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| "Amateurs pursue next great discovery" | 31 Jan 2007 23:39 GMT | 2 |
http://www.cnn.com/2007/TECH/space/01/15/virtual.astronomy.ap/index.html "Amateur astronomers pursue next great discovery" POSTED: 10:36 a.m. EST, January 15, 2007
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| Brain Worms!- Don't eat at any of those Taco Trucks! | 31 Jan 2007 23:18 GMT | 7 |
Pigs eating sh.t given off by Coffee Boy self cleaning underwear are spreading diseases that now threaten the entire human race! http://www.worldnetdaily.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=53761 Also mysterious threads popping out of pussy never-healing sores. Darla had
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| Formation Of A Star | 31 Jan 2007 22:53 GMT | 2 |
Is there any known evidence of the formation of a star? For i.e. Video tape evidence of space (visually empty) to the formation of a light producing object.
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| AUSTRALIA TO SWALLOW UNPALATABLE RECYCLED WATER | 31 Jan 2007 21:52 GMT | 1 |
... Welcome my friends to real world : ... First, Australia Mining Pioneer, Sir Turcaud, is continuously barred from returning to Australia & to bring that terrible DDD to an
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| The Scenario... John Connor Son and the Green Knight | 31 Jan 2007 20:16 GMT | 2 |
The Scenario... John Connor Son and the Green Knight It's just past midnight in an upstate New York town. In the loft of a windmill, a witchy woman begins to work her magic. Hell hath no fury like a woman scorned, and it is to hell that she turns:
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| Tempel Tuttle Particles of Life | 31 Jan 2007 19:50 GMT | 20 |
We keep talking comets gave life to Earth. Than I say the comet Tempel Tuttle is our life giver. We go through its tail often and see its debris as shooting stars. In this post I see those particles as the building blocks of life. Its nice to know the earth's orbit and the
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| Web Cam Imaging and Registax | 31 Jan 2007 18:22 GMT | 5 |
I have started using a web cam initially for imaging the Moon using Registax software. Last night I obtained a really good video image of the crater Plato. Unfortunately there are just over 10000 individual frames and Registax can not process over that number.
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| Diffraction though an aperture with a rounded edge. | 31 Jan 2007 12:15 GMT | 9 |
For many applications you want to limit or remove the *diffracted* light though an aperture, so that the light arriving at the imaging plane is more closely described by the geometrical optics approximation.
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| A simple request for an answer | 31 Jan 2007 11:37 GMT | 2 |
I am no mathmetician but perhaps someone could help answer a question from an old fool but here is a question about mapping the galaxy using self-replicating robots. Assuming we send 1 probe initally:
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| US President Now Agrees With Profound Earth Science Team Officers | 31 Jan 2007 07:26 GMT | 10 |
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii; format=flowed Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit nightbat wrote While the clueless Saul, duckies, and auk coffeeboys
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| More Troubling Planetary News | 31 Jan 2007 07:25 GMT | 1 |
nightbat wrote While the planet reels from daylight seeable passing comets, possible incoming massive asteroids, and man made global warming, the disturbed weather patterns persists reflecting same.
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| An Unusaul Astronomer | 31 Jan 2007 06:40 GMT | 7 |
One of the most successful astronomers, Milton Humason, was best known for measuring the speed at which stars are moving away from each other. He was never formally trained as an astronomer. He was a donkey driver who used to stop by the Mount Wilson observatory in California on his
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| Gordon Novel & Jack Sarfatti: Strange Bedfellows | 31 Jan 2007 01:13 GMT | 1 |
"Jack Sarfatti" <sarfatti@pacbell.net> wrote: Gordon is the American "Riley, Ace of Spies." Gordon and I are part of the elite HIA (deep inside CIA) set into motion in the early 1950's
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| PROPHECIES OF NOSTRADAMUS CLEARLY POINTING TO COMING EVENTS | 30 Jan 2007 22:24 GMT | 9 |
Kind forward of some post ***************************** Recently I was reading in the original some of the Nostradamus' Quatrains and with the help of some people 's book well versed on
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| Basic newcomer questions... | 30 Jan 2007 21:48 GMT | 6 |
I've had some 15 x 70 binoculars (strathspey) for a couple of weeks or so now. Enjoying seeing the sky in much greater detail. I've been trying to find Saturn. I was looking in the southern sky at between 12:30 and 1am this morning. According to Stellarium, Saturn
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