Gardaí are appealing for witnesses after a fatal road traffic collision in Mayo on Wednesday. The collision took place on Humbert Way at around 11:50pm.
| UPDATED: 18:55, Thu, Mar 11, 2021
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His wound was sustained in custody, the Met confirmed. The man, who is in his 40s, has since been returned to the police station. The Met said: The suspect was taken to a hospital for treatment to a head injury sustained while in custody.
However, she died just five and a half hours later at Wythenshawe hospital.
Following a post-mortem Manchester University NHS Trust, which runs the hospital, carried out its own investigation into Evelyn’s death.
Dr Lucy Hartley, who was part of the investigating team, told the inquest that if Evelyn s care had been better it was likely she would have survived.
Evelyn s death sparked an investigation into the NHS Trust (Image: Emma Porter) It is the view of the trust that but for the care issues identified Evelyn’s death could have been avoided
Dr Hartley, from Manchester University NHS Trust
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Shape of Star Explosions
When massive stars end their lives in fiery explosions called supernovae, their ashes fly outward to form expanding clouds of debris. While these clouds may look roughly spherical, astronomers think that star explosions are in fact lopsided events in which different amounts of material shoot outward in different directions.
Now, astronomers have a new tool to better understand the asymmetrical shapes of supernova explosions, and thus how stars explode in the first place. An instrument called “WIRC+Pol,” located at Caltech’s 200-inch Hale Telescope at Palomar Observatory, has delivered its first science results, which show that a supernova called SN 2018hna exploded in a shape more like an ellipse than a sphere, similar to the well-studied supernova remnant called SN 1987A.