“The Parliament of the Slovak Republic joined Ukraine, the Czech Republic, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, the Netherlands, Poland, the European Union, the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe and the NATO Parliamentary Assembly and passed a resolution recognizing : the current Russian regime as a terrorist and Russia as the state sponsor of terrorism,” Ukrainian Defense Minister Oleksii Reznikov said.
February 16, 2023
225 MIR de Familia abandoned their training in the last 5 years
MIR
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Crisis and AP
Crisis and AP
The data once once more confirms that the Family is ‘bleeding out’: to the empty places and the non-incorporation of MIR, we must add those who start the residence and leave.
PGA: A good start for Tiger Woods at the Genesis Invitational
Tiger Woods officially kicked off his 2023 year by starting the first round of the Genesis Invitational on Thursday followingnoon at the Riviera Country Club in California.
Greeted by a large crowd on the first tee, Woods started his round alongside Rory McIlroy and Justin Thomas. The 47-year-old golfer, who is looking for his 83e victory on the PGA Tour, took advantage of the par 5 of the 1is hole to register the birdie.
After committing a bogey on the 4th hole, Woods recovered on the 8th by placing his approach two feet from the cup before completing with an easy birdie to get back under par.
Woods is playing his first tournament since last July, where he was unable to avoid the cut in the 150e British Open played on the fairways of the historic St. Andrews Golf Club.
Since then, Woods had only participated in a 12-hole exhibition match and a tournament alongside his son, the PNC Championship, which he was able to play using an electric cart last December.
Woods hadn’t played in a regular season PGA Tour event since the Zozo Championship in October 2020.
Max Homa scored three consecutive birdies to take control of the tournament with a 64 (-7) card. The American is one stroke ahead of Spaniard Jon Rahm, who birdied eight times in the first 18 holes.
The round is still ongoing and the final rounds will be broadcast on RDS on Saturday and Sunday.
Montreal researchers pick up radio signal from distant galaxy
Researchers from Montreal and India have almost managed to go back in time by capturing a radio signal that dates back to 8.8 billion years ago, from the most distant galaxy known to date.
The signal picked up by the team was emitted by this galaxy when the universe was just 4.9 billion years old, giving researchers a glimpse into the early universe, McGill University said. , in a statement Thursday.
Thanks to the giant Metrewave radio telescope, located in India, the researchers managed to capture this radio signal coming from the galaxy farthest from Earth known to date.
Previously, astronomers had to limit themselves to nearby galaxies, since signals from distant galaxies were weak and therefore difficult to detect.
“But thanks to a natural phenomenon called gravitational lensing, we were able to pick up a weak signal from a record distance. This will allow us to understand the composition of galaxies located very far from Earth,” said Arnab Chakraborty, postdoctoral researcher at McGill University, under the supervision of Professor Matt Dobbs.
This discovery might thus open a window on the creation of the Universe.
“It’s as if we were going back in time, 8.8 billion years ago,” said the researcher, who studies cosmology in the Department of Physics at McGill University.
These results also open the way to exciting possibilities for exploring the cosmic evolution of stars and galaxies using existing low-frequency radio telescopes, the statement concluded.