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With tensions already running high over the fatal shooting of a 21-year-old Black man by sheriff's deputies, protests this weekend in Vancouver, Washington, devolved into reported vandalism of businesses and fights between demonstrators demanding justice and members of right-wing groups that converged in the city.
Kevin Peterson Jr. was shot to death on Thursday evening by Clark County sheriff's deputies in Hazel Dell, an unincorporated area of Vancouver, prompting consecutive nights of protests that led to at least six arrests early Saturday after authorities said some demonstrators ignored orders to disperse and began hurling rocks at law enforcement officers outside the Clark County Jail in Vancouver.
On Saturday night, members of a right-wing group gathered in Esther Park in Vancouver, prompting police to close the park. Those protesting Peterson's shooting and counter-demonstrators stood on opposite sides of a downtown Vancouver street arguing as a large police presence attempted to prevent the confrontation from escalating into violence.
On Friday night, video taken by ABC affiliate KATU in Portland, Oregon, showed fights breaking out between protesters and counter-protesters in Vancouver following a vigil for Peterson.
Peterson was shot dead around 6 p.m. Thursday by three Clark County sheriff's deputies in the parking lot of a bank in Hazel Dell, just north of downtown Vancouver, law enforcement officials said.
An independent investigation of the deadly encounter is being led by the Camas Police Department and the Southwest Washington Independent Investigative Response Team, which is comprised of certified peace officers and non-law enforcement community representatives.
During a brief news conference on Friday, Clark County Sheriff Chuck Atkins said the shooting unfolded as detectives of the Clark/Vancouver Drug Task Force were investigating suspected drug dealing in the parking lot of a motel in Hazel Dell. He said detectives spotted a man sitting alone in a car and as they approached the vehicle, the occupant got out and ran.
"A foot pursuit ensued where deputies from the Clark County Sheriff's Office were chasing a man with a firearm," Atkins said. "The information I have is that upon entering the parking lot of a bank, the man reportedly fired his weapon at the deputies. The deputies returned fire and the subject was tragically killed. It is my understanding that the man’s firearm was observed at the scene."
The man who was killed was later identified by his family as Peterson.
"It’s important to relate that the loss of a young man’s life likely means there is a grieving father, mother and other family. It is right and correct that the community would grieve along with this family," Atkins said.
He said that the three deputies who opened fire on Peterson have been placed on administrative leave while the results of the investigation are pending, in keeping with standard protocol for officer-involved shootings. The names of the deputies have not been released.
Battle Ground, Washington, Police Chief Mike Fort, the spokesman for the Southwest Washington Independent Investigative Response Team, released a statement saying that during the initial foot chase, Peterson allegedly pointed a gun at the narcotics detectives, causing them to back off as he kept running.
ABC News
ANKARA
Turkish security forces “neutralized” a total of 134 PKK/KCK terrorists in a month in anti-terror operations, the National Defense Ministry said on Sunday.
A total of 56 terrorists were neutralized inside Turkey and 78 more in cross-border operations, Maj. Pinar Kara, the spokeswoman for the ministry, said at a news briefing.
Turkish authorities use the word “neutralize” to imply the terrorists in question surrendered or were killed or captured.
Turkish security forces also destroyed 197 gun positions, shelters, caves, depots, and 117 improvised explosive devices (IED) used by the terrorists, the spokeswoman said.
Border security measures were also raised by building a modular concrete wall of 973 kilometers (604 miles) in total, including 832 kilometers (517 miles) on the Syrian border and 141 kilometers (87 miles) on the Iranian border, she said.
In operations launched between January and September, a total of 1,187 mines and IEDs were neutralized in Operation Peace Spring, Operation Euphrates Shield, and Operation Olive Branch zones, she added.
- Syria
In reference to Syria’s Idlib province, Kara said the security of the region was ensured after a cease-fire was agreed on March 5 to end the humanitarian plight in the region.
On March 5, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan and Russia’s Vladimir Putin announced that they had reached a cease-fire agreement in Idlib between the opposing rebel and regime forces.
So far, more than 400,000 Syrians have voluntarily returned to their homes, Kara added.
According to the UN estimates, hundreds of thousands of people have been killed and more than 10 million displaced in Syria, which has been ravaged by a civil war since early 2011, when the Assad regime cracked down on pro-democracy protesters.
- Libya
The military training, aid, and consultancy support provided to Libya in accordance with the bilateral agreements and international law signed with Libya's UN-recognized Government of National Accord (GNA) and upon invitation of the GNA continues, she noted.
Noting that a total of 74 mines/IEDs were detected and destroyed in Libya on 20-27 Oct., she said: “We support the UN-led talks, as we did in the talks in Istanbul, Moscow, and Geneva so far.”
A ground for a political solution was created with the talks, thanks to Turkey’s support to Libya so far, she said.
Turkey will continue to stand by Libya to ensure territorial integrity, sustainable cease-fire, lasting peace, and stability in the country, she added.
Libya has been torn by civil war since the ouster of late ruler Muammar Gaddafi in 2011.
The GNA was founded in 2015 under a UN-led agreement, but efforts for a long-term political settlement failed due to a military offensive by forces loyal to warlord Khalifa Haftar.
The UN recognizes Fayez al-Sarraj's government as the country's legitimate authority, as Tripoli has battled Haftar's militias since April 2019 in a conflict that has claimed thousands of lives.
Turkey also supports the al-Sarraj government.
- Fetullah Terrorist Organization (FETO)
As part of Turkey's fight against FETO, a total of 20,571 personnel have been dismissed, and the judicial and administrative processes continue for 3,551 personnel, since July 15, 2016, the spokeswoman also noted.
FETO and its US-based leader Fetullah Gulen orchestrated the defeated 2016 coup, in which 251 people were martyred and nearly 2,200 injured.
Turkey accuses FETO of being behind a long-running campaign to overthrow the state through the infiltration of Turkish institutions, particularly the military, police, and judiciary./aa
ANKARA
"A fight needs to be put up against anti-Muslim sentiment today, just as a battle was waged against anti-Semitism in the wake of the Holocaust," said the Turkish president on Sunday marking the 25th anniversary of the Dayton Peace Agreement.
On the occasion of the 25th anniversary of the beginning of talks for the Dayton Peace Agreement, which ended the war and genocide in Bosnia and Herzegovina on Nov. 1, 1995, President Recep Tayyip Erdogan sent a video message to the virtual Leaders Summit on Genocide: Lessons Learned from Srebrenica, organized by the Srebrenica Memorial Center and the Sycamore Foundation.
"The genocide, which occurred 25 years ago in Srebrenica, the heart of Europe, has been engraved as a black stain on the history of humanity. Despite the passing of a quarter-century, the pain caused by our 8,372 Bosnian brothers and sisters, brutally murdered, continues to wound our hearts.
"On this occasion, I once again commemorate our beloved martyrs with mercy and offer my condolences to the grieving families of the victims of the genocide and the Bosnian people," Erdogan said.
He said that sadly "the demands for justice made by those who lost their loved ones during the genocide were not fulfilled completely, and most of the perpetrators did not receive the punishment they deserved."
"Those who handed over our brothers and sisters taking shelter under the protection of the United Nations to their murderers and sent them to death have not given an account of their responsibilities. Even worse, humanity, especially the European politicians and media outlets, did not take the necessary lessons from the Srebrenica genocide.
"The massacres we witnessed in many parts of the world from Syria to Yemen, Arakan to New Zealand, are the most painful examples of this. The international organizations that have watched the Srebrenica genocide have just remained bystanders in the face of these atrocities in recent years," Erdogan noted.
He added: "We see that the countries that teach the world about human rights and democracy take the lead in Islamophobia and xenophobia."
"Racist terrorism spreads like the plague in many western countries, sometimes protected at the presidential level. The weight of attacks and assaults targeting Muslim places of worship, work places, masjids, and non-governmental institution buildings has increased to worrying levels," the president also said.
Erdogan stressed that the European Muslims were facing a systematic discrimination, and their rights and liberties were being usurped.
"It is high time to say 'stop' to this malign state of affairs and course of actions that threaten the future of humanity and the culture of coexistence of different faiths and cultures," he said.
He noted that "at a time of increasing economic distress and rising social tensions due to the coronavirus pandemic, significant tasks and duties fall upon all people and all heads of states who uphold democracy, freedoms, peace, and justice."
"We should be bravely vocal about the wrongs and misdeeds that we see to prevent a recurrence of the genocide in Srebrenica and we should look for solutions together. We must fulfill our responsibility, not only for ourselves and our countries, but also for the future of our children," he stressed.
Erdogan said he hopes that "the 25th anniversary of the Srebrenica genocide and the beginning of the talks for the Dayton Peace Agreement, will be the means of an awakening for the whole world, especially the European countries."/aa
ANKARA(AA)
The death toll from Friday's earthquake in Turkey’s Aegean region rose to 69, Turkey's Disaster and Emergency Management Authority (AFAD) announced Sunday.
Since 7 p.m. local time (1600GMT) on Sunday, some 987 aftershocks, with 43 of them over magnitude 4 have hit the area since then, AFAD said.
It added that 949 people have been injured, while 729 of them discharged from hospitals, 220 people still under treatment.
Temporary accommodation centers were established to meet urgent need for shelter in Izmir, with 3,545 tents, 57 general purpose tents, 24,382 blankets, 13,280 beds, 5,500 sleeping sets, 2,657 kitchen sets and 4 showers and toilet containers shipped to the zone, AFAD noted.
So far, 1,040 tents have been installed, with 1,430 more currently in installation phase.
ANKARA
A renowned Muslim scholar said on Sunday that the French president's recent remarks, in which he said he understands the feelings of Muslims shocked by blasphemous cartoons of the Prophet Muhammad, are a "step toward moderation" but not enough for remedy of his earlier statements.
"We expect from him the courage to openly apologize to our beloved, the greatest Messenger Muhammad and to all Muslims," Ali al-Qaradaghi, the secretary general of the International Union for Muslim Scholars, tweeted.
The French leader told Al Jazeera Arabic that he respects the sentiments of Muslims but will always defend freedom to speech and expression.
Earlier, he defended the cartoons, paid tribute to Samuel Patty, a teacher who was murdered on Oct. 16 after he showed the derogatory images to his students, and described Islam "as a religion in crisis." He also announced a crackdown against "Islamist separatism" in France.
Last month, the cartoons were also projected on French government buildings.
The Muslim scholar called on Emmanuel Macron to initiate "constructive" and "serious" dialogue, and to enact laws that prohibit and criminalize "insult and contempt against Islam and religious sanctities."
Macron's controversial stance has led to international condemnations, protests and calls to boycott French-made products.
Amid the outcry, on Oct. 29, a knife-wielding man killed three people at a church in the Mediterranean city of Nice. The violent attack attracted global condemnation./aa
KARACHI, Pakistan
Thousands marched in Pakistan's commercial capital Karachi on Sunday to denounce the republication of blasphemous cartoons, and anti-Islam remarks by French President Emanuel Macron.
Chanting slogans such as "Down with Charlie Hebdo," "Down with Macron," and "blasphemy of Prophet Mohammad unacceptable," the protest rally commenced from the mausoleum of founding father Mohammad Ali Jinnah, and culminated in the city's downtown.
The rally was organized by Jamaat-e-Islami, a mainstream religious party. Demonstrations were also held in the capital Islamabad, northeastern city of Lahore, and southwestern Peshawar, among others.
Addressing the rally, Asadullah Bhutto, the deputy chief of the party, censured the French president for encouraging the already rising wave of Islamophobia in the world, largely in Europe, following the killing of Samuel Patty, a teacher who showed cartoons of the Prophet Muhammad to his pupils.
Separately, protesters gathered near the French consulate. They tried to march towards the diplomatic building; however, police blocked the roads with containers and barriers.
In Quetta, the capital of southwestern Balochistan province, hundreds of Christians took out a rally and condemned the projecting of blasphemous caricatures on government buildings in French cities.
Carrying banners, and posters inscribed with slogans against Islamophobia, and in support of inter-faith harmony, the protesters gathered outside the Quetta Press Club.
Khalil George, a former Christian lawmaker, said freedom of expression does not mean one could hurt the feelings and religious beliefs of any community.
Besides protests, Macron's defense of the cartoons, and describing Islam as “a religion in crisis all over the world” has led to international condemnations and calls to boycott French products.
Last week, Pakistan's Prime Minister Imran Khan accused Macron of "attacking Islam." He also wrote to Muslim leaders for a collective strategy against Islamophobia, and urged Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg to ban anti-Islam content on his platform./aa
ANKARA(AA)
Azerbaijan on Saturday rejected Armenia’s “false and fake” claims that its forces used white phosphorus munitions in Upper Karabakh, saying that it is Yerevan that actually intends to use the illegal weapons.
Armenia is attempting to lay the basis for further provocations by delivering phosphorus cargo to the territory of Khojavend, the Azerbaijani Defense Ministry said in a statement.
Citing intelligence data, the ministry said Armenia is likely to use the “phosphorus-containing ammunition” against the Azerbaijani army.
“The Armenian side lays the basis for its further provocations by spreading on Oct. 30 false and fake information about the alleged use of weapons containing white phosphorus by the Azerbaijan Army,” read the statement.
“We declare once again that the Azerbaijan Army does not have any prohibited ammunition in its armament.”
Military gains
Clashes continued in the Agdere, Khojavend, and Gubadli directions of the front on Saturday, according to Azerbaijan’s Defense Ministry.
Armenian forces tried to target the cities of Tartar, Agdam, and Aghjabadi, it said in a statement.
Azerbaijani forces destroyed two more Armenian tanks, three armored vehicles, four missile systems, 12 howitzers, one anti-aircraft missile system, one radar, and two vehicles, it added.
The front is under the Azerbaijani army’s control, the ministry said.
Upper Karabakh conflict
Relations between the two former Soviet republics have been tense since 1991, when the Armenian military occupied Upper Karabakh, or Nagorno-Karabakh, an internationally recognized territory of Azerbaijan.
Four UN Security Council resolutions and two from the UN General Assembly, as well as international organizations, demand the “immediate complete and unconditional withdrawal of the occupying forces” from occupied Azerbaijani territory.
In total, about 20% of Azerbaijan's territory – including Nagorno-Karabakh and seven adjacent regions – has been under illegal Armenian occupation for nearly three decades.
The Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE) Minsk Group – co-chaired by France, Russia, and the US – was formed in 1992 to find a peaceful solution to the conflict, but to no avail. A cease-fire, however, was agreed to in 1994.
World powers, including Russia, France, and the US, have called for a new cease-fire. Turkey, meanwhile, has supported Baku's right to self-defense and demanded the withdrawal of Armenia's occupying forces.
In popular culture, exorcism often serves as a plot device in chilling films about demonic possession. This month, two Roman Catholic archbishops showed a different face of exorcism – performing the rite at well-attended outdoor ceremonies to drive out any evil spirits lingering after acrimonious protests.
The events' distinctive character gave a hint of how exorcism — with roots in ancient times — has evolved in some ways as it becomes more commonplace in many parts of the world.
In Portland, Oregon, Archbishop Alexander Sample led a procession of more than 200 people to a city park on Oct. 17, offered a prayer, then conducted a Latin exorcism rite intended to purge the community of evil. The event followed more than four months of racial justice protests in Portland, mostly peaceful but sometimes fueling violence and riots.
On the same day, 600 miles to the south, San Francisco Archbishop Salvatore Cordileone performed an exorcism ceremony outside a Catholic church in San Rafael, where protesters had earlier toppled a statue of Father Junipero Serra.
“We pray that God might purify this place of evil spirits, that he might purify the hearts of those who perpetrated this blasphemy,” Cordileone said.
Serra was an 18th-century Spanish missionary priest, long praised by the church for bringing Roman Catholicism to what is now the western United States. His critics say that Serra, in converting Native Americans to Catholicism, forced them to abandon their culture or face brutal punishment.
Cordileone said the exorcism prayers in Latin, remarking that “Latin tends to be more effective against the devil because he doesn’t like the language of the church.” The prayers were different from those offered when a person is believed to be the subject of demonic possession.
Two experts on exorcism -- religious studies professor Andrew Chesnut of Virginia Commonwealth University and the Rev. Pius Pietrzyk of St. Patrick’s Seminary and University in California -- recalled no other recent exorcisms in the U.S. similar to those in Oregon and California.
Chesnut noted that in Mexico, some high-ranking Catholic clergy performed an exorcism in 2015 seeking to expel demons nationwide. Participants said they were responding to high levels of violence, the practice of abortion and the crimes of the drug cartels.
More broadly, Chesnut said exorcism, in its traditional form as a demon-chaser, is increasingly widespread around the world, though there are no official statistics.
“The Exorcist,” the memorable horror film of 1973, depicts exorcism as a relatively rare and secretive endeavor. But it’s now so common that some exorcists combat demons remotely using their cell phone, according to Chesnut.
He says the driving force behind the surge since the 1980s has been the spread of Pentecostal churches that highlight the conflict between demons and the Holy Spirit, especially in Latin America, Africa and parts of Asia, including the Philippines.
Brazil is a particular hot spot for exorcisms, sometimes featured on televised broadcasts of church services. Pastors wave their hands over a person deemed to be possessed, shout orders for the devil to depart, then hold their hand to the person’s forehead and push them backwards, occasionally resulting in their collapse.
The Catholic church is not ceding the practice of exorcism to these other faiths. Pope Francis has acknowledged the legitimacy of the practice, and a Vatican-approved university in Rome has been conducting exorcism training sessions during Francis’s papacy for priests from around the world.
In September, Francis named three new auxiliary archbishops for the archdiocese of Chicago; one of them was Jeffrey Grob, one of the top exorcism experts in the archdiocese.
In the United States, one of the premier Catholic entities focused on exorcism is the Pope Leo III Institute in the Chicago suburb of Libertyville. Though operating with approval of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, it is independent and privately funded, with a focus on training and educating priests about exorcism.
In a statement on its web site, the institute acknowledges there is some skepticism about exorcism and demonic possession.
“Many Catholics are even among those who don’t believe in the devil or his influence upon them,” it says. “It is important to recall that Pope Francis has never been shy about speaking about the devil, and has warned many times against naiveté in the fight against Satan, even in the 21st century.”
One perennial challenge for modern-day exorcists is to determine if a person potentially possessed by the devil is in fact suffering problems better addressed by mental health professionals.
In light of this, the institute says its curriculum “is devoted to the importance of knowing how to discern whether someone is truly possessed, or whether they have some sort of psychiatric or psychological illness.”
The institute says it agrees with those who say exorcisms have increased in recent years, but adds that “there is no serious statistical study of the practice.”
The U.S. bishops conference has placed a detailed Q-and-A about exorcism on its web site, “in hopes that clear information is brought to bear on a topic that is often shrouded in mystery or misinformation."
Some of the basic points in the Q-and-A:
--There are two kinds of exorcisms: minor and major. The minor form is performed routinely during baptisms; the major form entails the expulsion of demons and should be performed only by a bishop or a priest who has a bishop’s permission.
--A person should be referred to an exorcist only after undergoing a thorough examination including medical, psychological, and psychiatric testing.
-- It’s permissible, under certain circumstances, for a Catholic priest to perform exorcism on a Christian who is not Catholic.
—In cases involving demonic possession of an individual, the identity of the exorcist should be kept secret or at most known only to the other priests of the diocese so as not to overwhelm the exorcist with random calls and inquiries.
—When the person undergoing the exorcism is female, there should be at least one other female present “for the sake of propriety and discretion.”/AP
SRINAGAR, India (AP) — Shops and businesses were shut in several parts of Indian-controlled Kashmir on Saturday as separatists challenging Indian rule called for a general strike to denounce new laws that allow any Indians to buy land in the disputed region.
Government forces in riot gear patrolled streets in Kashmir’s main city of Srinagar in anticipation of anti-India protests. Public transport also stayed off the roads.
Kashmir’s main separatist grouping called the strike to protest new land laws that India enacted on Monday, allowing any of its nationals to buy or its military to directly acquire land in the region. Pro-India politicians in Kashmir have also criticized the laws and accused India of putting the region’s land up for sale.
The new legislation ended or modified most laws that governed local land rights. It also abolished 1950s land reform laws that redistributed large patches of land to landless farmers.
The move has exacerbated concerns of Kashmiris and rights groups who see such measures as a settler-colonial project to change the Muslim-majority region’s demography. They are likening the new arrangement to the West Bank or Tibet, with settlers living in guarded compounds among disenfranchised locals. They say the changes will reduce the region to a colony.
Until last year, Indians were not allowed to buy property in the region. But in August 2019, Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government scrapped Kashmir’s special status, annulled its separate constitution, split the region into two federal territories — Ladakh and Jammu-Kashmir — and removed inherited protections on land and jobs. The move triggered widespread anger and economic ruin amid a harsh security clampdown and communications blackout.
Since then, India has brought in a slew of changes through new laws. They are often drafted by bureaucrats without any democratic bearings and much to the resentment and anger of the region’s people, many of whom want independence from India or unification with Pakistan.
Kashmir is divided between India and Pakistan, but both countries claim the region in its entirety. Rebels have been fighting against Indian rule since 1989.
The new laws, part of a series of hard-line Hindu nationalist policies by Modi, also authorize the Indian army to declare any area as “strategic” for operational, residential and training purposes against Kashmiri rebels.
The Indian government said the decision was made to encourage development and peace.
“I want to say this forcefully and with full responsibility that agricultural land has been kept reserved for farmers,” Lt. Guv. Manoj Sinha, New Delhi’s top administrator in Kashmir, said recently. “No outsider will come on those lands.”
The government has also said it only wanted to invite outside industries into the designated “industrial areas.”
The pro-freedom conglomerate said in a statement that India was undermining any possibility of peaceful resolution of the Kashmir dispute.
“Instead, a policy of permanent demographic change is aggressively being pushed to snatch our land, destroy our identity and turn us into a minority in our own land,” the statement said, adding that "laws are being invented and amended by New Delhi and forcibly thrust upon the people.”
India describes the Kashmiri militancy as Pakistan-sponsored terrorism. Pakistan denies the charge, and most Kashmiris call it a legitimate freedom struggle.
Tens of thousands of civilians, rebels and government forces have been killed in the conflict.
Scientists have discovered a lonely orphaned planet wandering through the Milky Way with no parent star to guide it — a "rogue" planet, stuck in endless darkness with no days, nights, or gravitational siblings to keep it company.
It's possible our galaxy is filled to the brim with these rogue planets, but this one is particularly unusual for one special reason: it is the smallest found to date — even smaller than Earth — with a mass similar to Mars.
Scientists have found over 4,000 "extrasolar" planets, also known as exoplanets, which are planets that orbits a star other than the sun. Many exoplanets — for example, one where it rains liquid iron — bear no resemblance to planets in our solar system, but they all have one shared trait: they all orbit a star.
But just a few years ago, astronomers in Poland found evidence of free-floating planets, unattached gravitationally to a star, in the Milky Way galaxy. In a new study, the same astronomers have now found the smallest such planet to date.
Exoplanets are difficult to spot, typically found only by observing the light from their host stars. Because free-floating planets have no parent star and emit almost no radiation, astronomers have to take a different approach to find them.
Rogue planets are spotted using gravitational microlensing, a result of Albert Einstein's theory of general relativity. In this case, the gravity of the planet (lens) acts as a sort of magnifying glass, able to bend the light of a bright star (source) behind it so that an observer on Earth can detect its presence.
"The observer will measure a short brightening of the source star," lead author Dr. Przemek Mroz, a postdoctoral scholar at the California Institute of Technology, said in a news release Thursday. "Chances of observing microlensing are extremely slim because three objects—source, lens, and observer—must be nearly perfectly aligned. If we observed only one source star, we would have to wait almost a million year to see the source being microlensed."
Researchers on the lookout for these events are monitoring hundreds of millions of stars in the center of the galaxy, which provides the highest chances of microlensing.
The Optical Gravitational Lensing Experiment survey, led by Warsaw University astronomers, is one of the largest and longest sky surveys, operating for over 28 years. Currently using a telescope at Las Campanas Observatory in Chile, the astronomers look to the galaxy's center on clear nights, in search of changes in the brightness of stars.
Because this technique relies only on the brightness of the source and not the lens, it allows astronomers to spot faint or dark objects — like rogue planets.
Measuring the duration of such an event, in addition to the shape of its light curve, can provide an estimation for the mass of the object astronomers are searching for. While most observed events, caused by stars, last several days, small planets only provide a window of a few hours.
In this case, OGLE-2016-BLG-1928, the shortest microlensing event ever recorded, lasted just 42 minutes. Based on the event, astronomers estimated the planet to have a Mars-like mass and found it to be rogue.
"When we first spotted this event, it was clear that it must have been caused by an extremely tiny object," said co-author Dr. Radoslaw Poleski from the Astronomical Observatory of the University of Warsaw. "If the lens were orbiting a star, we would detect its presence in the light curve of the event. We can rule out the planet having a star within about 8 astronomical units (the astronomical unit is the distance between the Earth and the sun)."
It's not totally clear why these rogue planets have no parent stars, but scientists don't think the planets had any say in the matter. Rather, they may have originally formed as "ordinary" planets — only to be kicked out of their parent systems after gravitational interactions with other planets.
NASA is currently constructing the Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope, scheduled to start operations in the mid-2020s. Studying these free-floating planets can help astronomers better understand the unstable histories of young planetary systems — including our own solar system./CBS