NAAA College Football Update

Recently on Nooz Buffet we compiled a list of college football teams that were undefeated heading into this weekend.

Let’s see how they did.


  • Texas upset Oaklahoma (5-1) 48-45.
  • West Virgina (5-0) racked up 509 total yards of offense in a 38-22 victory over Kansas.
  • Alabama (6-0) beat Arkansas 65-31.
  • N.C. State (5-0) beat Boston College 28-23.
  • Clemson (5-0) won 63-3 against Wake Forest.
  • The Florida Gators upset LSU (5-1) 27-19.
  • Colorado(5-0) won 28-21 in a close game against Arizona State.
  • Ohio State (6-0) beat Indianna 49-26.
  • Kentucky (5-1) lost in overtime 20-14 to Texas A&M.
  • UCF (5-0) won 48-20 over SMU.
  • Georgia (6-0) beat Vanderbuilt 41-13.
  • Notre Dame (6-0) beat Virgina Tech 45-23.


Twelve teams went in undefeated, but only nine came out perfect.

  1. UCF 5-0
  2. Georgia 6-0
  3. Notre Dame 6-0
  4. Ohio State 6-0
  5. Colorado 5-0
  6. Clemson 5-0
  7. N.C. State 5-0
  8. Alabama 6-0
  9. West Virgina 5-0

Patriots Improve To 3-2

The New England Patriots won last nights game against the Indianapolis Colts 38-24.  It looked as if the game was getting out of hand as the Patriots led 24-3 at half time, but the Colts pulled within 7 early in the fourth quarter.  With a little under ten minutes to play the patriots scored twice to finally put the game away.  The first was a 34 yard pass from Tom Brady to Josh Gordon, and then Sony Michel rushed for a 34 yard touchdown.

New England Patriots 38

Indianapolis Colts 24

Someone On Pluto Is Listening To A Radio! Well, Maybe.

Fast Radio Bursts – powerful but brief bursts of radio waves from deep space; they’re puzzling, mysterious, and the latest astronomical discovery.

CHIME is a novel radio telescope originally designed for mapping hydrogen over a portion of the universe.  CHIME collects digitized signals that are processed and used to form 3-D maps of hydrogen density, and those maps will be used to measure the expansion history of the universe.

As amazing as CHIME is, it doesn’t stop there because these signals can also pick up and detect fast, transient radio emission, which also makes CHIME a unique telescope for discovering new “Fast Radio Bursts” and monitoring pulsars.

So what did CHIME actually find?

FRB180725A (month, day, and year detected) transmitting in radio frequencies as low as 580 Megahertz, 200 MHZ lower than any FRB previously detected.  This low frequency was an indication the bursts were very bright and from a powerful source that we actually found in a galaxy 3 billion light years away!

Right now, were trying to figure out if the sources were naturally occurring or artificial.  If they’re artificial…….there could be an alien listening to a radio.  Well, maybe, but definitely not on Pluto.



Check back for new and updated information about CHIME and FRB.