early Thursday in San Diego, killing the co-founder of a music talent agency and two of its employees and igniting cars in a neighborhood of U.S. Navy-owned housing.
“We’ll soon be left with just a dusty rubble pile,” astrophysicist Karl Battams with the U.S. Naval Research Laboratory said in an email.Comets are balls of frozen gas and dust from billions of years ago. Every so often, a comet passes through the inner solar system.
“These are relics from when the solar system first formed,” said Jason Ybarra, director of the West Virginia University Planetarium and Observatory.The newest comet was discovered by amateur astronomers, who spied it in photos taken by a camera on a spacecraft operated by NASA and the European Space Agency to study the sun.The comet won’t swing close to Earth like Tsuchinshan-Atlas did last year. Other notable flybys included
in 2020 and Hale-Bopp and Hyakutake in the 1990s.The comet, also designated C/2025 F2, would have been visible just after dark slightly north of where the sun set. Its green color would have been difficult to see with the naked eye.
This might have been the object’s first ever trip past the sun, making it particularly vulnerable to breaking apart, Battams said. After its flyby, what’s left of the comet will disappear into the outer reaches of the solar system, past where scientists think it came from.
“It’s going to go so far out that we have no idea if it’s ever going to return,” said Battams.Daboll didn’t detail the nature of the injury, but said Nabers didn’t need any procedures on his toe during the offseason.
“They have a plan,” Daboll said. “Our doctors, our trainers, if you will, have a plan to kind of move him along and he’s been doing a good job with that.”Nabers was the sixth overall pick in the NFL draft last year after setting LSU’s career record for yards receiving with 3,003 in three seasons. He followed that by catching an NFL rookie-record 109 passes for New York last season, setting the franchise mark for most receptions in a season. Nabers also tied former Giants star Odell Beckham Jr. for the NFL record for fewest games needed for 100 career catches, reaching the milestone in just 14 contests.
He was able to accomplish that despite having an unsettled quarterback situation last season with Daniel Jones, Drew Lock and Tommy DeVito all starting games.Russell Wilson, signed to a one-year deal worth up to $21 million with $10.5 million guaranteed, is