Ever since the James Webb Space Telescope began sending incredible photos of the universe back to earth, scientists, clergy, and ordinary citizens have been awestruck at the sharpness and the detail of images from the $10 billion telescope.
French physicist Ćtienne Klein used his time on the telescope to image our closest stellar neighbor, Proxima Centauri.
Photo de Proxima du Centaure, lāĆ©toile la plus proche du Soleil, situĆ©e Ć 4,2 annĆ©e-lumiĆØre de nous.
Elle a ƩtƩ prise par le JWST.
Ce niveau de dĆ©tailsā¦ Un nouveau monde se dĆ©voile jour aprĆØs jour. pic.twitter.com/88UBbHDQ7Z
— Etienne KLEIN (@EtienneKlein) July 31, 2022
The image garnered thousands of ālikesā and retweets. āThis level of detail,ā Klein wrote. āA new world is revealed day after day.ā
But what āworldā was revealed? As it turns out, Klein had tweeted out a photo of a slice of sausage.
Vice:
But a few days later, Klein revealed that the photo he tweeted was not the work of the worldās most powerful space telescope, as he had in fact tweeted a slice of chorizo sausage.
āAccording to contemporary cosmology, no object belonging to Spanish charcuterie exists anywhere but on Earth,ā he said after apologising for tricking so many people.
āLike an idiot, I got screwed,ā tweeted one French user. āSame,ā replied another, āthe source was so credibleā¦ā
No one should feel embarrassed about being tricked. Klein was trying to make a point about āfake newsā and was more successful than he could have imagined.
An appeal to authority is usually considered fallacious in academic circles, but it happens every day in political life. āSome studyā claims this or that, or āthis expertā supports a particular point of view. Itās all part of the fabric of propaganda weāre bombarded with every day.
Thatās not to say that all appeals to authority are bogus. But great care should be taken before accepting them.
Gizmodo:
Kleinās edible stint comes weeks after the first images captured by JWST were widely shared online, with people marveling at the beauty of the cosmos captured in detail by the worldās biggest space telescope. At the same time, things of cosmic nature are very easily misinterpreted, and itās easy to exaggerate events taking place outside of our planet. Just follow click-bait headlines that warn of incoming asteroids, menacing black holes, and violent solar eruptions.
Itās a hilarious joke, and blowhards should leave Klein alone. His intention with the little hoax was to advise people to proceed with caution when absorbing information about celestial objects. And that perhaps sometimes what you may see as a burning ball of gas located about four light years away from Earth is nothing more than some sliced pork sausage.
Klein is no stranger to controversy. In 2017, the science popularizer was accused of plagiarizing more than a dozen scientists, philosophers, and writers in books and articles. He says he was later cleared, but no report has ever been issued.
Story cited here.