Author: Ms Bich

  • ‘So Sorry..’ – Venus Williams’ Return to Tennis in Jeopardy as Doubles Partner Shares a Distressing Update

    ‘So Sorry..’ – Venus Williams’ Return to Tennis in Jeopardy as Doubles Partner Shares a Distressing Update

    Venus Williams has had quite an on-and-off season so far this year. Although she began the year by playing in the WTA 250 ASB Classic, Venus wasn’t able to participate in the Australian Open due to an injury. Subsequently, she made a comeback in the grass-court season but had a torrid time on the court. In the last month’s US Open too, she lost in the first round tamely against qualifier Greet Minnen. As Venus was set to make a comeback once again, a saddening update has left her plans in jeopardy.

    The American legend hasn’t played a match since her opening-round defeat at the US Open. Let’s find out why Venus’ comeback efforts might take a hit.

    Venus Williams’ doubles partner withdraws

    The 43-year-old was set to play in the WTA 250 Jasmin Open Monastir in Tunisia. She received a wildcard entry in the singles main draw. Further, Venus was also set to partner Ons Jabeur for the doubles competition. However, Jabeur has withdrawn at the last minute due to an unfortunate injury.

    Talking about her withdrawal, Jabeur said, “Everyone, so sorry that I have to withdraw because my knee is not feeling so great and I would just want to say that I love my time here in Zhengzhou and hopefully I can come back next time. Thank you for the fans for cheering for me and hope to come back next year. Thank you.”

    https://twitter.com/ZhengzhouOpen?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw%7Ctwcamp%5Etweetembed%7Ctwterm%5E1712483360508129483%7Ctwgr%5Ea502ef72013a38e77dfdcbd05e31f0587a7f14c2%7Ctwcon%5Es1_&ref_url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.essentiallysports.com%2Fwta-tennis-news-so-sorry-venus-williams-return-to-tennis-in-jeopardy-as-doubles-partner-shares-a-distressing-update%2F

    Last year, Serena Williams partnered with Ons Jabeur during her comeback tournament. Now, months later, Venus was also hoping to play with the Tunisian star but injury to Jabeur has spoilt her plans. Furthermore, there was utter confusion about Venus’ comeback ahead of the tournament.

    Confusion erupts on Venus’ comeback tournament

    Days before the tournament, the Tunisian Tennis Federation announced the news of Venus’ participation. In a statement released by them, it read, The countdown has officially started for Jasmin Open in Monastir (250 points) from October 14 to 22, Ons Jabeur & Venus Williams will be with us.”

    Subsequently, in the official players’ list released by them, the names of Venus and Jabeur went missing, creating confusion about their participation. But with Jabeur down with injury, it is unlikely that she’ll play in the tournament. Meanwhile, Venus’ participation is also uncertain and the final decision on her participation will be known in some time. Can the American legend come back strongly in the upcoming tournaments? Let us know your views in the comments below.

  • Serena Williams shows off her curves attempting to fit into a pre-baby Valentino skirt

    Serena Williams shows off her curves attempting to fit into a pre-baby Valentino skirt


    Serena Williams welcomed her second child in August 2023, and she’s getting real when it comes to her post-partum body. The tennis star started a series about a Valentino denim skirt she bought while she was pregnant that she hopes to fit into soon.

     

    China v United States

    Serena is always honest

    Captioned, “The Diary of a Denim skirt (part 1) #valentino,“ Williams explained while showing off the skirt, “I got this cool Valentino skirt when I was pregnant, and I was like ‘I’m gonna be able to fit this when I don’t have a belly.’” She quickly admitted, “I can’t fit it.”

    She explained that it “should’ve been able to fit it by now” but she admitted she got “distracted” and is about a month behind her goals. “We have a ways to go,” she said. “Houston, we got a problem! Palm Beach, we got a problem!” The mom of 2 quipped.

    In a world where celebrity mamas at times choose a quick post-baby solution like weight loss drugs or surgery, Williams is handling it with exercise. “I feel like if I go to the gym and get fit, I’ll be able to fit in again,“ she said confidently. For now, the skirt went back in her drawer.

    The Olympic gold medalist, who was named Fashion Icon in November, had so much love in the comments from fans who loved seeing her authenticity and vulnerability. “Well done on sharing the reality of postpartum… not just the glamourized Instagram version,” reads one of the top liked comments.

    Others hyped her up, letting her know her curves are a blessing. “Houston disregard… that ain’t no problem,” “Girrrrrrrl that thang is THANGIN!!!!!” and “Honey I’ll take your problem, sincerely a member of the square booty gang,” read some of the happy comments.

    One person even brought Drake into the picture, writing, “You know Drake just threw his phone against the wall.” The athlete and rapper sparked dating rumors in 2011.

    Williams and her husband, Alexis Ohanian, did not share the exact date their second daughter, Adira, was born, but they confirmed the news on August 22, 2023. They are also the parents of Alexis Olympia Ohanian Jr, who will turn seven on September 1.

  • Why the M2 Browning .50 Caliber is the Most Lethal Heavy Machine Gun in History

    Why the M2 Browning .50 Caliber is the Most Lethal Heavy Machine Gun in History

    The powerful M2 Browning .50 caliber heavy machine gun entered development following orders from Gen. John J. Pershing in World War I, and it has remained a timeless weapon that armies can count on. From World War II to the Russo-Ukrainian War, the M2 delivers the perfect combination of versatility, range and lethal potential.

    Photo Credit: Bettmann Archive / Getty Images

    The M2 Browning .50 caliber is as reliable as it is powerful

    According to field surveys, soldiers have rated the M2 Browning .50 caliber among the most effective guns in their arsenal – and for good reason. The heavy machine gun is a belt-fed, closed-bolt, air-cooled weapon with a range of 1,830 meters.

    M2 Browning .50 caliber against a black backdrop M2 Browning .50 caliber heavy machine gun. (Photo Credit: Rama / Wikimedia Commons CC BY-SA 2.0)

    The M2 can fire between 450 and 600 .50 caliber BMG (12.7 x 99 mm NATO) RPM. Its sheer power, combined with the .50 BMG cartridge, makes it a lethal, relentless weapon that’s extremely versatile and effective in both anti-personnel and anti-aircraft scenarios.

    The heavy machine gun has been used in countless conflicts throughout history, including the Second World War, in Vietnam and during the war in Afghanistan, and it’s still relied upon today.

    100 years of the .50 caliber

    Weapons forever changed during WWI. Due to new innovations in armor, aircraft and military vehicles, more powerful guns were needed on the battlefield – specifically, larger-caliber firearms. The commander of the American Expeditionary Force, Gen. John J. Pershing, asked the US Army Ordnance Department to develop a machine gun that could stand up to the heavily-armored German Junkers J.I.

    Three soldiers with the 62nd Coast Artillery manning an M2 Browning .50 caliber heavy machine gun Soldiers with the 62nd Coast Artillery manning an M2 Browning .50 caliber heavy machine gun in the field, 1945. (Photo Credit: Hulton Archive / Getty Images)

    Famed arms designer John Browning went to work remodeling his .30-06 M1917 machine gun to fire a larger round. The new ammunition was designed by Winchester, who originally added a rimmed cartridge for use as an anti-tank rifle. Pershing insisted, however, that the new and improved gun use rimless cartridges.

    The very first .50 caliber machine gun began trials in October 1918, one month before the end of WWI. The original model fired less than 500 RPM and had a muzzle velocity of 2,300 FPS, which fell short of the minimum 2,700 needed to penetrate German armor.

    Some Americans managed to get their hands on the Mauser M1918 13.2 mm Tankgewehr anti-tank rifle and its ammunition. The rounds required a velocity of 2,700 FPS and could penetrate armor up to one-inch thick, at a range of 230 meters. Winchester used the German ammunition to improve upon its .50 caliber design.

    Two members of the South African Army firing an M2 Browning .50 caliber heavy machine gun Servicemen with the South African Army firing an M2 Browning .50 caliber heavy machine gun during an exercise, 1974. (Photo Credit: Jonathan C. Katzenellenbogen / Getty Images)

    By 1921, Browning debuted the M1921 machine gun. It was water-cooled to keep the barrel from overheating. With the water jacket and cooling system in place, it weighed a whopping 121 pounds, dropping to a still heavy 79 pounds when empty. It wasn’t until the 1930s that the gun was re-branded as the M2.

    Several updates were made to the original design, including replacing the water-cooling mechanism with lighter air-cooled options. However, the air-cooled barrel was less effective, and the M2 eventually couldn’t fire more than 75 rounds before overheating.

    To remedy the issue, a larger, stronger and bulkier barrel was added, which worked to reduce overheating, but added more weight to the already heavy gun. Later on, a quick-change function was developed to allow the operator to change an overheated barrel with a cool one.

    Soon, the M2 Browning .50 caliber became one of the most prolific weapons in the US military’s arsenal. It offered both fixed and flexible mounting options for fighter and bomber aircraft, while also working with vehicles and tanks. It could also be used to provide infantry fire support, and was even used for anti-aircraft support on naval ships.

    US Navy Special Boat-26 (SBU-26) members firing an M2 Browning .50 caliber heavy machine gun Crew members with the US Navy Special Boat Unit-26 (SBU-26) outfitted with an M2 Browning .50 caliber heavy machine gun, 1994. (Photo Credit: Leif Skoogfors / Getty Images)

    The Allied forces adopted the M2 during WWII. After the conflict, it saw use in Korea and Vietnam. In Vietnam, snipers found the heavy machine gun to be a suitable long-range weapon for combat and modified it with the appropriate hardware. The M2 and its lethal .50 caliber ammunition also saw action during the Falklands War, the Persian Gulf War and in Iraq, among other conflicts.

    In 2010, the US Army created the M2A1 designation amid the development of the XM806 program, which was cancelled in 2012. Under the designation, the new and improved M2 features a new flash suppressor, revised bolt assembly, a manual trigger block safety, a quick-change barrel feature and an optional carrying handle.

    Currently, pre-existing M2 Brownings are undergoing modifications to meet the new standards of the M2A1.

    A lethal encounter

    Since the M2 Browning .50 caliber was designed specifically to target armored vehicles and aircraft, the last place anyone wants to be is on the receiving end of one of its bullets. Some believe the M2 is only allowed to be fired toward equipment, but it’s been used in anti-personnel scenarios, as well. Anyone hit with a .50 caliber bullet will suffer severe injuries and most likely death as it rips through the body with incredible speed and force.

    .50 caliber BMG cartridge belts laid out 50 caliber BMG rounds. (Photo Credit: Paul J. Perkins / US Navy / Wikimedia Commons / Public Domain)

    One US Marine was lucky enough to survive the impossible when he was shot with a .50 caliber round at point-blank range in Iraq. Cpl. Jared Foster had served his security detail in Iraq for only a month when he sat down in his tent one night after a fire watch. He heard a weapon discharge, and his tent was suddenly filled with smoke.

    Foster initially thought the smoke was from a grenade that had gone off. “Then I looked down because I felt something really cold, and when I lifted my hand up, it had blood all over it,” he recalled. Moments before, an M2 had been fired from five feet behind him, the bullet just missing his spine and exiting through his stomach.

    Foster’s comrades rushed to treat the wound. They removed his clothes, only to see his intestines fall out of his body. They told the corporal that he’d been shot with a .50 caliber round, but he didn’t believe it. “Nah, that would rip your head off,” he said shortly before losing consciousness.

    Aviation Warfare Systems Operator 3rd Class Ryan Branco manning an M2 Browning .50 caliber heavy machine gun

    Aviation Warfare Systems Operator 3rd Class Ryan Branco, assigned to the “Dusty Dogs” of Helicopter Anti-Submarine Squadron Seven (HS-7), mans an M2 Browning .50 caliber heavy machine gun while serving as a door gunner aboard a Sikorsky SH-60 Seahawk. (Photo Credit: Kristopher Wilson / Wikimedia Commons / Public Domain)
    The same bullet that damages aircraft and blasts through concrete should have torn Foster in half, but, somehow, he survived.

    “The doctors said they didn’t know if they could save me,” he shared with the Marine Corps Safety Corner. “They didn’t know how to put me back together because they’d never seen anyone shot by a .50-caliber. The hole in my back was huge. But whatever they did worked.”

  • Who Was Altamura Man? How One Neanderthal’s Misfortune Became a Blessing for Science

    Who Was Altamura Man? How One Neanderthal’s Misfortune Became a Blessing for Science

    Who was Altamura Man? The most complete Neanderthal fossil ever found sits at the bottom of a sinkhole in southern Italy, where scientists have studied it for years.

    The reconstruction of Altamura Man by Dutch artists Adrie and Alfons Kennis. (Credit: Roberto Montanari/Shutterstock)

    In 1993, cave explorers entered a long, narrow tunnel at the Lamalunga Cave near the town of Altamura in southern Italy. At the far end, they found an upside-down human skull fused into the rock alongside a large collection of other human bones.

    The skull’s jutting brow was covered in a layer of pearl-like coralloid, calcium deposits otherwise known as cave popcorn. Much of the remains were covered in some form of the mineral that had leached down from the surrounding limestone.

    Today, scientists believe the person (the “Altamura Man”) had fallen through a sinkhole in the surrounding limestone karst and never made it back out again. He starved to death, and the calcium deposits, along with stalactites and stalagmites, had sealed him into a calcified tomb.

    Who Was the Altamura Man?

    In the early going, no one knew if the skeleton had belonged to an early Homo sapiens human or Neanderthal, and given its remote location, serious scientific study was slow to come. In 2009, a group of researchers received permission from Italian authorities to remove a piece of its right shoulder blade in an attempt to understand who this unlucky person had been.

    When the team – which hailed from universities in Italy, Spain and Australia – examined the full skeleton, they found it to be remarkably intact and mostly visible from the tunnel despite the rampant calcification.

    The remains rested in what came to be called the “Apse of Man,” named for the large domed area of a church that rises above the altar. Behind the Apse, scientists say, lies an unreachable “back chamber” that contains a few of the man’s bones.

    The team initially tried to date the shoulder blade by extracting its collagen, but they couldn’t find enough to pass through an accelerator mass spectrometer.

    Dating Neanderthal Bones

    In 2011, they began to pursue a different strategy and collected calcium deposits from bones still in the cave, along with a stalagmite already found broken. The researchers aimed to date the skeleton by first dating the deposits, which had dripped onto the bones over thousands of years.

    Using uranium thorium dating, they tested the calcium and estimated that the Altamura Man was between 130,000 years and 172,000 years old, placing it among the oldest Neanderthal fossil ever found. A further examination of the set classified them as belonging to an “Early Neanderthal” with a mixture of archaic and later features.

    Attempts at DNA analysis using the shoulder blade fell short of the researchers’ hopes, but tests did confirm that the Altamura Man was a Neanderthal.

    Further Research on Altamura Man

    For a 2020 study, scientists snaked a videoscope into the skull’s mouth and estimated, based on tooth wear, that the Altamura Man had been a younger adult at the time of his death. Overall, he’d suffered from poor oral health and had lost at least two teeth during his lifetime, which was unusual for Neanderthals, who appear to have mostly enjoyed healthy teeth.

    The skeleton continues to attract study as the most complete Neanderthal fossil yet found, even though much of it remains encased in rock.

    In March 2023, a paper attempted to digitally reconstruct the skull, which possessed both newer (in Neanderthal terms) and archaic features, putting it at odds with its own time period.

    The Altamura represents, “the remnant of an archaic population, which was probably not in simple continuity with the Neanderthal lineage,” the paper says.

  • The Real-Life Airmen Behind the Highly-Anticipated Miniseries ‘Masters of the Air’

    The Real-Life Airmen Behind the Highly-Anticipated Miniseries ‘Masters of the Air’

    Masters of the Air (2024) is the highly-anticipated miniseries from the minds behind Band of Brothers (2001) and The Pacific (2010). Following the exploits of the Eighth Air Force, the nine-episode show, slated to air exclusively on Apple TV+, is sure to bring audiences an up-close view of the intense fighting that took place in the European Theater during the Second World War. The following are just some of the real-life airmen the actors in Masters of the Air skillfully portray.

     

    Photo Credit: yassi / MovieStillsDB

    Gale Cleven

    Military portrait of Gale Cleven + Austin Butler as Maj. Gale Cleven in 'Masters of the Air'

    Gale Cleven + Austin Butler in Masters of the Air, 2024. (Photo Credit: 1. American Air Museum CC BY-NC 3.0 2. yassi / MovieStillsDB)
    Of the airmen featured in Masters of the Air, Gale Cleven is central to the story. Portrayed by Austin Butler, he joined the military as an air cadet in March 1940 and, shortly after, earned his famous “Buck” nickname. Following training, he was sent to MacDill Air Force Base, Florida, and assigned to the 29th Bombardment Group as an instructor and first lieutenant.

    Cleven’s time at MacDill AFB was short-lived, as he was transferred to Idaho to command the 350th Bombardment Squadron, after which he and the 350th were sent to Kearney Air Force Base, Nebraska, where the 100th Bombardment Group was in the middle of preparing for their deployment overseas.

    Cleven’s premiere mission in the European Theater took place over Bremen in June 1943, while his most famous was the air raid on Regensburg that August, which saw him in the lead bomber. Despite the aircraft suffering severe damage, the major was able to take control of the aircraft and safely land it in North Africa, albeit after what must have been a terrifying flight. For his efforts, he was awarded the Distinguished Service Cross.

    The 100th continued to fly dangerous missions over Europe with the Boeing B-17 Flying Fortress, suffering substantial losses in the process. One saw the downing of Cleven’s bomber, which resulted in him being taken as a prisoner of war (POW) by the Germans. He was housed at Stalag Luft III until the order came to evacuate the camp in late January 1945, at which point the airman managed to lose his overseers and make it back to friendly lines.

    Following the Second World War, Cleven continued with the US Air Force, seeing service in Korea and Vietnam. He retired in 1955, having achieved the rank of colonel.

    John C. Egan

    John C. Egan looking up + Callum Turner as Maj. John C. Egan in 'Masters of the Air'

    John C. Egan + Callum Turner in Masters of the Air, 2024. (Photo Credit: 1. Roger Freeman Collection / Imperial War Museums / American Air Museum CC BY-NC 3.0 2. yassi / MovieStillsDB)
    One of the commanders of the “Bloody 100th,” John C. Egan is among the most famous airmen to be portrayed in Masters of the Air. In 1940, he joined up as a Flying Cadet at Randolph Field, Texas. Two years later, he was assigned to the 29th Bombardment Group as a first lieutenant and instructor, and just a few months after that was transferred to Gowan Army Air Field, Idaho as an operations officer with the 100th Bombardment Group.

    After flying a handful of missions with the 305th Bombardment Group at Chelveston, England, Egan took over command of the 418th Bombardment Squadron. Similarly to his comrade and friend, Gale Cleven, he participated in the deadly Regensburg air raid, about which he said:

    “We were under fighter attack for three and a half hours and saw three Fortresses immediately around us shot down between the German border and the target. No one turned back, although some of us thought we were as good as dead.”

    Egan’s bomber was among those downed during the Münster air raid on October 10, 1943, after which he was captured and sent to Stalag Luft III. Following the Second World War, he returned to the United States to continue his service with the US Air Force, which involved deployments to Korea and the Far East.

    Egan unexpectedly died of a heart attack in 1961. He was buried at Arlington National Cemetery with full military honors.

    Harry Crosby

    Harry Crosby looking down + Anthony Boyle as Maj. Harry Crosby in 'Masters of the Air'

    Harry Crosby + Anthony Boyle in Masters of the Air, 2024. (Photo Credit: 1. 100th Bomb Group Museum / American Air Museum CC BY-NC 3.0 2. yassi / MovieStillsDB)
    Harry Crosby, portrayed by Anthony Boyle in Masters of the Air, was among the US Army Air Forces’ (USAAF) most skilled airmen, serving as the lead navigator for the 100th Bombardment Group during the Second World War.

    Crosby enlisted in the US Army Air Corps (USAAC) the week after the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor and earned a commission as a navigator at Mather Field, California. As with the others mentioned in this article, he was assigned to the 100th and deployed to England for service aboard B-17 Flying Fortresses over Europe.

    On July 24, 1943, Crosby participated in Operation Gomorrah, the bombing of Hamburg by the USAAF and the Royal Air Force (RAF). The week-long air raid destroyed 60 percent of the city and saw Crosby receive the Distinguished Flying Cross for his “outstanding performance as lead Navigator.” This was followed that October with an equally dangerous mission over Bremen, which ended in his B-17 crash-landing after sustaining damage.

    For his efforts during the war, Crosby was the recipient of several honors, including the Bronze Star and the Croix de Guerre.

    Robert Rosenthal

    Military portrait of Robert Rosenthal + Nate Mann as Maj. Robert "Rosie" Rosenthal in 'Masters of the Air'

    Robert Rosenthal + Nate Mann in Masters of the Air, 2024. (Photo Credit: United States Air Force / Find a Grave / Wikimedia Commons / Public Domain 2. yassi / MovieStillsDB)
    Among the most decorated airmen of the Eighth Air Force, Robert Rosenthal is portrayed by Nate Mann in Masters of the Air. The lawyer enlisted in the US Army the day after the attack on Pearl Harbor and, just under two years later, was assigned to the 418th Bombardment Squadron, based out of Thorpe Abbots, England.

    “I couldn’t wait to get over there,” he recounted to Donald L. Miller. “When I finally arrived, I thought I was at the center of the world, the place where the democracies were gathering to defeat the [Germans]. I was right where I wanted to be.”

    Flying a total of 52 missions aboard B-17 Flying Fortresses, Rosenthal participated in the deadly Münster air raid in October 1943. His bomber was the only one to return, but with a hole in the right wing, two dead engines, three injured crewmen and damaged systems. Over a year later, he was shot down over German-occupied France and was rescued by the Free French, after which he returned to duty, conducting additional bombing missions over Europe.

    Following the Second World War, Rosenthal, with his law background, served as one of the assistants to Chief US Prosecutor Robert H. Jackson at the Nuremberg Trials.

    For his service, he received 16 decorations, including the Distinguished Service Cross, two Silver Stars and three Distinguished Flying Crosses – two from the United States and one from Britain.

    Curtis Biddick

    Military portrait of Curtis Biddick + Barry Keoghan as Lt. Curtis Biddick in 'Masters of the Air'

    Curtis Biddick + Barry Keoghan in Masters of the Air, 2024. (Photo Credit: 1. American Air Museum CC BY-NC 3.0 2. yassi / MovieStillsDB)
    Curtis “Muggs” Biddick is one of the storied airmen whose heroics over Europe are portrayed in Masters of the Air. He enlisted in the US Army Air Corps in January 1942 as an Aviation Cadet, after which he was assigned to the 100th Bombardment Group. He was sent to England in the spring of 1943 and was soon involved in combat action.

    On July 24, 1943, Biddick was among those to conduct a 12-hour mission to Trondjheim, the Eighth Air Force’s first attack on a Norwegian target. On the way back to Thorpe Abbotts, his aircraft crash-landed in Aberdeen – luckily, he survived the incident.

    Just under a month later, Biddick was back in the sky, this time over Regensburg. Sadly, this air raid proved to be his last, as his bomber suffered an oxygen fire after being struck by enemy fire. The blaze trapped some of the B-17 Flying Fortress’ crew on the flight deck, killing four, including the first lieutenant.

    He was interred at the US Cemetery at Jefferson Barracks in St. Louis, Missouri.

    Alexander Jefferson

    Portrait of Alexander Jefferson + Branden Cook standing on a red carpet

    Alexander Jefferson + Branden Cook attending the Hulu Original Tell Me Lies screening and red carpet event at NeueHouse Hollywood, 2022. (Photo Credit: 1. US Embassy London / Wikimedia Commons / Public Domain 2. Robin L Marshall / Getty Images)
    While the majority of the airmen featured in Masters of the Air served with the 100th Bombardment Group, not all of them did. Alexander Jefferson, portrayed by Branden Cook, was one of the famous Tuskegee Airmen who flew with the 332nd “Red Tail” Fighter Group.

    Jefferson volunteered for flight training upon joining the US Army Reserve, but was denied and, instead, tasked with being a chemical analyst. He applied to the US Army Air Forces and, in April 1943, was told to report to Tuskegee Army Air Field, Alabama. After earning his wings, he was assigned to Ramitelli Airfield, Italy, from which he flew the North American P-51 Mustang against enemy targets. He also served as an escort with the Fifteenth Air Force.

    After being shot down over southern France in August 1944, Jefferson, like many Allied pilots, was taken as a prisoner of war and sent to Stalag Luft III, before being moved to Stalag VII-A. As the Soviet Red Army moved into Poland, he and other POWs were forced to march to Munich, at which point they were rescued by Gen. George Patton‘s Third US Army.

    After returning to the United States, Jefferson served as an instrument instructor at Tuskegee Army Air Field and remained in the US Air Force Reserve, before retiring in 1969. In 2004, he was awarded the Purple Heart for the wounds he’d suffered after being shot down in German-occupied France during World War II.

    Robert H. Daniels

    Portrait of Ncuti Gatwa

    Ncuti Gatwa attending the Virgin Media British Academy Television Awards at the Royal Festival Hall, 2022. (Photo Credit: Samir Hussein / WireImage / Getty Images)
    Tuskegee Airmen feature heavily in Masters of the Air, with Robert H. Daniels also being portrayed in the miniseries. Taking on the P-51 Mustang pilot is the latest actor to portray the Doctor in Doctor Who (2005-present), Ncuti Gatwa, who made his debut in the role in the December 9, 2023, anniversary special, The Giggle.

    Serving with the 301st Fighter Squadron, Daniels was shot down in August 1944 while attacking a German radar unit near the French city of Marseilles. He was subsequently taken as a prisoner of war and held for nine months, until the fighting in Europe came to an end in May 1945.

  • How Much Has Serena Williams Paid in Fines Throughout Her Career?

    How Much Has Serena Williams Paid in Fines Throughout Her Career?

    Very few tennis players have left a mark like Serena Williams did in her career.

    Only behind Margaret Court, Serena Williams has the 2nd highest number of Grand Slams among women with 23 titles. The 42-year-old has netted more than $94 million as prize money in her career. However, she has also lost a huge chunk of it throughout her career in fines.

    Image Credit: Cara Owsley/The Enquirer / USA TODAY NETWORK

    Not only is she one of the greatest, but Serena Williams has also been one of the most controversial tennis stars ever. Her fines throughout her career amount to hundreds of thousands of dollars, which includes some big controversies at the Grand Slams.

    At the 2009 US Open, where Williams lost to Kim Clijsters 4-6, 5-7, Williams breached the code of conduct with her racket abuse.

    After that, she committed a ‘foot fault’ which gave Clijsters two points. Williams’ outburst following that included profanities being hurled at the lineswoman, as was picked up on the microphone.

    Williams was fined $10,000 plus $500 for racket abuse. She was later levied a heavy fine of $175,000 instead of suspending her from the 2010 US Open.

    However, she was given a condition that her fine would be reduced to $82,500 if she committed no offense for the next two years. The reduced amount remained.

    At the 2011 US Open, Serena Williams was playing against Samantha Stosur, when she committed an offense. Believing to have won a point, Williams shouted “Come On!” in an energy-fueled manner. The chair umpire penalized Williams by giving the point to Stosur based on ITF’s deliberate hindrance rule.

    Livid with the outcome, since Williams was one serve away from the game point, she made unflattering and obnoxious gestures toward the chair umpire. Williams somehow still managed to not violate her two-year probation period from the 2009 US Open since no profanities were being thrown around. She was still fined $2000.

    Next at the 2018 US Open, Serena Williams was triply-fined for three code violations in a single match. She was playing in the finals against Naomi Osaka, which the latter won, and her coach Patrick Mouratoglou gave her coaching hand signals.

    Williams vehemently denied it and got angry at the umpire for that violation which cost her $4000. This was followed by a second violation when Williams smashed her racket in court, it cost her a point, and fined $3000 for it. She also hurled abuses at the chair umpire, whose fine was $10,000. In total, she was fined $17,000.

    There was also a $10,000 fine for once again smashing her racket. Except, this was during her practice session and at Wimbledon, where her racket damaged the grass on the court. That was a big violation.

    In total, Williams’s fines, in public knowledge, amounted to $122,000. This could be subject to certain variations given some of the smaller fines which she may or may not have had to pay.

    How does Serena and Venus Williams compare to each other in this regard?

    Serena Williams has had multiple fines in her career. Four of such big fines for multiple code violations came at the Grand Slams. She has always had a very strong personality, which she repeatedly expressed in multiple interviews. However, even if that might be the reason, it didn’t stop her from being a controversial personality throughout her career. In comparison, her sister Venus Williams was quite tame.

    Venus Williams is a champion by herself, winning 7 Grand Slams in her career. Although she didn’t nearly replicate her sister’s success rate, she is still a bonafide legend. She has also maintained a great code of conduct, with only one fine placed in her career. At the 2015 French Open, where she lost to Sloane Stephens in straight sets, she didn’t attend the post-match press conference later. It was the first match of the tournament and losing upset her deeply. For this, Venus Williams had to pay a fine of $3000.

  • The Inside Story Behind the Historic First Flight on Mars

    The Inside Story Behind the Historic First Flight on Mars

    Even if the Ingenuity helicopter fails, it is already a success — an engineering resource for a grand future of flight on other worlds.

    The Ingenuity helicopter is now being lowered — very carefully! — to the Martian surface beneath the belly of the Perseverance rover. (Credit: NASA/JPL/Caltech/Ken Kremer)

    If you want to go flying on Mars, you’re going to need a great flight engineer. When NASA sought out the best person for the job, they selected MiMi Aung. As deputy director of the Autonomous Systems Division at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory, she had already tackled fantastically challenging projects designed to enable formation flying in space and high-precision landings on other worlds. Then NASA gave Aung, a Burmese-American engineer, her toughest assignment yet: manage a project to build a helicopter that can fly on Mars.

    The helicopter is called Ingenuity. It just traveled to Mars strapped to the belly oft the newly arrived Perseverance rover. And yes, Ingenuity is about to go flying on Mars.

    Perseverance has jettisoned a protective shield, exposing Ingenuity to the Mars environment to the first time. The rover is now driving to an open area — a safe place for a test flight — and performing what mission controllers call “reverse origami” to unfold the stowed helicopter and lower it gently to the ground. Sometime on or shortly after April 8, Ingenuity will spin up its wings and attempt liftoff in the extremely thin Martian atmosphere.

    If successful, it will be the first powered flight on another world. It will almost surely not be the last. Years of determined work by Aung and her team have broken through the challenges to flying on Mars, challenges that many engineers considered insurmountable. Now the techniques and technologies are available for future flyers on Mars. Or maybe above the clouds of Venus, or even high in the atmospheres of the giant planets. The cliche is apt here: The sky’s the limit.

    I spoke with Aung about the engineering efforts that went into creating Ingenuity, and what to watch for as it attempts its Wright Brothers moment on Mars. A lightly edited version of our conversation follows. (The second part of the conversation, covering Aung’s remarkable career at JPL, will run in my next column.)


    You’ve been working on this project for many years. How does it feel to see Ingenuity finally sitting on the surface of Mars, ready to fly?

    I have to keep reminding everybody, you have to look at Ingenuity from the question we started with: “Can it be possible to fly on Mars?” Now that’s no longer a question. We have flown in a really thin, Mars-like atmosphere [in tests on Earth]. That was very difficult job. A lot of challenges along the way to get there.

    Then it was no longer a question of whether we could fly. It was like, how? We had to overcome how and build this system. From head to toe, the Ingenuity helicopter is just 1.8 kilograms. That is a huge, huge accomplishment.

    So this is not just the first flight on Mars, this is the beginning of a new era of space exploration?

    That’s right. Going forward, we are equipped to design lighter vehicles. We now have the equations, we have the models, we have the simulations. We have people connected across NASA and with industry to go on to the future. So that is set in place. Every step going forward is now checking and saying, “This one solution we came up with to build, what are the shortfalls? What were the unknown unknowns? What did we not think about?”

    If all goes according to plan, this scene will be unfolding on Mars in about two weeks. (Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech)

    If all goes according to plan, this scene will be unfolding on Mars in about two weeks. (Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech)

    What have you learned already, during the months when Ingenuity was bundled up with Perseverance during the flight to Mars?

    The first big thing was when we turned on [the helicopter] in space vacuum. We had already tested our hardware. Due to the light weight, we had to use commercial off the shelf, lightweight components, right?  We had tested the helicopter in a Mars-like environment [on Earth], but we were still just simulating. We turned it on and it worked, that’s great — but do you know how much breath-holding there was? But we got through the launch environment and the true space vacuum, so we’re good there.

    Then there was descent and landing, same thing: “Is everybody okay?” The day after landing, when we turned on, our thermostat circuit started working again. Now we’re working in the Mars atmospheric environment! We know that the vehicle arrived at Mars the way we packed it and launched it, so we’re a lot more confident.

    Can you walk me through the milestones happening right now as you prepare for Ingenuity’s first-ever flight on Mars?

    We already know are working the way we want to on the rover. The next big moment is when we deploy, starting now. This is where we work with the Perseverance rover team: JPL and Lockheed Martin that did the Mars helicopter delivery system and AeroVironment, as well as NASA Ames and NASA Langley. We all worked together to put it onto the rover.

    During deployment, again, we want to know: Are we learning anything new in the Mars environment? The drop is probably the biggest moment for us. That energy budget that we did, that little thermal shell that was trapping the carbon dioxide. Did we calculate the energy right for the Mars temperatures that we modeled? So this is a cross section of thermal and power and electronics, and all of the modeling there is. It’s all about survival now. How well did our hardware survive? After drop, do we survive the first night?

    In the best-case scenario, you would get five test flights on Mars, is that right?

    Yes. We have up to five flights planned. We have a 30-day experimental window, and then we’re done. We fly on a three-day cadence, so it’s not like we can fly three days in a row.

    What limits you to five flights? If Ingenuity’s hardware exceeds your expectations, could you keep going?

    The fixed limit is time. We have 30 days. As you know, Perseverance has its own incredibly important primary mission. Days on Mars are extremely valuable, so I’m very appreciative of getting those days. We’ll be packing those 30 days. Then you need get to get back to the primary science of the Perseverance rover’s mission.

    Testing a flight model of the Ingenuity helicopter at JPL's Space Simulator. Working out the engineering here on Earth was the hard part. (Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech)

    Testing a flight model of the Ingenuity helicopter at JPL’s Space Simulator. Working out the engineering here on Earth was the hard part. (Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech)

    As an engineer, what will you be watching for during the Ingenuity test flights? You talk like you’ve already completed the hardest parts of the mission.

    You absolutely got it. To all to us, we know this vehicle. We’ve flown the [test] vehicles so many times, the tens and tens of times, in flight chambers. We stressed the engineering development model and the flight model and tested it? How did it survive the trip? The main thing is that we want to learn. If anything unexpected happens, how do we get the information so that we can feed that information into the next generation of [flight] vehicles? That’s what drives us now.

    You’re already thinking about new flying vehicles for Mars or other worlds?

    Absolutely. There is something deep that drives you when you do so much work for so many years, right? For us, that drive is adding an aerial dimension to space exploration. Not just a spacecraft in space or rovers on the surface: We’ll also have the ability to fly around in the way we want to. Adding that aerial dimension will be useful in many ways. Rovers need scouts that can see far ahead, high-definition scouts that can get a clear picture of where you are. Astronauts in the future will want to explore places they can’t get to.

    Now, what is it possible to build? How can we fulfill the vision?

    Can you go bigger than Ingenuity? Could you have giant helicopters zooming around on Mars?

    We’re at a 1.2-meter diameter system [Ingenuity’s flying rotors] because that’s the largest that would fit in the Perseverance rover, and that’s the largest mass they could give us. For future helicopters, we’re looking at a three- or three-and-a-half meter diameter [rotor], and a mass of about 15 kilograms. Anything larger than that, the floppiness of the system comes into play [and makes the helicopter unstable]. A system like that could carry a one-kilogram payloads. That’s the vision.

    What kind of science could you do with a one-kilogram payload flying around on Mars?

    Oh, the science community has lots of ideas about instruments! They are also coming up with [potential] payloads that are getting lighter and lighter. And maybe we could get to a two-kilogram payload. Unfortunately, Mars just doesn’t have enough atmospheric density to make it safe to fly anything bigger.

    You’re adamant that Ingenuity is not a “drone.” What’s wrong with that word?

    I often get getting teased about not using the word “drone” for the Mars helicopter, but I feel very strongly about it, for the following reason: We are just getting over the fundamentals. This is a pathfinder mission to show, How do you build it and how do you operate it? We’re breaking the paradigm, but it has a lot further to go. Once [flying machines] become a norm — which is our dream, which is why we work so hard — then yes, there will be Mars drones at that point.

    There is another flying machine already in the works, the Dragonfly mission that will fly on Titan in 2036. Do you collaborate with that team?

    Dragonfly is quite different. It’s a large system, a spacecraft-class instrument, because there is so much atmosphere on Titan. However, testing the aerial vehicle is still a first-time event. How do you spin for the first time without vibrating and shaking apart? Everything that we had to solve, Dragonfly will also be doing that. It will be fantastic to share the lessons we’ve learned about how to the aerial vehicle and  how do you simulate the [alien] flight environment on Earth.

    MiMi Aung (center) with NASA engineers Teddy Tzanetos (left) and Bob Balaram, who developed the concept of a Mars helicopter in the 1990s. (Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech)

    MiMi Aung (center) with NASA engineers Teddy Tzanetos (left) and Bob Balaram (right), who developed the concept of a Mars helicopter in the 1990s. (Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech)

    Where else might we go flying in the solar system?

    Every planetary object that has atmosphere is a potential target. When Dragonfly was selected, it was fantastic because, yes, there’s going to be another aerial vehicle! Yes, it really can become the norm. Anyplace we send landers or rovers to, why not have a flying machine accompanying it? That’s my dream. If you go to Mars, why not? Why not put multiple helicopters on [a future rover], multiple copies? By then we can call them drones. It’s a very powerful exploration tool.

    I hadn’t even thought about that. You could have swarms of flying robots.

    Absolutely! You can go to all dimensions. You could make it large and add telecommunication systems so you can communicate directly to Earth, then you don’t have to go to the rover or relay with orbiters. Or you can go small and send a whole bunch of them. If you go small, you can build a very small, extremely clean system [sterilized to avoid contaminating Mars or other worlds]. You could explore sensitive areas. Or we can send swarms that share information and take data simultaneously across different areas.

    It opens up a whole new way of exploring.

    Since you are always looking forward – what is the next challenge for you?

    I’m working on a proposal to NASA on Venus mission called VERITAS. A decision from NASA [on whether to fly VERITAS] comes in July. So I’m at Mars with the helicopter, and I’m at Venus in parallel as we’re speaking.

    It’s time to go back to Venus. We haven’t been there in 30 years. Our proposal is a whole global investigation of the surface and the interior. Venus holds so many answers to rocky planet evolution. It’s fundamental, and it’s our nearest neighbor. It’s started so similar to Earth in mass and the size.

    You really have an amazing job.

    Thank you so much. It’s really fun to tell this story. It’s like a big reward after all the work you do.


    For more space news and ideas, follow me on Twitter: @coreyspowell

     

  • Serena Williams intervenes in Venus Williams retirement plan as icon eyes next event

    Serena Williams intervenes in Venus Williams retirement plan as icon eyes next event


    Venus Williams has not played a match since the US Open after picking up a horror knee injury.

    Venus and Serena Williams

    Venus Williams is plotting another comeback after suffering a horror fall at Wimbledon last year.

    The 43-year-old revealed that sister Serena doesn’t want her to retire as she outlined her plan to return to competition on home soil in March.

    The elder Williams sister hasn’t played a match since August, when she crashed out in the first round of the US Open.

    She rushed back after picking up a knee injury at Wimbledon but has been recovering ever since and is now set to compete in Indian Wells and Miami.

    While the seven-time Grand Slam champion is still hungry to compete, she admitted that she had to have an “honest conversation” with herself after going out 6-1 6-1 to Greet Minnen in Flushing Meadows.

    That was her worst loss at her home Grand Slam tournament.

    But it was Serena who played a big part in her decision to keep playing. The 23-time Major winner ended her own career at the US Open in 2022.

    “One of my big goals is to play United States, to play in the Miami Open and at Indian Wells,” Venus said in a new video. “I have not played there since 2019 due to injuries. It’s a long time… It’s a lot of years not to play at home.

  • Spain’s Newest Submarines Were Delayed Because Someone Put a Decimal In the Wrong Place

    Spain’s Newest Submarines Were Delayed Because Someone Put a Decimal In the Wrong Place

    When you think of countries at the forefront of submarine development, Spain likely isn’t the first that comes to mind. That’s not to say the nation hasn’t developed its own vessels. The latest is the S-80 Plus-class, four submarines powered not by a nuclear reactor, but through air-independent propulsion. Development began in the 1990s, but fell victim to several delays, one of which was caused by someone not looking over their work.

     

    Photo Credit: Paul Hanna / Bloomberg / Getty Images

    A need to upgrade an aging submarine fleet

    Isaac Peral (S-81) at sea

    Isaac Peral (S-81) completing snorkel maneuvering sea trials, 2023. (Photo Credit: Martin C. / Europa Press / Getty Images)
    The idea of updating the Spanish Navy’s Cold War-era submarines came about after the French began looking into replacing their own fleet of S-60 Daphné-class vessels. One of the designs proposed, dubbed the “S-80,” featured a new teardrop hull and a slew of new weaponry and sensors. However, it proved to be too expensive and was rejected.

    Around this time, the Spanish firm Bazán also began to design a new submarine, which shared similarities with the proposed S-80. This led to a joint venture that was agreed upon by the Spanish Navy in 1998, but on the condition that the new vessel would be powered via air-independent propulsion for better endurance underwater.

    That should have been the end of it, but other requests emerged as time went on. While initially focused on defense, naval officials had since decided they wanted a submarine for “power projection,” meaning that, on top of its increased endurance, it needed the ability to fire land-attack missiles.

    Once that was confirmed, the Spanish government signed an agreement for four units.

    Delay after delay after delay…

    Isaac Persal (S-81), an S-80 Plus-class submarine, at port

    Handover ceremony for the Isaac Peral (S-81), 2023. (Photo Credit: Paul Hanna / Bloomberg / Getty Images)
    At first, the plan was to have the first S-80 Plus-class submarine ready for delivery by 2011. Unfortunately, the project was soon hounded by delays, pushing the date to 2023. The first delays were caused by the government, as officials couldn’t agree on what company would supply the combat system. Shortly after, Spain suffered a budget crisis.

    However, those were minor compared to the glaring error that was discovered in May 2013. Once construction began, it was found that one of the naval engineers had miscalculated the weight of each vessel, thanks to a decimal being put in the wrong place. This meant the submarines were between 75-100 tons heavier than anticipated, putting them at risk of not being able to resurface after submerging.

    General Dynamics Electric Boat was brought in to resolve the issue, which involved lengthening each vessel by 10 meters and increasing the overall displacement by 100 tons. The increased size of the submarines also meant that their port needed to be enlarged.

    This redesign took until the end of 2014 and saw the project go over budget by 30 percent. It also meant that the company in charge of constructing and delivering the submarines, Navantia, wouldn’t be able to complete the first unit until much later.

    S-80 Plus-class specs

    Isaac Peral (S-81), an S-80 Plus-class submarine, at sea

    Isaac Peral (S-81) completing snorkel maneuvering sea trials, 2023. (Photo Credit: Martin C. / Europa Press / Getty Images)
    S-80 Plus-class submarines have a displacement of 2,965 tons, which is dispersed over a length of nearly 266 feet. The combat system that was eventually agreed upon is the VC 9.0 SCA, which is equipped with active and passive sonars that have accurate electromagnetic detection systems. The system allows multiple targets to be acquired.

    As aforementioned, the submarines are powered by air-independent propulsion, featuring three bioethanol engines and a single electric motor. This method affords the class a range of 5,000 miles, and speeds of up to 22 MPH when surfaced and 14 MPH once submerged.

    To ensure the vessels can conduct their tasks in secret, low noise, radar, magnetic and infrared signatures were used, all of which reduce the risk of detection. This is of particular interest to Spain’s Special Forces, who need the ability to travel to remote places fast, without enemy combatants knowing.

    S-80 Plus-class submarines were given the requested ability to launch land attacks, as well as sea ones. Each vessel is capable of launching an array of torpedoes and missiles, including the UGM-84 Sub-Harpoon Block II, DM2A4 torpedoes, Exocet missiles, MK48 torpedoes, TP2000 torpedoes, Spearfish torpedoes and Blackshark torpedoes.

    The first S-80 Plus-class submarine enters service

    Sailors standing atop the Isaac Peral (S-81), an S-80 Plus-class submarine

    Handover ceremony for the Isaac Peral (S-81), 2023. (Photo Credit: Paul Hanna / Bloomberg / Getty Images)
    In mid-2022, the first S-80 Plus-class submarine, the Isaac Peral (S-81) embarked on seal trials, with the vessel conducting her first static dive that March. The remaining three – the Narciso Monturiol (S-82), Cosme García (S-83) and Mateo García de los Reyes (S-84) – are slated to be delivered in 2024, ’26 and ’28, respectively.

  • Astronomers caught a black hole slurping up a star like spaghetti

    Astronomers caught a black hole slurping up a star like spaghetti

    The rare moment could teach us about stellar death.

    This illustration depicts a star (in the foreground) experiencing spaghettification as it’s sucked in by a supermassive black hole (in the background) during a ‘tidal disruption event’. In a new study, done with the help of ESO’s Very Large Telescope and ESO’s New Technology Telescope, a team of astronomers found that when a black hole devours a star, it can launch a powerful blast of material outwards. ESO/M. Kornmesser

    When a star ventures a little too close to a black hole, the intense tidal forces suck into it like a giant noodle of star stuff in a cosmic (and much more chaotic) reenactment of that iconic scene in “Lady and the Tramp.” The black hole’s extreme gravitational pull shreds the star into thin strands of material—a process delightfully called “spaghettification.”  When these noodle-like strips get sucked into the black hole, they release a powerful bright flare of energy.

    In September of 2019, the light from such a doomed encounter reached Earth. An international team of researchers, using a fleet of telescopes from the European Southern Observatory (ESO), monitored the flare—dubbed AT2019qiz—for a six-month stretch as it grew brighter then faded away. The phenomenon, known as a tidal disruption event, is detailed in a new study published last week in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society.

    At about 215 million light-years away from Earth, the star’s flaring death throes was the closest such event astronomers had ever observed. “We were prepared—we had telescope time ready on some of the world’s biggest and best telescopes,” says astronomer Matt Nicholl, lead study author and Royal Astronomical Society research fellow at the University of Birmingham. The research team got a front-row seat to just what happens when a star is devoured by a gargantuan black hole, and the combination of the star’s proximity and timing allowed the astronomers to study it in “unprecedented detail,” according to Nichols.

    Nicholl and his colleagues caught a glimpse of the star, which was approximately the same mass as the sun, soon after it started getting ripped apart. These powerful bursts of light are often obscured behind a curtain of interstellar dust and debris, according to Nichols, making it difficult for astronomers to study them in greater detail. But this latest tidal disruption event was discovered shortly after the star had been “spaghettified,” allowing researchers to study it before that curtain of dust and debris had fully formed. “It seems to have paid off because we really got a great look at this thing,” Nicholl adds.

    Researchers observed this act of stellar cannibalism through ultraviolet, optical, X-ray, and radio wavelengths. With this vantage point, researchers could parse out that about half of the star’s mass was slurped by the black hole, which is over a million times bigger. The other half was simultaneously ejected outward into space.

    Nicholl adds that the flare the star sends as its dying gasp in this particular event reached its maximum brightness particularly quickly. “It took about a month after encountering the black hole,” Nicholl says. “These faster ones are harder to find, so it suggests that there might be a lot of these short-lived flares that have escaped our attention until now.”

    Going forward, astronomers hope their detailed observations of this incredibly destructive event can help us learn more about how black holes and matter interact. “The next step is to try and find lots more of these events and observe them in the same level of detail,” Nicholl says. “We can see if what we found for this one holds true for all of them.”