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The NASA New Horizons spacecraft’s extensive observations of Lyman-alpha emissions have resulted in the first-ever map from the galaxy at this important ultraviolet wavelength, providing a new look at the galactic region surrounding our solar system. The findings are described in a new study authored by the SwRI-led New Horizons team.

The newly published research paper detailing the observations and their interpretation, “The Lyman-alpha Sky as Observed by New Horizons at 57 AU,” by R.G. Gladstone and co-authors appears in The Astronomical Journal.

“Understanding the Lyman-alpha background helps shed light on nearby galactic structures and processes,” said SwRI’s Dr. Randy Gladstone, the study’s lead investigator and first author of the publication. “This research suggests that hot interstellar gas bubbles like the one our is embedded within may actually be regions of enhanced hydrogen gas emissions at a wavelength called Lyman alpha.”

In the Chinese city of Wuhan, surgeons have successfully transplanted an artificial heart with magnetic levitation weighing only 45 grams to a 7-year-old child.

It is noted that the third-generation magnetic levitation device is designed to treat heart failure in children. Every year, about 40 thousand children with heart failure are hospitalized in China. Of these, 7–10% need an urgent transplant.

However, the country performs less than 100 pediatric transplants a year due to an acute shortage of donors. However, in Wuhan, surgeons have successfully transplanted a tiny artificial heart the size of a coin, which is moved by magnetic levitation, into a 7-year-old boy.

An Arizona man has become the third person in the world to receive Neuralink’s brain implant – letting him ‘speak’ again in his own voice.

Brad Smith has ALS, a progressive disease that makes him unable to move any part of his body, except his eyes and the corners of his mouth.

Today, we’re diving into how the 2004 reboot of Battlestar Galactica didn’t just serve up emotionally broken pilots and sexy robots—it predicted our entire streaming surveillance nightmare. From Cylons with download-ready consciousness to humans drowning in misinformation, BSG basically handed us a roadmap to 2025… and we thanked it with fan theories and Funko Pops.

🔎 Surveillance culture? Check.
👤 Digital identity crises? Double check.
🤯 Manufactured realities? Oh, we’re way past that.

Turns out, the Cylons didn’t need to invade Earth. We became them—scrolling, uploading, and streaming our humanity away one click at a time.

So join me as we break it all down and honor the sci-fi series that turned out to be way more documentary than dystopia.

👉 Hit like, share with your fellow glitchy humans, and check out egotasticfuntime.com before the algorithm decides fun is obsolete!

#BattlestarGalactica.