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Remains of Rocket Expected to Hit Moon in March

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Remains of Rocket Expected to Hit Moon in March

Scientists say debris from a rocket used to help deploy satellites in 2015 is preparing to hit the moon in early March.

The object is used to boost a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket during its second stage flight. This leftover parts from spacecraft and equipment is called space junk.

The path of the rocket wreckage was first observed by American Bill Gray. He is an astronomer and founder of Project Pluto, based in the northern state of Maine. He develops and sells software that tracks the paths of different space objects, including space junk.

Gray has been posting information on the object’s path to the moon on the website. He said his information was based on his own observations as well as gleaned from others.

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The object, which weighs about four tons, will hit the moon at 2.58 kilometers per second, he wrote. Gray said all of his data shows the rocket will hit the far side of the moon at 12:25 UTC on March 4. The other side of the moon faces away from Earth.

Astrophysicist Jonathan McDowell, along with NASA, also confirmed the expected strike. McDowell is with the Center for Astrophysics, run jointly by Harvard University and the Smithsonian Institution in Massachusetts.

McDowell wrote in an online statement that in the past, “a lot of junk from lunar missions has ended up hitting the Moon.” But he noted that this is “the first time an accidental impact of an object not explicitly aimed at the Moon has been noticed. It.” McDowell tweeted that he found the expected strike “fun, but no big deal.”

Gray agreed, saying the moon is often hit by larger objects that move faster than the SpaceX rocket wreckage. That’s why the moon forms all the craters, he noted. “It can withstand this abuse very well,” Gray wrote.

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There are about 30 to 50 “lost deep space objects,” like the long-missing SpaceX booster, some 50 years old, McDowell said. He added, “It may be that some of them landed on the moon without us noticing.”

McDowell said the debris of the SpaceX rocket is just one example of the growing problem and potential danger of space junk. “I think it’s time for the world to more seriously regulate and catalog deep space activities,” he wrote.

A NASA spokeswoman told AFP that the space agency viewed the expected strike as “an exciting research opportunity”. But she said finding the craters that formed could be difficult, taking “weeks to months”.

This is because the strike cannot be seen in real time from Earth. Additionally, NASA’s Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter — which is currently orbiting the moon — will not be able to observe the impact when it occurs, the spokesman said.

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In the past, spacecraft have crashed into the moon for scientific experiments. But this may be the first unplanned strike identified in this way.

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Winner of BTS’ Jungkook lookalike competition in Chicago is an all-too-familiar face as ‘lore runs deep’

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Winner of BTS’ Jungkook lookalike competition in Chicago is an all-too-familiar face as ‘lore runs deep’

On Sunday, The BTS Jungkook lookalike contest winner was crowned in Chicago. Impersonators sporting his signature piercings and tattoos swarmed the venue.

Social media personality Andrew Alexander, who’s previously been documented as sharing “striking similarities” with BTS’ Jungkook, won the K-pop star-focussed lookalike competition in Chicago on Sunday, November 24, 2024. (Instagram )

The chain reaction set off by YouTuber Anthony Po’s super-viral Timothée Chalamet look-alike contest in Manhattan on October 27, led fans to the K-pop chapter of this journey a month later.

On Sunday, November 24, the new US trend surrounding celebrity lookalike contests saw BTS’ Jungkook enthusiasts turning up for registration in droves. As the Hindustan Times (and several other outlets) previously reported, the event held at Ping Tom Memorial Park in Chicago, Illinois, handed out a $20 cash prize and a bottle of Soju to the winner. As it turned out, some older fans of the K-pop septet already knew the much-debated winner of the anticipated turnout.

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Also read | HT Exclusive: BTS Festa, NCT Nation, top K-dramas and more now streaming on Channel K – Amazon Prime Video at 1 INR

A flurry of fan-shared videos and photos popped up online on Sunday (US time), capturing the three finalists in action as the trio, like other Jungkook impersonators showed up dressed in variations of black outfits. Ultimately, Andrew Alexander, a widely renowned YouTube sensation, was crowned the winner. Even if the name doesn’t ring a bell, some BTS fans will remember the content creator from a years-old YouTube video, in which his sister “turned” him into the beloved K-pop group’s maknae.

Who is Andrew Alexander, the winner of Chicago’s Jungkook lookalike competition?

According to the social media personality’s YouTube videos, Andrew is a third-year university student living in California. He clearly flew into Chicago, especially for the Jungkook contest scheduled this week.

Over four years ago, Alexander’s sister, Ashley, posted a video titled “I turned my brother into BTS Jungkook,” as she highlighted how “a lot of people say he looks like” the K-pop star. Given their “striking similarities,” as reflected not only their resemblance (though not validated by a lot of fans) but also their mannerisms, Andrew’s other sister (presumably), Amber, said at the time, “It’s so funny every video we post, there’s at least 20 new people that are like ‘I don’t know if anyone’s ever said this but, Andrew looks like Jungkook’”.

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However, Andrew himself did not admit to the similarities. That didn’t stop BTS fan pages from drawing comparisons between him and the BTS singer.

In a video posted before the viral winning announcement, Andrew’s sister documented the scene at the competition venue. Ashley wrote confirmed in the caption, “He flew from LA we flew from NY.” Ironically, the ultimate Jungkook lookalike contest participant was also registered as #7, a number that holds great emotional significance in the BTS fandom, given the group’s member count.

Also read | With no tickets to Taylor Swift’s Toronto Eras stop, NYC influencer forced to shell out thousands of dollars last minute

A netizen who’d had been a longtime fan of the Alexander siblings clan – all YouTube personalities – commented on one of Andrew’s posts on November 24, “been a fan since 2018,” as they added a reference to Ashley’s YouTube channel “ur mom ashley.”

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In yet another video posted by Amber Alexander, she also recorded the full-circle moment: “He flew all the way from California for this (crying emoji) after years of getting comments saying he looks like Jungkook @andrewalexander WON THE LOOKALIKE COMPETITION.”

Hours before show time, Ashley also took to her TikTok profile (@aaashleyk), showing a behind-the-scenes glimpse at how the family ‘Jungkook-ified’ Andrew by drawing the pop star’s famously known hand tattoos and suggesting that he needed a lip ring as well. For his final look, Andrew also showed up with Jungkook’s eyebrow and ear piercings. 

Fans react to the winner being crowned for the lookalike contest

While some instantly approved the decision with comments like “Andrew is actually the ONLY one who looked like jungkook, the others literally have no similarity at all,” others who probably never tracked the siblings’ years-old digital footprints were lost why this win was especially gaining momentous traction online.

“If Andrew didn’t win, I would have hosted another one to make sure he won,” someone else wrote in the comments. Others quipped along the lines of how Jungkook had returned from the military and “Kinda crazy how they let Jungkook win his own lookalike competition.”

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Those familiar with Andrew’s journey, definitely agreed with how the contest “cooked” with its final decision, especially since “the lore runs deep.” Who could’ve known that this was years in the making at a time when lookalike contests weren’t a norm?

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