, the useful life of the plant is already over.

It’s all part of the plan, the German government’s energy-transition plan called Energiewende. The energy has to become “renewable,” a word meaning — in effect — unreliable (wind, solar). Also, Germans must drastically reduce their consumption of energy.

Maybe they should call the plan Götterdämmerung — twilight of the gods or, in this case, of industrial civilization.

This is Common Sense. I’m Paul Jacob.


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Categories
Thought

Jack Woodford

When the publisher steps out of his legitimate function as a packager and forwarder, he cures people by the millions of the habit of reading books, just as real schoolmarms make windrows of brats permanently allergic to literature by cracking them over the head with the worst of it.

Jack Woodford, The Loud Literary Lamas of New York (1950), p. 47.

Categories
Today

Hallowe’en

As if to perform a Day of the Dead act, Josef Stalin’s body was removed from Lenin’s Tomb on October 31, 1961.

Ireland, Canada, United Kingdom, United States and other nations celebrate Halloween on October 31.

The word Halloween or Hallowe’en dates to about 1745 and is of Christian origin, meaning “hallowed evening” or “holy evening.” It comes from a Scottish term for All Hallows’ Eve (the evening before All Hallows’ Day). In Scots, the word “eve” is “even,” and this is contracted to “e’en” or “een.” Over time, (All) Hallow(s) E(v)en shortened into Halloween.

It is one of those darker-themed celebrations, often conjuring up images of death and horror. Randall Carlson notes that this autumnal celebration is ancient and global, and speculates that it originates in ancient comet approaches that had terrifying and deadly results on the surface of the planet.

Categories
crime and punishment

The Dorito Bandito Threat

A student at Kenwood High School in Baltimore County didn’t know what he was inviting when he munched on Doritos after football practice.

“They made me get on my knees, put my hands behind my back, and cuffed me,” Taki Allen said of the police in about “eight cop cars” who surged to his location.

“They searched me, and they figured out I had nothing,” Allen recalled. “Then, they went over to where I was standing and found a bag of chips on the floor. I was just holding a Doritos bag — it was two hands and one finger out, and they said it looked like a gun. . . .

“The first thing I was wondering was, was I about to die? Because they had a gun pointed at me.”

The school’s security system is “AI-powered.” 

It “saw” a gun, not Doritos plus finger. 

An alert went out before the security system’s finding had been confirmed. The alert was soon cancelled, but the school principal didn’t know this when she called the police, who in turn acted with leap-first/look-afterward brio.

We can’t blame AI. We cannot blame insensate artificial intelligence, so-called, any more than we can blame knives and guns for the way these inanimate objects “act.” The humans in this case bungled bigtime. They should reform.

Steps to take include never acting on the basis of unverified AI claims and never using drunken, hallucinogenic AI as one of your call-the-cops triggers to begin with.

This is Common Sense. I’m Paul Jacob.


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Categories
Thought

G.K. Chesterton

All conservatism is based upon the idea that if you leave things alone you leave them as they are. But you do not. If you leave a thing alone you leave it to a torrent of change.

Gilbert Keith Chesterton, as used by Alston Chase for the epigraph of Playing God in Yellowstone: The Destruction of America’s First National Park (1986).
Categories
Today

Martha and Rose

Martha Wayles Skelton Jefferson, Thomas Jefferson’s wife, was born on October 30, 1748.

On the same date two hundred twenty years later, American journalist, novelist and author Rose Wilder Lane died. Lane is perhaps best known, today, for her editorial work — some say “ghost writing” — of her mother’s Little House on the Prairie books for children. Her non-fiction The Discovery of Freedom was published in 1943, the same year as a similarly themed book, The God of the Machine, was published by her friend Isabel Paterson.

Categories
Accountability budgets & spending cuts national politics & policies too much government

Blame Rand Paul?

“The Republican plan adds about $2 trillion to the debt,” Senator Rand Paul explained at the beginning of the month, referring to the Continuing Resolution (CR) which remains, to this day, unresolved. “I’m opposed to deficit spending,” he added, insisting that he would “vote for something with less deficit, but not a $2 trillion deficit.”

Most of the shutdown screaming blames President Donald Trump, but Trump’s a big advocate for the CR. Trouble is, it requires a 60 percent Yea vote in the Senate. All but three Democrats voting Nay ensure that the CR will continue to fail.

So, Sen. Paul’s continuing Nay vote isn’t the cause really; a switch on his part wouldn’t allow the bill to pass. The folks worried about losing their SNAP benefits (just about the only Americans not in government who’ve noticed the shutdown) shouldn’t blame anyone other than those nay-saying Democrats.

From the beginning, Paul has noted a different irony — his alignment with the bulk of Democrats in opposing the CR. He’s against its continuation of old spending expectations; Democrats, on the other hand, demand even more, especially securing the renewal of Obamacare subsidies.

While the CR failed a 13th time, yesterday, Rep. Rosa DeLauro (D-Ct.) said that lawmakers had set aside a USDA contingency fund “for exactly these kinds of purposes” — that is, to fund SNAP during the shutdown. The White House insists it lacks legal authorization for this, and, besides, November’s food subsidy requires $9 billion, and the fund falls short by four.

It appears that the tens of millions who may not get their EBT cards filled at the beginning of November remain unaware of what the battle is really about.

But they may be getting a clue: it’s not about them.

This is Common Sense. I’m Paul Jacob.


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