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Teen charged with murder after shooting of boy, 14
A 16-year-old boy will appear in court on Saturday charged with murdering Eghosa Ogbebor.
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European football: Real Madrid held at home by Girona to extend winless run | European club football
Real Madrid had to settle for a 1-1 draw against mid-table Girona in La Liga on Friday, extending the hosts’ winless run to three games in all competitions and giving leaders Barcelona the chance to stretch their advantage at the top.
Federico Valverde put Madrid ahead six minutes after half-time but Girona levelled in the 62nd minute through Thomas Lemar. Álvaro Arbeloa’s side are six points behind with league leaders Barça, who have a game in hand against Espanyol on Saturday and could move nine clear with seven games to play.
Madrid began the night under pressure, having lost 2-1 at Mallorca last weekend and then losing by the same scoreline at home to Bayern Munich in the Champions League. Arbeloa still opted for a full-strength side for Friday’s game, despite the second leg of their quarter-final coming up next Wednesday.
Kylian Mbappé and Vinícius Júnior led the line at the Bernabéu, with Jude Bellingham in midfield as Real monopolised possession. Yet for all their territorial dominance, clear chances proved scarce in a poor first half short on tempo and inspiration.
Girona, who have climbed away from relegation danger to sit 12th in the league, were content to sit deep and spring forward when possible. They came closest before the break when Azzedine Ounahi unleashed a fierce effort from inside the box, forcing goalkeeper Andriy Lunin to produce a sharp reflex save.
The contest finally flickered into life after half-time and Valverde broke the deadlock in the 51st minute with a low strike from the edge of the area. It should have posed little threat to Paulo Gazzaniga, but the Girona keeper allowed the ball to squirm through his arms as he tried to smother it.
The hosts’ relief was short-lived, though. In the 62nd minute, Lemar surged in from the right and rifled a superb shot from the edge of the box. The winger, who is loan from Atlético Madrid – sent his effort just inside the right post beyond Lunin’s despairing dive to level the score.
Madrid pushed for a winner but lacked composure going forward as Girona held their shape with discipline to frustrate the crowd. Home fans again jeered their own players, with the sense that their team’s title hopes are quickly disappearing.
Marseille and Roma boost Champions League hopes
Marseille reclaimed third place in Ligue 1 with a 3-1 win over bottom side Metz, while Monaco suffered a shock 4-1 defeat away to Paris FC.
Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang gave Marseille a first-half lead at the Vélodrome, and Igor Paixão latched onto Mason Greenwood’s pass to make it 2-0 early in the second half. Giorgi Tsitaishvili pulled one back for Metz, before substitute Hamed Junior Traorè wrapped up victory for the hosts in stoppage time.
Monaco’s 10-game unbeaten league run came to an abrupt end in the French capital, with Paris FC going 3-0 up after just 21 minutes. Jonathan Ikoné struck twice for the hosts, either side of a goal from veteran Italy striker Ciro Immobile.
The USA forward Folarin Balogun pulled one back before the break for Monaco, keeping up his record of scoring in each of his team’s last seven league games. Luca Koleosho put the result beyond doubt in the 71st minute, just after Paul Pogba had come on to a rapturous reception.
“It was heartwarming,” Pogba said of the crowd’s reaction as he made his first Monaco appearance since December. “I am just trying to get some minutes under my belt and get back to full fitness. It will come with time.”
Donyell Malen hit a hat-trick as Roma revived their fading Champions League hopes by cruising past Serie A’s bottom club Pisa 3-0 at home.
The Dutchman’s treble takes his total to 10 goals in 12 Serie A appearances since joining on loan from Aston Villa in January. Malen punished a defensive error to put Roma ahead inside three minutes, then tucked the ball home from close range for his second just before half time.
Malen completed his hat-trick after 51 minutes, finishing well from Matías Soulé’s through ball. Roma stay in sixth place but are level on points with Juventus in fifth, and a point behind Como in fourth, albeit with a game in hand.
In Germany, Augsburg took an early two-goal lead at home to Champions League hopefuls Hoffenheim. The visitors struck back to level before half-time through Robin Hranac and Bazoumana Toure, but could not find a winner as it ended 2-2.
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Artemis II splashdown: Orion capsule scheduled to land off California coast at just after 5pm local time – live updates | Nasa
What to expect as Artemis II comes home
The splashdown of the Orion capsule will follow a precise timeline through the afternoon and evening on Friday.
Nasa says the scheduled splashdown time of 5.07pm PT (8.07pm ET; 1.07am Saturday BST) is approximate, and will harden as the capsule passes certain milestones during its descent.
Here’s what the day looks like right now (all times Pacific):
-
8.35am Crew wakes up
-
10.50am Crew completes cabin configuration preparation
-
11.53am Final return trajectory correction burn
-
4.33pm Orion separates from service module
-
4.37pm Crew module raise burn to place spacecraft at correct angle for reentry
-
4.53pm Entry interface to Earth’s atmosphere at 400,000ft
-
5.07pm Splashdown
Orion will be exposed to heat up to 5,000F (2,760C) during its 25,000mph reentry. A set of 11 parachutes will deploy in sequence at set altitudes following reentry that will slow the spacecraft to 17mph at splashdown.
It could take up to two hours after splashdown for crews from Nasa and the US navy to reach the capsule, open the hatch and release the astronauts. Nasa plans to take them by helicopter to a military base in San Diego for medical checks, then they will fly back to Houston’s Johnson Space Center.
Nasa plans a post-landing press conference about two and a half hours after splashdown.
Key events
Mission highlights
From its spectacular 1 April launch into a clear blue Florida sky, Artemis II has provided the world with a succession of captivating moments, deep-space records, and stunning, never-before-seen imagery from the far side of the moon.
Here are a few of the 10-day mission’s highlights:
Flight day 1 (launch day)
Hundreds of thousands of people packed the beaches and causeways of Florida’s space coast, and millions more watched on TV or online, as the mighty Space Launch System (SLS) rocket of Artemis II lifted off at 6.35pm ET on humanity’s first journey to the moon in almost 54 years.
“It foundational for what we do here at Nasa to inspire,” Jared Isaacman, the space agency’s new administrator, said at the post-launch press conference.
“It should be a component of every one of our missions. We want to inspire and create interest in the next generation to grow up and contribute to this endeavor.”
Flight day 2
After orbiting Earth while the astronauts and flight controllers in Houston established that the spacecraft, now known by its mission handle of Integrity, was functioning properly, a translunar injection burn committed it to the 250,000-mile journey to moon.
Flight day 5
Artemis II entered the moon’s gravitational sphere of influence at 12.37am ET, the first crewed spacecraft to do so since Apollo 17 in December 1972.
Flight day 6
After setting a record for the farthest humans have ever traveled from Earth – 252,756 miles – and experiencing a 40-minute communications blackout during which they ate maple cookies supplied by Canadian crewmember Jeremy Hansen, Artemis II’s astronauts embarked on a six-hour observation of the lunar surface.
“It is blowing my mind what you can see with the naked eye from the moon right now. It’s just unbelievable,” Hansen said as Orion began the flyby and made its closest approach at a height of 4,067 miles.
The crew also witnessed an “absolutely stunning” solar eclipse.
Flight day 10 (splashdown)
Other than launch day, the riskiest part of the mission. The crew donned reentry spacesuits and completed final mission closeout tasks, including configuring the capsule’s seats for their 25,000mph descent to the Pacific Ocean.
Perspectives from the moon
All four of the Artemis II astronauts spoke passionately during the mission about what they were seeing, and how they felt, as they passed over the surface of the moon at 4,067 miles away, their closest approach on Monday.
Reid Wiseman, mission commander:
We saw sights that no human has ever seen before, not even in Apollo, and that was amazing for us. The surprise of the day, we just came out of an eclipse where the sun, moon – the entire dark moon about that big right out the window that we were watching – we could see the corona of the sun, and then we could see the planet train line up, and Mars
And all of us commented how excited we are to watch this nation, and this planet, become a two-planet species
Jeremy Hansen, mission specialist:
We have seen just some extraordinary things. Things I thought we might see looked similar to what I thought they might look like, and other things I just had never even imagined
The perspective I launched with was that we live on a fragile planet in the vacuum and the void of space. We’re very fortunate to live on planet Earth. Our purpose as humans is to find joy in lifting each other up by creating solutions together instead of destroying, and when you see it from out here it doesn’t change it, it just absolutely reaffirms that
Christina Koch, mission specialist:
I just had an overwhelming sense of being moved by looking at the moon. It lasted just a second or two and I actually couldn’t even make it happen again, but something just threw me in suddenly to the lunar landscape and it became real
The moon really is its own unique body in the universe. When we have that perspective and we compare it to our home of Earth, it just reminds us how much we have in common. Everything we need, Earth provides, and that, in and of itself, is somewhat of a miracle, and one that you can’t truly know until you’ve had the perspective of the other
Victor Glover, pilot:
It was very moving to look out the window. It was hard to speak looking through the zoom [lens], I went straight where Christina went and I was walking around down there on the surface, climbing and off-roading on that amazing terrain
Boy, I am loving the terminator [the dividing line between sunlight and darkness]. There’s just so much magic in the terminator, the islands of light, the valleys that look like black holes. You’d fall straight to the center of the moon if you stepped in some of those. It’s just so visually captivating
Artemis II record breakers
The crew of Artemis II traveled farther from Earth than any humans before them, reaching 252,756 miles, more than 4,000 beyond the previous record set by the Apollo 13 crew in April 1970.
“We do so in honoring the extraordinary efforts and feats of our predecessors in human space exploration” mission specialist Jeremy Hansen said from space.
“We most importantly choose this moment to challenge this generation and the next to make sure this record is not long-lived.”
It wasn’t the only record set during their 10-day lunar flyby. Christina Koch became the only woman to have traveled to the moon and back. Hansen, of the Canadian Space Agency, became the first non-American. Victor Glover, the Artemis II pilot, became the first person of color to do so.
Before the four Artemis II astronauts, only 24 humans made the journey and returned safely. All were white American men during nine manned Apollo missions between December 1968 and December 1972.
On the eve of splashdown day, the Artemis II crew spoke about inspiring the next generation and “working on something big for the good of everyone”.
You can catch up on their comments here:
What to expect as Artemis II comes home
The splashdown of the Orion capsule will follow a precise timeline through the afternoon and evening on Friday.
Nasa says the scheduled splashdown time of 5.07pm PT (8.07pm ET; 1.07am Saturday BST) is approximate, and will harden as the capsule passes certain milestones during its descent.
Here’s what the day looks like right now (all times Pacific):
-
8.35am Crew wakes up
-
10.50am Crew completes cabin configuration preparation
-
11.53am Final return trajectory correction burn
-
4.33pm Orion separates from service module
-
4.37pm Crew module raise burn to place spacecraft at correct angle for reentry
-
4.53pm Entry interface to Earth’s atmosphere at 400,000ft
-
5.07pm Splashdown
Orion will be exposed to heat up to 5,000F (2,760C) during its 25,000mph reentry. A set of 11 parachutes will deploy in sequence at set altitudes following reentry that will slow the spacecraft to 17mph at splashdown.
It could take up to two hours after splashdown for crews from Nasa and the US navy to reach the capsule, open the hatch and release the astronauts. Nasa plans to take them by helicopter to a military base in San Diego for medical checks, then they will fly back to Houston’s Johnson Space Center.
Nasa plans a post-landing press conference about two and a half hours after splashdown.
Hello and welcome to our live coverage of the splashdown of the Artemis II crew off the coast of California after their mesmerizing 10-day mission to fly around the moon.
The Orion capsule that carried four astronauts, three Americans and one Canadian, on their 695,000-mile lunar adventure is scheduled to land at 5.07pm PT (8.07pm ET, 1.07am Saturday BST).
I’m Richard Luscombe, and I’ll be bringing you the developments as they happen, from the preparations for Orion’s fiery reentry into Earth’s atmosphere, to its Pacific Ocean splashdown and hatch opening that will give the crew their first breaths of fresh air since before their launch from Florida on 1 April.
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