Showing posts with label Space. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Space. Show all posts
Thursday, September 10, 2015
Planet X Accidentally Disclosed by NASA At Recent Conference
At What Point Do People Take Their Heads Out Of The Sand?
Is A Second Solar System Other Than The One We Know Of Orbiting Our Sun?
In a word: Yes. Contrary to those who want to yell “Conspiracy Theory,’ or point fingers and laugh, the United States learned as early as 1953 with one of our first infrared telescopes that we have an inbound bogey, or bogey’s I should say. Planet X is far more than just one massive planet.
It just happens to be the outermost planet within a smaller solar system that is orbiting a dwarf star.
You see, it has always been a well known fact that our solar system was a bit “different” than other solar systems, because we were not a binary system, meaning a solar system with two starts, once of which is typically a dwarf star. As it turns out, we’re not so different.
In the first video below, you will see an unmistakable giant sphere in the heavens… one that with current astrological maps show is not there.
So what is it then?
As I said, scientists are well aware that many other documents solar systems contain two stars: A primary star, much like our own sun, and then a much smaller one, known as a dwarf star.
More http://b4in.info/clp9
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Saturday, June 27, 2015
Supercomputer Model Shows Planet Making Waves In Nearby Debris Disk
A new NASA supercomputer simulation of the planet and debris disk around the nearby star Beta Pictoris reveals that the planet’s motion drives spiral waves throughout the disk, a phenomenon that causes collisions among the orbiting debris.
Patterns in the collisions and the resulting dust appear to account for many observed features that previous research has been unable to fully explain.
These images compare a view of Beta Pictoris in scattered light as seen by the Hubble Space Telescope (top) with a similar view constructed from data in the SMACK simulation (red overlay, bottom).
The X pattern in the Hubble image forms as a result of a faint secondary dust disk inclined to the main debris disk.
Previous simulations were unable to reproduce this feature, but the SMACK model replicates the overall pattern because it captures the three-dimensional distribution of the collisions responsible for making the dust.
More with Video http://bit.ly/1KhGC90
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Wednesday, June 17, 2015
Why Has NASA Announced That A Meteor Is Not Going To Hit The Earth In September?
Internet buzz about a giant meteor that is going to strike our planet in September has become so intense that NASA has been forced to issue a statement publicly denying that it is going to happen.
NASA insists that the agency knows of “no asteroid or comet currently on a collision course with Earth”, and that “no large object is likely to strike the Earth any time in the next several hundred years”.
To be honest, NASA should perhaps hold off on making such bold statements concerning what will happen in the future considering the fact that the Chelyabinsk meteor that exploded over Russia in 2013 took them totally by surprise.
In any event, what we do know is that our region of space is absolutely packed with meteors and asteroids. At this point, approximately 10,000 major near earth objects have been discovered by scientists, and about 10 percent of them are one kilometer or larger in size. If any of those big ones were to hit us, we would be looking at another Tunguska event or worse.
Very large meteors have struck our planet before, and they will hit us again. It is only a matter of time.
More http://bit.ly/1CdwZSg
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Sunday, May 17, 2015
New Theories About Dark Matter
Tom Broadhurst, the Ikerbasque researcher in the Department of Theoretical Physics of the UPV/EHU, together with Sandor Molnar of the National Taiwan University and visiting Ikerbasque researcher at the UPV/EHU in 2013, have conducted a simulation that explains the collision between two clusters of galaxies. Clusters of galaxies are the biggest objects that exist in the universe. They are collections of hundreds of thousands of galaxies pulled together by gravity.
In general, galaxy clusters grow in size by merging with each other to become increasingly larger. Gravitational forces cause them to slowly come together over time despite the expansion of the universe. The system known as “El Gordo”, the biggest known cluster of galaxies, is in turn the result of the collision between two large clusters. It was found that the collision process compresses the gas within each cluster to very high temperatures so that it is shining in the Xray region of the spectrum.
In the Xray spectrum this gas cloud is comet shaped with two long tails stretching between the dense cores of the two clusters of galaxies. This distinctive configuration has allowed the researchers to establish the relative speed of the collision, which is extreme (~2200km/second), as it puts it at the limit of what is allowed by current theory for dark matter.
More http://bit.ly/1KdsFtX
'via Blog this'
Tom Broadhurst, the Ikerbasque researcher in the Department of Theoretical Physics of the UPV/EHU, together with Sandor Molnar of the National Taiwan University and visiting Ikerbasque researcher at the UPV/EHU in 2013, have conducted a simulation that explains the collision between two clusters of galaxies. Clusters of galaxies are the biggest objects that exist in the universe. They are collections of hundreds of thousands of galaxies pulled together by gravity.
In general, galaxy clusters grow in size by merging with each other to become increasingly larger. Gravitational forces cause them to slowly come together over time despite the expansion of the universe. The system known as “El Gordo”, the biggest known cluster of galaxies, is in turn the result of the collision between two large clusters. It was found that the collision process compresses the gas within each cluster to very high temperatures so that it is shining in the Xray region of the spectrum.
In the Xray spectrum this gas cloud is comet shaped with two long tails stretching between the dense cores of the two clusters of galaxies. This distinctive configuration has allowed the researchers to establish the relative speed of the collision, which is extreme (~2200km/second), as it puts it at the limit of what is allowed by current theory for dark matter.
More http://bit.ly/1KdsFtX
'via Blog this'
Saturday, May 16, 2015
New Theories About Dark Matter
Tom Broadhurst, the Ikerbasque researcher in the Department of Theoretical Physics of the UPV/EHU, together with Sandor Molnar of the National Taiwan University and visiting Ikerbasque researcher at the UPV/EHU in 2013, have conducted a simulation that explains the collision between two clusters of galaxies. Clusters of galaxies are the biggest objects that exist in the universe. They are collections of hundreds of thousands of galaxies pulled together by gravity.
In general, galaxy clusters grow in size by merging with each other to become increasingly larger. Gravitational forces cause them to slowly come together over time despite the expansion of the universe. The system known as “El Gordo”, the biggest known cluster of galaxies, is in turn the result of the collision between two large clusters. It was found that the collision process compresses the gas within each cluster to very high temperatures so that it is shining in the Xray region of the spectrum.
In the Xray spectrum this gas cloud is comet shaped with two long tails stretching between the dense cores of the two clusters of galaxies. This distinctive configuration has allowed the researchers to establish the relative speed of the collision, which is extreme (~2200km/second), as it puts it at the limit of what is allowed by current theory for dark matter.
More http://bit.ly/1KdsFtX
'via Blog this'
Tom Broadhurst, the Ikerbasque researcher in the Department of Theoretical Physics of the UPV/EHU, together with Sandor Molnar of the National Taiwan University and visiting Ikerbasque researcher at the UPV/EHU in 2013, have conducted a simulation that explains the collision between two clusters of galaxies. Clusters of galaxies are the biggest objects that exist in the universe. They are collections of hundreds of thousands of galaxies pulled together by gravity.
In general, galaxy clusters grow in size by merging with each other to become increasingly larger. Gravitational forces cause them to slowly come together over time despite the expansion of the universe. The system known as “El Gordo”, the biggest known cluster of galaxies, is in turn the result of the collision between two large clusters. It was found that the collision process compresses the gas within each cluster to very high temperatures so that it is shining in the Xray region of the spectrum.
In the Xray spectrum this gas cloud is comet shaped with two long tails stretching between the dense cores of the two clusters of galaxies. This distinctive configuration has allowed the researchers to establish the relative speed of the collision, which is extreme (~2200km/second), as it puts it at the limit of what is allowed by current theory for dark matter.
More http://bit.ly/1KdsFtX
'via Blog this'
Wednesday, May 6, 2015
Rumor Has It Massive ELE Coming In Sept. — Asteroid Strike
Are there any truth to the rumors? You decide.
In Earth’s last 540 million years over fifty percent of the animal species on planet Earth was wiped out at least 5 different times from a mass extinction event according to research posted on Wikipedia.
If true, it just goes to show one how frail life on this planet really is.
After all as it sits, in 2015, 16,306 species are considered endangered by extinction and more species face extinction every year as man has literally destroyed the planet in a certain sense.
And as you may know it’s no secret that we are long overdue for an extinction level event (ELE). Whether it’s from a nuclear war, a supervolcano eruption, or and asteroid impact, technically speaking, our days are numbered.
More http://bit.ly/1P0cnbe
'via Blog this'
Are there any truth to the rumors? You decide.
In Earth’s last 540 million years over fifty percent of the animal species on planet Earth was wiped out at least 5 different times from a mass extinction event according to research posted on Wikipedia.
If true, it just goes to show one how frail life on this planet really is.
After all as it sits, in 2015, 16,306 species are considered endangered by extinction and more species face extinction every year as man has literally destroyed the planet in a certain sense.
And as you may know it’s no secret that we are long overdue for an extinction level event (ELE). Whether it’s from a nuclear war, a supervolcano eruption, or and asteroid impact, technically speaking, our days are numbered.
More http://bit.ly/1P0cnbe
'via Blog this'
Tuesday, May 5, 2015
Key Facts About SpaceX Crewed Dragon’s First Test Flight May 6 – Watch Live
The first critical test flight of SpaceX’s crewed Dragon that will soon launch American astronauts back to orbit and the International Space Station (ISS) from American soil now less than two days away.
The test flight – called the Pad Abort Test – is slated for the early morning hours of Wednesday, May 6, if all goes well. The test vehicle will reach roughly a mile in altitude (5000 feet, 1500 meters) and last about only about 90 seconds in duration from beginning to end.
More http://bit.ly/1ENNE20
'via Blog this'
The first critical test flight of SpaceX’s crewed Dragon that will soon launch American astronauts back to orbit and the International Space Station (ISS) from American soil now less than two days away.
The test flight – called the Pad Abort Test – is slated for the early morning hours of Wednesday, May 6, if all goes well. The test vehicle will reach roughly a mile in altitude (5000 feet, 1500 meters) and last about only about 90 seconds in duration from beginning to end.
More http://bit.ly/1ENNE20
'via Blog this'
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