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  • 300 homes burned down in Jakarta electrical fire

    Romeo Gacad / AFP - Getty Images

    Indonesian fire victims rest beside tombs at a cemetery after their houses were burned down in Jakarta on Aug. 7.

    Romeo Gacad / AFP - Getty Images

    Indonesian father Diansyah comforts his four-year-old son Adnan in front of their burned house in Jakarta, on Aug. 7.

    A massive fire triggered by a faulty electrical connection burned down a neighborhood in Jakarta. A village official said around 300 houses were razed and displaced around 1,700 people, mostly workers and small merchants, as residents were observing Ramadan.

    -- AFP - Getty Images

    Romeo Gacad / AFP - Getty Images

    Indonesian fire victim Nur Azizah feeds her two sons Nurul and Vito as her family breaks their fast from their burned house in Jakarta on Aug. 7.

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  • Steve Helber / AP

    Couple embraces in Va.

    Lt. Michael Sturm, of Philadelphia, embraces his fiancé Susan Brooks as he arrives at Naval Station Norfolk aboard the nuclear powered aircraft carrier Abraham Lincoln in Norfolk, Va. on Aug. 7, 2012. The Lincoln will be ported in Norfolk for at least four years for upgrades.

  • Martian 'crime scene photo' shows rover and its trash

    Sarah Milkovich, a member of the science team for NASA's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter, guides you through an orbital view of the Curiosity rover as well as its heat shield, parachute, backshell and sky crane wreckage.


    NASA's Mars Curiosity rover is in fine shape, but the sky crane that lowered the car-sized, 1-ton craft to the Red Planet's surface is not looking so good. That's plain to see from the "crime scene photo" provided by Curiosity's high-flying sister probe, Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter.

    The orbital image, released today, not only shows Curiosity and the sky crane, but the rover's parachute, backshell and heat shield as well. The picture was snapped on Monday night (Pacific Time), about 24 hours after the sky crane executed a perfect maneuver to lower Curiosity to its landing spot in Gale Crater, then flew away for a planned crash landing.

    Sarah Milkovich, a member of the orbiter's science team, unveiled the latest jaw-dropping image during today's news briefing at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif. The debris scattered around the rover documents each step of the Mars Science Laboratory's nail-biter of a landing sequence.

    "It's like a crime scene photo here," she said.


    The heat shield is visible toward the lower right corner of the scene, which is part of a larger strip of imagery acquired by the orbiter. NASA's schedule for Curiosity's landing called for that disk-shaped part of the spacecraft to be thrown off two and a half minutes before landing — and in fact you can see the shield falling away in a video released Monday. Milkovich said it landed about three-quarters of a mile (1,200 meters) from the rover's landing site.

    Curiosity's backshell and its attached parachute are spread out southwest of the rover, about four-tenths of a mile (615 meters) away. Those pieces were jettisoned from the spacecraft about a minute before landing. You can see them still attached to the rover in a different picture taken by the orbiter during Curiosity's descent.

    The sky crane was the last piece of the landing puzzle: It was a rocket-powered platform designed to reduce the descent velocity to a near-standstill, and then drop the rover to the ground on the end of three strong cables. When the rover hit the surface, the cables were cut with explosive charges, and the sky crane flew itself away to avoid crashing on top of the rover. Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter's picture shows the dark streaks left behind by the crane's crash, about a half-mile (650 meters) to the northwest. The blast pattern suggests that the crane hit the dirt obliquely, Milkovich said.

    NASA / JPL-Caltech / Univ. of Arizona

    This view shows the whole scene around the Curiosity rover, as captured by NASA's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter. Click on the image for a larger view, or check out NASA's close-ups for the rover, the parachute, the sky crane and the heat shield.

    Analyzing the crime scene
    At each site where something landed, the relatively bright material on the surface has been disrupted, exposing darker material beneath, Milkovich said. The pattern of dark and light material around the rover supports the view that Curiosity is oriented along a northwest-to-southeast axis, with the rover's front facing the 3-mile-high (5-kilometer-high) mountain known as Aeolis Mons or Mount Sharp.

    "You're getting the same information from orbit as you're getting from the ground, and that really makes you feel very good," Milkovich said.

    Some observers noted that images taken just after the landing, by a rear-facing camera on Curiosity, seemed to show a puff of dust rising from a spot northwest of the rover — and they hypothesized that the disturbance was caused by the sky crane's crash. Now the orbital imagery shows that the spot really is roughly where the wreckage is located. A reporter asked Mike Watkins, one of the mission managers for Curiosity's $2.5 billion mission, whether the hypothesis could actually be right.

    "I don't think you can rule it out, based on this image," Watkins replied.

    In order to get the shot, Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter had to be rolled to an unusually high 41-degree angle, producing a sidelong view similar to what you'd see from an airplane window. The picture was taken from a height of roughly 186 miles (300 kilometers), yielding a resolution of 15 inches (39 centimeters) per pixel.  Future pictures are expected to show the hardware in greater detail.

    Kenneth Edgett, a member of the Curiosity team from Malin Space Science Systems, said the picture showed three different types of geological formations converging on a point near Curiosity's landing site. "If it were up to me, I would go where those three come together," Edgett said. Nature's Eric Hand provides more detail on Curiosity's potential future route. However, mission managers say it's too early to tell exactly which places the rover will visit.

    There's one place the rover will definitely not visit: the sky crane crash scene. Engineers estimate that there were still about 300 pounds (140 kilograms) of hydrazine rocket fuel left over from the sky-crane platform's 880-pound (400-kilogram) supply when the crash occurred. Mission managers want to make sure the rover avoids having its scientific instruments contaminated by the fuel that was splashed around the impact zone.

    Steven Lee via Twitter

    The Curiosity mission's team for entry, descent and landing evaluates an orbital image that shows the impact location for the sky-crane descent stage on Mars.

    Curiosity is getting busy
    Watkins said the rover is in good shape. It's already taking lots of pictures and acquiring scientific data with its RAD experiment (which reads radiation levels) and its REMS weather station. Over the next day, mission managers will tweak the REMS settings to get it in better working order, and fine-tune the orientation of Curiosity's high-gain antenna to get it pointing more directly at Earth.

    By Wednesday, Curiosity's mast should be raised to its full height of 7 feet (2.1 meters) above the ground, which will clear the way for the checkout of the mast's science and navigation cameras. The first high-resolution, 360-degree views of Curiosity's surroundings could become available in the next day or two.

    Curiosity will be gathering data for at least the next two years, with the prime objectives of unraveling billions of years' worth of the geological record at Mount Sharp and looking for chemical evidence that could show whether or not Mars was ever potentially habitable. There'll be lots of cool pictures ahead, but Watkins said the early pictures are particularly treasured because they show places that have never been seen up close before.

    "These are the days that people have worked five or 10 years for, going on right now," he said.

    Update for 5:45 p.m. ET: Thanks to JPL's Steven Lee for sharing his picture of the entry, descent and landing team poring over the picture of the sky crane crash site. Lee also reports on the winner of the team's office pool to predict the landing location: Congratulations to entry controller designer Paul Brugarolas

    More about the Curiosity mission:


    Alan Boyle is NBCNews.com's science editor. Connect with the Cosmic Log community by "liking" the log's Facebook page, following @b0yle on Twitter and adding the Cosmic Log page to your Google+ presence. To keep up with Cosmic Log as well as NBCNews.com's other stories about science and space, sign up for the Tech & Science newsletter, delivered to your email in-box every weekday. You can also check out "The Case for Pluto," my book about the dwarf planet and the search for new worlds.

  • 432 lbs land on the neck of Germany's Matthias Steiner during Olympics weightlifting final

    Mike Groll / AP

    Matthias Steiner of Germany gets hit by the weights while failing to make a successful lift in the men's over 105-kg, group A, weightlifting competition at the 2012 Summer Olympics, on Aug. 7, in London.

    Grigory Dukor / Reuters

    Germany's Matthias Steiner is injured when his weights fall during the men's Group A snatch weightlifting competition at the ExCel venue during the London 2012 Olympic Games, on Aug. 7.

    Dropping weights on your neck has to be one of the worst nightmares for an Olympic weightlifter. Even as a spectator, there is a tension when watching these athletes lift astonishing amounts of weight over their heads, especially because of the possibility that something like this will happen. Fortunately, Steiner got up and waved to the crowd after medics rushed over to treat him. Future medical tests will determine the severity of his injury. AP reports:

    Defending Olympic weightlifting champion Matthias Steiner of Germany was hit in the neck by the barbell Tuesday in the men's super heavyweight competition.

    Steiner lost his balance trying to lift 196 kilograms — about 432 pounds — in his second lift of the snatch portion of the competition. He fell awkwardly to the platform as the barbell crashed down on him.

    Read more on NBCOlympics.com.

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    Grigory Dukor / Reuters

    Germany's Matthias Steiner is struck by his falling weight after he dropped it during the men's Group A snatch weightlifting competition at the ExCel venue during the London 2012 Olympic Games on Aug. 7.

    Richard Heathcote / Getty Images

    Matthias Steiner of Germany lies on the floor after failing to lift in the Men's Weightlifting final on Day 11 of the London 2012 Olympic Games at ExCeL on Aug. 7, in London.

    Lars Baron / Getty Images

    Matthias Steiner of Germany lies on the floor after failing to lift in the Men's Weightlifting final on Day 11 of the London 2012 Olympic Games at ExCeL on Aug. 7, in London.

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  • With a tip of the hat, Romney's horse, Rafalca, is out of the Olympics

    Mike Hutchings / Reuters

    Jan Ebeling of the U.S. riding Rafalca laughs after competing in the equestrian dressage individual grand prix special at the London 2012 Olympic Games in Greenwich Park August 7.

    Mike Hutchings / Reuters

    Ann Romney, right, wife of U.S. Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney, applauds as her horse, Rafalca, competes in the equestrian dressage at the Olympics in London on August 7. Co-owners Beth Meyer and Amy applaud along side.

    Alex Livesey / Getty Images

    Jan Ebeling of the United States riding Rafalca competes in the Team Dressage Grand Prix Special on Day 11 of the London 2012 Olympic Games at Greenwich Park on August 7.

    The three owners Beth Meyer, Amy Ebeling and Ann Romney watched from the stands as their horse, Rafalca, made her final appearance at the 2012 London Olympic Games.  Ridden by Amy’s husband, Jan Ebeling, Rafalca’s score wasn’t enough to make the cut for Thursday’s dressage medal event. Only the top 18 move on to the freestyle portion of the competition.  They all seemed to enjoy the ride  – with Jan tipping his top hat at the end and the three women cheering from the stands.

    "It was wonderful. She was elegant and consistent again. We just love her," said Ann Romney.

    Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney has received some criticism for his wife’s participation in a sport that many view as only for the wealthy and well-to-do.  Ann Romney began riding as therapy to relieve symptoms from multiple sclerosis, which she was diagnosed with in 1998. But the scrutiny has only been positive for the sport of dressage, or “horse ballet” as it is sometimes described. The attention also brought some humor and parody to a sport that may have been too serious in the past. Perhaps the attention on Rafalca will also help those who could benefit from horse riding therapy which is used for people with physical and mental disabilities.

    Full coverage on NBCOlympics.com

    David Goldman / AP

    Jan Ebeling, of the United States, raises his hat after competing in the equestrian dressage competition with his horse Rafalca at the 2012 Summer Olympics, Tuesday, Aug. 7.

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     More Olympics on PhotoBlog:

    Alexandra Raisman's gravity-defying floor routine gets her Olympic gold medal

    Britain's Alistair Brownlee swims, cycles and runs to Olympic gold in triathlon

    Huge blow for China as hurdler Liu Xiang crashes out of Olympics

    A moment of true sportsmanship, as Japan consoles a defeated France

    If horses could fly... equestrian jumping at London 2012 Olympics

  • Alexandra Raisman's gravity-defying floor routine gets her Olympic gold medal

    Andrew Gombert / EPA

    US Alexandra Raisman competes in the Floor Exercise final at the London 2012 Olympic Games Artistic Gymnastics competition, on London, Aug. 7.

    Hannah Johnston / Getty Images

    Alexandra Raisman of the United States competes in the Artistic Gymnastics Women's Floor Exercise final on Day 11 of the London 2012 Olympic Games at North Greenwich Arena on Aug. 7, 2012 in London, England.

    Mike Blake / Reuters

    Alexandra Raisman of the U.S. competes in the women's gymnastics floor exercise final in the North Greenwich Arena during the London 2012 Olympic Games on Aug. 7.

    Hannah Johnston / Getty Images

    Alexandra Raisman of the United States competes in the Artistic Gymnastics Women's Floor Exercise final on Day 11 of the London 2012 Olympic Games at North Greenwich Arena on Aug. 7, in London, England.

    Ben Stansall / AFP - Getty Images

    A young US supporter waves a flag after the women' s floor exercise gymnastics final on Aug. 7.

    AP reports -- Aly Raisman finished the Olympics in style.

    The U.S. captain matched Gabby Douglas in gold medals, winning the title on floor exercise Tuesday. Add in the bronze on balance beam from earlier in the day, and she becomes the most decorated of the Fierce Five.

    Good thing Raisman had such a big day because the rest of the Americans came up empty-handed. Douglas had another rough day, finishing seventh on balance beam after a fall. World champion Jordyn Wieber, voted most likely to leave the Olympics with the biggest haul, was seventh on floor and finishes without any individual medals.

    Continue reading.

     

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    Scott Heavey / Getty Images

    Alexandra Raisman of the United States competes in the Artistic Gymnastics Women's Floor Exercise final on Day 11 of the London 2012 Olympic Games at North Greenwich Arena on Aug. 7.

    Ronald Martinez / Getty Images

    Alexandra Raisman of the United States hugs coach Mihai Brestyan after winning the gold medal for the Artistic Gymnastics Women's Floor Exercise final on Day 11 of the London 2012 Olympic Games at North Greenwich Arena on Aug. 7, in London, England.

    Rolf Vennenbernd / EPA

    Alexandra Raisman of the US celebrates with her gold medal in the women's floor exercise at the London 2012 Olympic Games Artistic Gymnastics, on Aug. 7.

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  • Britain's Alistair Brownlee swims, cycles and runs to Olympic gold in triathlon

    Hannibal / EPA

    Competitors start the men's Triathlon with the swim during the London 2012 Olympic Games Triathlon competition at the Hyde Park, London on August 7.

    Paul Hackett / AFP - Getty Images

    Athletes compete during the cycling portion of the Men's Olympic Triathlon Race on Aug. 7, during the London 2012 Olympic Games.

    Tim Wimborne / Reuters

    Britain's Alistair Brownlee, left, runs ahead of Spain's Javier Gomez and Jonathan Brownlee in the men's triathlon final during the London 2012 Olympic Games at Hyde Park on Aug. 7,

    Hannibal / EPA

    Britain's Alistair Brownlee celebrates winning the men's Triathlon during the London 2012 Olympic Games Triathlon competition at the Hyde Park, London, Britain,on Aug. 7.

    Jae C. Hong / AP

    Spain's Javier Gomez, left, congratulates Great Britain's Alistair Brownlee after Brownlee won the gold medal in the men's triathlon at the 2012 Summer Olympics, on Aug. 7, in London.

    /

    Click for more from the 2012 summer games in London.

     From Reuters- LONDON (Reuters) - Since triathlon joined the Olympics in 2000 it has produced seven out of seven upset wins but Alistair Brownlee  bucked the trend in spectacular style on Tuesday when he delivered a perfectly-executed race plan to claim Britain's first medal in the sport.

    Their second came moments later when younger brother Jonathan Brownlee took bronze, despite having to serve a 15-second penalty for mounting his bike too early, while Spaniard Javier Gomez, fourth four years ago when he was top-ranked, split them with silver. Click here for the rest of this story and the latest results.

     

  • How Hwee Young / EPA

    From construction worker to shamanic healer

    Batgerel Batmunkh, a shaman, kisses his niece Munkhsoyol while 'possessed by the white spirit' during a shamanic healing ritual in their ger on the outskirts of Ulan Bator, Mongolia, in a photo taken on July 4, 2012 and made available to NBC News today.

    This ancient faith dominated the land during the time of Genghis Khan but was brutally suppressed under decades of communist rule, the European Pressphoto Agency reports. In recent years ancestor worship has seen a resurgence, as many have sought to fill a spiritual void in a bewildering urban landscape dominated by the burgeoning mining industry, where the traditional nomadic lifestyle is becoming a thing of the past.

    Batgerel and his brother Gankhuyag became shamans only two years ago, having previously worked in construction. Illness and misfortune plagued their family, they say, causing them to seek the advice of a shaman. It was revealed to them then that they had been chosen by spirits to serve as shamans. Only by doing so would their lives improve and would they be able to avoid further miseries, they were told.

    "When I first heard that I had been chosen to receive the spirits, I did not believe it and was angry and ignored the calling," Batgerel said. "But my life became worse and worse and I began to believe. After receiving the spirits, my life and health became better and now I live in happiness. I am very thankful to the spirits and this way of life."

  • Eight dead from roadside bomb attack in Kabul

    Musadeq Sadeq / AP

    A damaged bus which was hit by a remote control bomb is lifted by a crane on the outskirts of Kabul, Afghanistan, on Aug. 7. A militant detonated a remote-control bomb Tuesday morning, killing at least eight Afghan civilians who were traveling in a bus just northwest of the Afghan capital, police said.

    S. Sabawoon / EPA

    Inside the wrecakge of a passanger van after it hit a roadside bomb blast in Paghman, district of Kabul, Afghanistan, on August 7. The bomb placed on a bridge in Paghman district of Kabul province targeted a civilian minibus in which eight people were killed and seven others were injured.

    From AP: KABUL, Afghanistan — A militant detonated a remote-control bomb Tuesday morning, killing at least eight Afghan civilians who were traveling in a bus just northwest of the Afghan capital, police said.

    The bomb was placed under a bridge and was detonated when the bus traveled over the span, said Mohammad Zahir, the criminal director for Kabul police. Continue reading this story here. 

      

  • Huge blow for China as hurdler Liu Xiang crashes out of Olympics

    Lee Jin-Man / AP

    China's Liu Xiang, left, fails to clear the first hurdle in a men's 110-meter hurdles heat as he competes alongside Hungary's Balazs Baji at the 2012 Summer Olympics in London on August 7, 2012.

    Daniel Ochoa De Olza / AP

    Liu Xiang, second left, and Barbados' Shane Brathwaite, right, both fell at the first hurdle. Poland's Artur Noga, left, pulled up with an injury as only five men finished the race.

    Daniel Ochoa De Olza / AP

    The Associated Press reports — Former world-record holder and 2004 champion Liu Xiang of China stumbled into the first hurdle and fell to the track in his opening heat Tuesday, his second consecutive first-round exit in the Olympic 110-meter hurdles.

    Four years ago in Beijing his Olympics ended after two full strides, when he withdrew from his preliminary heat with right foot and hamstring injuries, disappointing his country of more than 1 billion people.

    Stefan Wermuth / Reuters

    This time, Liu made it only as far as the initial hurdle, knocking it down. He clutched his lower right leg and stayed down for a few moments. He eventually rose and hopped on his left foot along the outside of the race route.

    Daniel Ochoa De Olza / AP

    When he got to the spot of the 10th and final hurdle, he hobbled over to kiss it, then continued hopping until he got to the finish line.

    Jewel Samad / AFP - Getty Images

    Another hurdler, Balazs Baji of Hungary, went over and raised Liu's hand in the air, as if to signify he was the winner. Then other competitors went over to offer handshakes of condolences. Eventually, Liu got into a wheelchair and was taken away from the track. Read the full story.

    Olivier Morin / AFP - Getty Images

    Previously on PhotoBlog: A moment of true sportsmanship, as Japan consoles a defeated France

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  • Stephane De Sakutin / AFP - Getty Images

    Orphaned rhino calf nursed back to health

    Conservationist Karen Trendler watches over a four-month-old black baby rhino at the Entabeni Safari Conservancy in Limpopo, South Africa on July 31, 2012.

    Entabeni is one of the world's only dedicated orphanages for rhino calves whose parents were poached for their horns, Agence France Presse reports. The conservancy specially designed and built four high-care rooms and one intensive care chamber where sick calves can receive 24-hour attention. These include an incubator, drips and surveillance cameras.

    Almost 300 rhinos have been poached in South Africa since the start of the year, and 448 were killed in 2011. The country has seen a huge rise in poaching in the last few years as black market demand for rhino horn soars.

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  • 'It's like Waterworld': Monsoon rains swamp Manila, force 270,000 to flee

    Noel Celis / AFP - Getty Images

    Residents carry their belongings as they wade through flood waters after a river overflowed following torrential rain in Manila, the Philippines on August 7, 2012. Half of Manila was under water on August 7, officials said, as torrential rains paralysed the Philippine capital in its worst floods since a typhoon killed more than 400 people three years ago.

    Jay Directo / AFP - Getty Images

    Rescuers carry a man from the rubble of a landslide in Quezon City, suburban Manila on August 7, 2012. The landslide covered four houses, and at least one person was confirmed dead in the accident, one of many in a city hit by heavy downpours and rising floodwaters.

    Jay Directo / AFP - Getty Images

    A resident pushes his bicycle through murky floodwaters in Quezon City in suburban Manila on August 7, 2012.

    Reuters reports — Deadly torrential rains submerged much of the Philippine capital and surrounding areas on Tuesday, forcing nearly 270,000 people to flee their homes with more flooding expected in the north of the country as a tropical storm passes through the region, officials said. 

    "It's like Waterworld," said Benito Ramos, head of the Philippines national disaster agency, referring to a Hollywood movie about a flooded world.

    Disaster officials said over half of Manila was swamped by floods as high as three meters, worsened by a high tide and the release of water from dams in surrounding provinces. Read the full story.

    Rolex Dela Pena / EPA

    Rescuers use rubber boats to transport residents evacuating from floods in Marikina City, east of Manila, on August 7, 2012.

    John Javellana / AP

    Stranded residents ride a rubber boat pulled by rescuers along a flooded area in suburban Marikina, east of Manila, on August 7, 2012.

    Monsoon rains in the Philippines flood the capital, forcing more than 270,000 people to leave their homes and seek evacuation shelters. NBCNews.com's Dara Brown reports.

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  • Fire erupts at Chevron oil refinery in Richmond, Calif.

    Josh Edelson / Reuters

    Firefighters douse a flame at the Chevron oil refinery in Richmond, California, on August 6, 2012. A fire struck the core of Chevron Corp's large Richmond refinery on Monday evening, sending flames and a column of smoke into the air and prompting authorities to order nearby residents indoors.

    KNTV

    Chevron oil refinery on fire in Richmond, Calif. seen from San Fransisco bay.

    KNTV

    Firefighters attack a blaze that erupted at a Chevron oil refinery in Richmond, Calif.

    Residents living near Richmond, California, are being told to stay inside and shut their windows after a fire erupted at a Chevron oil refinery. NBCNews.com's Dara Brown reports.

    NBC News reports: A fire erupted around 6:30 p.m. Monday night at one of the processing units at the Chevron refinery in Richmond, Calif.

    A "level 3" shelter in place order was issued, NBCBayArea.com reported. Residents in Richmond, North Richmond and San Pablo were advised to go indoors and close all windows and doors. Read the full story here.

  • Somalia marks one year since Islamist militants were driven out of Mogadishu

    Abdurashid Abdulle Abikar / AFP - Getty Images

    Somalis celebrate during a ceremony to mark the first anniversary of terror group Al-Shabab's withdrawal from Mogadishu at Konis Stadium in the north of the capital on Aug. 6, 2012. Somali president Sheikh Shrif Sheikh Ahmed attended the ceremony and declared the day a national day to be called 'Peace day' and marked each year.

    Dai Kurokawa / EPA reports — On Aug. 6 Somalia marked one year since African Union and Somali government forces drove out the hardline Islamist militants al-Shabab from the capital Mogadishu. Life has been returning to normal for many Mogadishu residents since al-Shabab left the city. However, the change is fragile and the Islamist fighters, who control much of the country's southern area, remain a great threat to the stability of the capital. The population of Somali refugees reached more than one million last month according to The United Nations Refugee Agency. Read More

    See more photos on Somalia

    Dai Kurokawa / EPA

    Dock workers carry bags of imported cement at a seaport in Mogadishu, Somalia on Aug. 6.

    Dai Kurokawa / EPA

    Twelve-year-old Yusuf Abdrahaman lies on a stretcher as he waits to be transported to another clinic in Mogadishu, Somalia on Aug. 6. Abdrahaman was injured when a wall collapsed on him while playing outside.

    Reuters

    A Burundian soldier serving with the African Union Mission in Somalia patrols in an armed personnel carrier in Mogadishu on Aug. 6.

    Stuart Price / EPA

    The Mogadishu fishing harbor stands in Somalia on Aug. 6.

    Dai Kurokawa / EPA

    Somali women wait to receive treatment at the outpatient clinic run by the African Union in Mogadishu on Aug. 6.

    Dai Kurokawa / EPA

    African Union soldiers from Uganda play a board game as they rest at their camp in Mogadishu, Somalia on Aug. 6.

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  • NYPD increases presence at Sikh temples in New York City area

    Spencer Platt / Getty Images

    New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg meets with area Sikh members at the Sikh Cultural Society in Queens following the deadly shootings at a Sikh temple in Wisconsin by an Army vet on Aug. 6, in New York City. The suspected gunman has been identified as 40-year-old Wade Michael Page, who allegedly killed six people at a temple in Wisconsin August 5, was shot to death by police. He was an army veteran and reportedly a former leader of a white supremacist heavy metal band. Three others were critically wounded in the attack.

    Spencer Platt / Getty Images

    Members of New York's Sikh community listen as New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg and Police Commissioner Raymond Kelly hold a news conference after meeting with area Sikh members at the Sikh Cultural Society in Queens on Aug. 6, in New York City.

    Jeffrey Phelps / AP

    A gunman opened fire Sunday morning at a Sikh temple outside of Milwaukee, killing six people and wounding at least three others, including a police officer, before being shot to death, authorities said.

    Sikh communities through the United States have been shaken from the news of Sunday's deadly shooting at a Wisconsin temple. While the shooting took place over 800 miles from New York City, it is clear from the top photo (above) that tensions remain high. NBC New York reports:

    "Since the incident happened yesterday, the NYPD came right over here and go over to all our other temples and we feel safe, we feel the confidence in our NYPD," said Gurdev Singh Kang, president of the Sikh Cultural Society in Richmond Hill, Queens. "I appeal to our whole Sikh community, be peaceful."

    Mayor Bloomberg and Police Commissioner Ray Kelly attended a prayer service inside the Richmond Hill temple Monday afternoon. They later spoke to the press, and Bloomberg decried what he called the "deafening silence" of the presidential candidates on the issue of gun control.

    Bloomberg said the NYPD was taking precautionary steps  -- "some visible and some not" -- to keep the Sikh community safe.

    "When we received information of the shootings yesterday we immediately dispatched additional resources to Sikh temples here in New York," Kelly said Monday. "I can assure you that we're going to continue to monitor this issue, we're going to keep our presence at these locations in place and we're going to make that determination on a daily basis."

    Read the full story.

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    Mehdi Taamallah / AFP - Getty Images

    New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg speaks outside of the Sikh Cultural Center in Richmond Hill Queens in New York on Aug 6. The Mayor's press conference is in response to a shooting the at the Sikh Temple of Wisconsin in Oak Creek Wisconsin on August 5,2012 that left seven people including the suspected shooter dead and three injured. Mohan Singh Khatra, chairman of the Sikh Cultural Center in Richmond Hills, lost his 70-year-old uncle in the attack.

    Spencer Platt / Getty Images

    A member of New York's Sikh community listens as New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg and Police Commissioner Raymond Kelly hold a news conference after meeting with area Sikh members at the Sikh Cultural Society in Queens on Aug. 6, in New York City.

    Authorities have identified the alleged gunman in the deadly shooting at a Wisconsin Sikh temple as Wade Michael Page, an Army veteran who may have ties to white supremacist groups. NBCNews.com's Pete Williams reports.

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  • A moment of true sportsmanship, as Japan consoles a defeated France

    Christophe Simon / AFP - Getty Images

    France's Camille Abilly looks on as Japan celebrates their victory at the end of their women's football semi final Japan vs France event at Wembley stadium during the London 2012 Olympic Games on Aug. 6, in London. Japan won 2-1.

    Damir Sagolj / Reuters

    France's Camille Abilly is consoled by a player from Japan after Japan defeated France in the women's semi-final soccer match at Wembley Stadium in London at the London Olympic Games, on Aug. 6.

    Christophe Simon / AFP - Getty Images

    Japan's Aya Miyama chats with dejected France player Camille Abilly at the end of their women's football semi final Japan vs France event at Wembley stadium during the London 2012 Olympic Games on Aug. 6, in London.

    It is not often you see players of opposing teams going out of their way to console one another after a game has ended. Their interaction is usually limited to a friendly handshake or pat on the back.

    These images of Japan's Aya Miyama comforting France's Camille Abilly, after Japan defeated France 2-1 in a close semi-final match, stood out from other post-game reaction photos. While we have no way of knowing what words were exchanged between the players (and we can only assume there was a bit of a language barrier between them), their body language speaks for itself. It is clear Miyama took time to try and comfort the distraught Abilly, and Abilly seems to eventually accept her kind gesture.

    In such intense competitions, where emotions run high with adrenaline, it is reassuring to know that these Olympians are not only extraordinary athletes, but show true sportsmanship as well.

    Editor's note: This post has been updated to correctly identify the Japanese player consoling France's Abilly. It is actually midfielder Aya Miyama, not Azusa Iwashimizu.

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    Damir Sagolj / Reuters

    France's Camille Abilly is consoled by Japan's Aya Miyama, after Japan defeated France in the women's semi-final soccer match at Wembley Stadium in London at the London Olympic Games, on Aug. 6.

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  • Scenes from the Fringe: Edinburgh welcomes arts festival season

    Dan Kitwood / Getty Images

    A girl with a papier-mache creature on her head is helped down a street during the Edinburgh Fringe on Aug. 6, in Edinburgh, Scotland. The Edinburgh Festival Fringe is the largest arts festivals in the world, it was established as an alternative to the International Festival also held in August, and celebrates it's 66th anniversary this year.

    Dan Kitwood / Getty Images

    Street entertainers perform on the Royal Mile to promote their shows during in the Edinburgh Fringe Festival on Aug. 6, in Edinburgh, Scotland.

    Reuters -- The serious, anarchic and comedy-strewn Edinburgh Fringe has kicked into high gear this past weekend with a record number of shows and performers crowding the Scottish capital and giving a welcome boost to the economy as the city's population doubles over the month-long festival season.

    The official Fringe program lists a record 2,695 shows, plus more on the "Free Fringe", with an influx of nearly 23,000 performers this year. Festivals in Scotland are worth some 250 million pounds ($389.99 million) to the Scottish economy annually, with the Fringe itself bringing in 140 million pounds to Edinburgh alone.

    Read the full story.

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    Dan Kitwood / Getty Images

    Street entertainers perform on the Royal Mile to promote their shows during in the Edinburgh Fringe Festival on Aug. 6, in Edinburgh, Scotland.

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  • Mars orbiter captures rover in midair

    NASA

    NASA's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter spots the Curiosity rover and its parachute during its descent on Sunday night, just a minute before landing.


    NASA's Curiosity rover may be the star of the Martian show, but it was the Mars Reconnaisance Orbiter that wowed the crowd this morning with an incredible picture of the rover at the end of its parachute, six minutes into its "seven minutes of terror."

    The orbiter's imaging team had planned the shot for months, and the payoff came Sunday night when MRO snapped the picture from a distance of 211 miles (340 kilometers). At the time, Curiosity was about 2 miles (3 kilometers) above the Martian surface, still protected inside its Mars Science Laboratory back shell and heat shield.

    Journalists applauded when the image was unveiled at this morning's news briefing by Sarah Milkovich, a scientist on the team for MRO's High Resolution Imaging Science Experiment, or HiRISE.


    "If HiRISE took the image one second before or one second after, we probably would be looking at an empty Martian landscape," Milkovich said in a news release. "When you consider that we have been working on this sequence since March and had to upload commands to the spacecraft about 72 hours prior to the image being taken, you begin to realize how challenging this picture was to obtain."

    Milkovich said the image resolution was 13.2 inches (33.6 centimeters) per pixel. The operation was more difficult to take than expected, due to the relative positions of the two spacecraft as their paths crossed, but MRO managed to get the shot and send it back overnight. In the days ahead, the orbiter has been programmed to take additional pictures of the rover on the ground, within Gale Crater.

    "Guess you could consider us the closest thing to paparazzi on Mars," Milkovich said. "We definitely caught NASA's newest celebrity in the act."

    By the way, this isn't the first time MRO has caught a falling star on Mars: Back in 2008, the orbiter snapped a similarly amazing picture of Phoenix Mars Lander during its descent to the Red Planet's north polar region.

    Update for 7:55 p.m. Aug. 7: Another section of the same image apparently shows the spacecraft's heat shield, which was flung away from Curiosity just before this picture was taken. The fact that the disk-shaped shield is standing out in such sharp relief against the background of the Martian terrain, with no disturbance surrounding it, suggests that we're seeing it as it's falling through the air. Here's the wide-angle view:

    NASA / JPL-Caltech / Univ. of Arizona

    This is a wide-angle view of Gale Crater's interior, seen during the descent of the Curiosity rover. The upper inset zeroes in on the rover's backshell and parachute, while the lower inset appears to show the spacecraft's heat shield descending separately.

    A post-landing picture from MRO shows Curiosity as well as the heat shield and other spacecraft components on the ground.

    More about Mars:


    Alan Boyle is NBCNews.com's science editor. Connect with the Cosmic Log community by "liking" the log's Facebook page, following @b0yle on Twitter and adding the Cosmic Log page to your Google+ presence. To keep up with Cosmic Log as well as NBCNews.com's other stories about science and space, sign up for the Tech & Science newsletter, delivered to your email in-box every weekday. You can also check out "The Case for Pluto," my book about the dwarf planet and the search for new worlds.

  • Sikhs at the Golden Temple, their holiest shrine

    Raminder Pal Singh / EPA

    Baptized Sikh men sit near the sacred pond of the Golden Temple, the holiest of Sikh shrines in Amritsar, India, on Aug. 6.

    Raminder Pal Singh / EPA

    A Sikh man prays facing the Golden Temple (unseen), the holiest of Sikh shrines in Amritsar, India, on Aug. 6.

    Narinder Nanu / AFP - Getty Images

    Indian Sikh devotees pay their respects at the Golden Temple in Amritsar, India, on Aug. 6.

    The shootings at a Sikh temple in Wisconsin have highlighted how little is known about the religion in America, so it seemed like a good time to take a look at their holiest shrine, the Golden Temple in Amritsar, India. 
    By NBC News Staff: American Sikhs said they have often been singled out for harassment, and occasionally violent attack, since the September 11, 2001 attacks because of their colorful turbans and beards. 
    The 2001 attacks were carried out by Muslims linked to the al-Qaida militant group led by Osama bin Laden. Sikhs are not Muslim but many Americans do not know the difference, members of the Sikh community said. 
    The Sikh faith is the fifth-largest in the world, with more than 30 million followers. It includes belief in one God and that the goal of life is to lead an exemplary existence. Full Story

    Jeffrey Phelps / AP

    A gunman opened fire Sunday morning at a Sikh temple outside of Milwaukee, killing six people and wounding at least three others, including a police officer, before being shot to death, authorities said.


     

  • Chance as a photographer's tool: 'Shooting from the hip' in Chicago

    Scott Strazzante / Chicago Tribune

    Shooting from the Hip street photography in Chicago, IL. Photograph taken with Hipstamatic on an iPhone.

    A combination of chance, timing and an unobtrusive way of documenting communities.

     Chicago Tribune staff photographer Scott Strazzante’s “Shooting from the Hip” blog features street-photography from the neighborhoods of Chicago with unpredictable compositions that offer a genuinely candid look at the people and their lifestyles.

    Scott Strazzante/Chicago Tribune

    Shooting from the Hip street photography in Chicago, IL. Photograph taken with Hipstamatic on an iPhone.

    Key to Strazzante’s aesthetic is a method of shooting without always looking through the viewfinder.  Despite the uncertainty that it can bring Strazzante says, “chance became one of the tools in my arsenal.”

     Getting the shot while literally shooting from the hip is actually a well-honed skill. Scott began years ago with film cameras that had removable prisms which allowed him to compose while positioning the camera at high or low angles to get unique views. Not bringing the viewfinder up to his eye enables him to capture natural moments without his subjects reacting to his camera and also expands his field of vision.

     “If I shot from the eye, I might be walking down the street and see a moment but as I’m lifting the camera to my eyes it might be gone.  So now it’s almost just part of my thought process where I see it and I shoot it.”

    Scott Strazzante / Chicago Tribune

    Bus stop. Photograph taken with Hipstamatic on an iPhone.

    Scott Strazzante/Chicago Tribune

    Shooting from the Hip street photography in Chicago, IL. Photograph taken with Hipstamatic on an iPhone..

    “One of the other byproducts for shooting from the hip is that I have a wider range of vision to see moments coming together.  I can see the guy with the big Afro coming down the street while there’s a woman with a crutch coming in from this way and then there’s a person with a balloon so I can kind of wait till they all intersect.”

    “I wanted my blog to be a little more free-flowing and just kind of my thoughts, but it kind of turned into more literally shooting from the hip.  One of the things that I think over the years of being a newspaper photographer that started to grate on me was that every place I went outside of a sporting event, people knew I was there.”

     “They knew they were being photographed.  And obviously, that kind of influenced what they would do, they would either do something for the camera or they would have this knowing expression on their face that they were being photographed and for me that kind of ruined the photos.”

     Strazzante started with the “shooting from the hip” method as a way to avoid that camera awareness of his subjects.  “No one is putting on a show, even though they are in public, they still have a reality to it.  There’s not any kind of influence from me because I’m just another pedestrian,” he said.

    Scott Strazzante/ Chicago Tribune

    After rushing for a career high 205 yards, Chicago Bears' Matt Forte meets Carolina Panthers' Steve Smith at midfield after Bears' 34-29 win in NFL game at Soldier Field in Chicago, IL on Sunday, October 2, 2011. Scott Strazzante took this picture by reaching around other photographers to get the right angle.

    Additionally, Strazzante discovered a path to a newfound creativity along the way.  “I came to realize that the compositions that I made that were more happenstance are more interesting than the ones that my brain could put together.  I really enjoyed that surprise of, oh, this leg is in there framing this or, I got low enough for this, all this was in the frame.

    One example of this came at the end of a Bears football game in which running back Matt Forté ran for over two hundred yards.“I knew I had to rush out on to the field and get some sort of post-game Matt Forté. photo.”

    Scott Strazzante/ Chicago Tribune

    Second version of the meeting between Matt Forte and Steve Smith. Photographer Scott Strazzante was able to line up the image after the media cleared.

    After finding Forté mid-field with Steve Smith of the Carolina Panthers, surrounded by other media, Strazzante reached around another photographer to get the shot of the players together ( at left ) without looking through the viewfinder. “Matt Forte’s entire head was obliterated by sun, and then people kind of cleared out and then I moved over and I stepped into the correct exposure and I shot it with my eye. “

    “I went back and I compared like the photo I took just kind of reaching down which I thought was a super creative and interesting, I really liked it and then I looked at the photo that my mind put together and it was just this boring expected newspaper image. It’s like what I’ve been trained over the years to make.”

     

    “I have this kind of schizophrenic line in my work where I have my creative, out-of-control photographs from the iPhone or “shooting from the hip”. Then when I’m shooting through my-- with my eye, with my brain, sometimes I get trapped in this newspaper-world of all these years of expectations of editors telling me ‘the horizon can’t be crooked’ or ‘it has to be in focus’.”

     “These things that have been ingrained in my head for years and years that I sometimes have a hard time mentally breaking through with that, and I feel I have all this freedom when I’m shooting for my blog that sometimes I forget to put into my daily work because my editors at the Tribune, they’re almost constantly telling me,  Scott,  please, be as creative with your daily assignment, as you are with your blog work because we like that.”

    Scott Strazzante / Chicago Tribune

    Photograph taken with Hipstamatic on an iPhone.

    Scott Strazzante/Chicago Tribune

    Maywood Park Racetrack in Melrose Park, IL

     Strazzante borrowed his daughters iPhone on a family trip last year and was quickly hooked.

    “In December I got my own iPhone and then it slowly replaced my professional cameras as my street photography weapon of choice.  Then I started doing Instagram, and now I’ve completely stopped doing street photography with my normal camera. Now I just use the iPhone exclusively because I really just love the Instagram community and it’s been really a fun thing for me.”

     “I feel that I have the right to photograph anyone on the street I want...but there will be some photographs that I won’t published because I just think they are almost cruel.  So there are definitely some photographs I won’t publish,  but there’s no photograph I won’t shoot because I just don’t know how it will turn out.”

     

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    Scott Strazzante/Chicago Tribune

    Shooting from the Hip street photography in Chicago, IL.

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  • Puff up that chest: Indian Army recruitment drive

    Raminder Pal Singh / EPA

    A prospective recruit has his chest measured as part of a fitness test during an Indian Army recruitment drive on the outskirts of Amritsar, India, on Aug. 6.

    Raminder Pal Singh / EPA

    Prospective recruits run during a fitness test for an Indian Army recruitment drive on the outskirts of Amritsar, India, on Aug. 6.

    Raminder Pal Singh / EPA

    Prospective recruits run for a fitness test during an Indian Army recruitment drive on the outskirts of Amritsar, India, on Aug. 6.

    Raminder Pal Singh / EPA

    Prospective recruits jump to grab the bars for a fitness test during an Indian Army recruitment drive on the outskirts of Amritsar, India, on Aug. 6.

     

  • Russian PM Dmitry Medvedev takes his cabinet on a railway journey

    Dmitry Astakhov / Government Press Service via RIA Novosti - AP

    Russian Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev, center, holds a cabinet meeting to discuss railway ticket pricing on a train leaving Omsk on Aug 6, 2012. Deputy prime minister Arkady Dvorkovich is at left and Enegy Minister Alexander Novak at right.

    Dmitry Astakhov / Government Press Service via RIA Novosti - AP

    Russian Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev visits a railway museum in the village of Tpoki in Siberia on Aug. 6, 2012.

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  • Ceremonies mark 67th anniversary of Hiroshima atomic bomb attack

    Kimimasa Mayama / EPA

    A survivor of the Hiroshima atomic bomb offers a prayer for victims of the world's first atomic bombing at Hiroshima Peace Memorial Park in Hiroshima, western Japan, on August 6, 2012.

    Arata Yamamoto, NBC News reports from Tokyo — As dignitaries from 71 countries joined a crowd of 50,000 on Monday to mark the 67th anniversary of the Hiroshima atomic bomb attack, Japanese officials vowed to revamp energy policies in the wake of the devastating Fukushima nuclear accident.

    On Aug. 6, 1945, about 140,000 people were killed by an American atomic bomb that hastened the end of World War II.  Another blast in Nagasaki three days later killed 70,000 more. Read the full story.

    Yasuyoshi Chiba / AFP - Getty Images

    Paper lantern floats are released into the water during a ceremony for the victims of the atomic bomb in Hiroshima at Ibirapuera park in Sao Paulo, Brazil, on August 5, 2012. The ceremony was synchronized at the same time as 8:15 am Japanese time - the hour that the bomb exploded over Hiroshima 67 years ago. According to the Brazil Hibakusha Association for Peace, 115 victims are said to live in Brazil.

    A peaceful gathering in Hiroshima, Japan, as the city commemorates the 67th anniversary of the atomic bomb that was dropped there during World War II. NBCNews.com's Dara Brown reports.

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