Any stargazers out there...?

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  • mikadonovan
    Senior Tech

    Site Contributor
    2,500+ Posts
    • May 2008
    • 2931

    #181
    Re: Any stargazers out there...?

    Originally posted by NeoMatrix
    If I answer this with my own totally full quantum explanation I risk literally standing science on its head.
    Pretty sure we're safe. I doubt many actual particle physicists frequent this copier repair forum. I have never heard of this "polarizes the electron-wavelet positional plane", and I am unfamiliar with this term "atomic nucleus gyration" . Still, great response. I always enjoy collaboration and discussion with people of a little higher intellect than the norm.. Keeps my poor old brain chunking along like it should, questioning everything and soaking up data.
    NEVER ASSUME ANYTHING

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    • Copier Addict
      Aging Tech

      Site Contributor
      10,000+ Posts
      • Jul 2013
      • 14813

      #182
      Re: Any stargazers out there...?

      Originally posted by emujo2
      We really need to pay attention to Neo..I found him giving a lecture....


      YouTube
      That's hilarious.

      Comment

      • mikadonovan
        Senior Tech

        Site Contributor
        2,500+ Posts
        • May 2008
        • 2931

        #183
        Re: Any stargazers out there...?

        After looking over hundreds of Mars photos from all the Mars rovers, I found a really good one from Curiosity showing some funky stuff (not rocks). I have cropped an are of the original pic and highlighted some of the weird stuff. I downloaded the original image directly from NASA. They usually obfuscate the stuff they don't want you to see, but there are so many anomalies they miss stuff. I will include the link to the original image. If you check it out, you must use the "download" button to get the full image. The one that you immediately see has had the right and left side cut off (thanks NASA). These things were found on the left side of the downloaded image. Original image size is 69.8M.
        Curiosity Rover's View of Alluring Martian Geology Ahead – NASA’s Mars Exploration Program
        Attached Files
        NEVER ASSUME ANYTHING

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        • emujo2
          Service Manager

          1,000+ Posts
          • Mar 2017
          • 1579

          #184
          Re: Any stargazers out there...?

          Why would it amaze you to find stuff, that looks like it was manufactured, on Mars..We've been going there for 30 + years, and there have been numerous failed landing attempts..Even the successful landings generate trash with heat shields, drag shuts, and other re entry items..We tend to leave our trash wherever we go..e

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          • mikadonovan
            Senior Tech

            Site Contributor
            2,500+ Posts
            • May 2008
            • 2931

            #185
            Re: Any stargazers out there...?

            It amazes me because it is amazing. We live in a universe with 100 billion galaxies, and each galaxy full of 100 billion stars and even more planets than that. Logic dictates WE ARE NOT, NOR EVER HAVE BEEN ALONE IN THIS UNIVERSE This image was taken with the Hirise camera on the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter (image also downloaded directly from NASA). The second image is a zoom image of the first. I cropped the area in red. This is one of many structure-like anomalies found on Mars over the years. Probably not a heat shield or debris. Not that any of this makes the news. The fact is, most people really don't want to know this stuff. They prefer to live on this side of the curtain, and that's OK. Just not OK for me. When I first started researching this stuff, I was the consummate critic citing 'bullshit" for ALL of it. After digging a little deeper, my view has relaxed a little bit giving me a more honest assessment of this phenomenon, not so much affected by mainstream sensibilities (which are incorrect sometimes).
            Attached Files
            Last edited by mikadonovan; 12-04-2019, 08:28 PM.
            NEVER ASSUME ANYTHING

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            • Copier Addict
              Aging Tech

              Site Contributor
              10,000+ Posts
              • Jul 2013
              • 14813

              #186
              Re: Any stargazers out there...?

              Originally posted by mikadonovan
              After looking over hundreds of Mars photos from all the Mars rovers, I found a really good one from Curiosity showing some funky stuff (not rocks). I have cropped an are of the original pic and highlighted some of the weird stuff. I downloaded the original image directly from NASA. They usually obfuscate the stuff they don't want you to see, but there are so many anomalies they miss stuff. I will include the link to the original image. If you check it out, you must use the "download" button to get the full image. The one that you immediately see has had the right and left side cut off (thanks NASA). These things were found on the left side of the downloaded image. Original image size is 69.8M.
              The items in the red circles look very similar to the rest of the shale like rocks strewn about the photo.

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              • emujo2
                Service Manager

                1,000+ Posts
                • Mar 2017
                • 1579

                #187
                Re: Any stargazers out there...?

                People just love to believe...Remember the "face" on Mars? And the latest, Omua-mua (spelling), this chuck of rock changed direction slightly and accelerated as it left our solar system, it had to be alien space ship..There's no lack of TV specials that cater to this..Machinery on the Moon, Alien autopsy, Ancient Invaders ect. No one would be happier than me to find other life in our galaxy or even proof of it else where in the universe (although I do believe that microbial life will be found on other planets in our own solar system..) but actual intelligent life, capable of traveling between the stars, this is still the stuff of good (and bad Sci-Fi). E

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                • FrohnB
                  Service Manager

                  Site Contributor
                  1,000+ Posts
                  • Jul 2017
                  • 1919

                  #188
                  Re: Any stargazers out there...?

                  NASA’s Parker probe shows sun's rogue plasma waves and magnetic isles | Science News


                  Parker Solar Probe has completed three of 24 planned passes through never-before-explored parts of the Sun's atmosphere with it's latest pass at a mere 15 million miles from the suns surface. It's last expected pass distance will be about 3.7 million miles from the surface, closer to the sun than any mission ever before. It has captured plasma speeding away from the sun at 311,000 mph, and then in an instant recording speeds of plasma moving at 620,000 mph sustained for a couple of minutes over and over and over, showing that the sun is Hectic and unpredictable as all hell at all times!

                  Good article to read.
                  Omertà

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                  • theengel
                    Service Manager

                    1,000+ Posts
                    • Nov 2011
                    • 1784

                    #189
                    Re: Any stargazers out there...?

                    Originally posted by mikadonovan
                    They usually obfuscate the stuff they don't want you to see,
                    It's all there for you to see, if you want to look at it. They don't hide anything.

                    Anyway, this doesn't look at all manufactured. It looks like geological layers... much like the surrounding rock.

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                    • copier tech
                      Field Supervisor

                      5,000+ Posts
                      • Jan 2014
                      • 8174

                      #190
                      Re: Any stargazers out there...?

                      thumbnail_IMG_4893.jpg

                      I was sat in the garden during the summer & this tiny rock literally fell from the sky I like to think it was a meteor!?


                      Let us eat, drink, and be merry, because tomorrow we may die!

                      For all your firmware & service manual needs please visit us at:

                      www.copierfirmware.co.uk - www.printerfirmware.co.uk

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                      • theengel
                        Service Manager

                        1,000+ Posts
                        • Nov 2011
                        • 1784

                        #191
                        Re: Any stargazers out there...?

                        That is so awesome.

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                        • mikadonovan
                          Senior Tech

                          Site Contributor
                          2,500+ Posts
                          • May 2008
                          • 2931

                          #192
                          Re: Any stargazers out there...?

                          Originally posted by copier tech
                          [ATTACH=CONFIG]44303[/ATTACH]

                          I was sat in the garden during the summer & this tiny rock literally fell from the sky I like to think it was a meteor!?


                          According to Space.com, thousands of little space rocks hit the ground each year.
                          NEVER ASSUME ANYTHING

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                          • theengel
                            Service Manager

                            1,000+ Posts
                            • Nov 2011
                            • 1784

                            #193
                            Re: Any stargazers out there...?

                            It's still awesome. I don't have any, but my dad found one the size of a baseball in a river rock bed. But to have one drop right in front of you--that's cool.

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                            • mikadonovan
                              Senior Tech

                              Site Contributor
                              2,500+ Posts
                              • May 2008
                              • 2931

                              #194
                              Re: Any stargazers out there...?

                              PIA 20332 is an excellent image for finding anomalies. I found what appears to be remnants of an ancient structure on Mars. Here is the link to the original NASA image.
                              Catalog Page for PIA20332
                              Attached Files
                              NEVER ASSUME ANYTHING

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                              • NeoMatrix
                                Senior Tech.

                                2,500+ Posts
                                • Nov 2010
                                • 3513

                                #195
                                Re: Any stargazers out there...?

                                Originally posted by FrohnB
                                NASA’s Parker probe shows sun's rogue plasma waves and magnetic isles | Science News


                                Parker Solar Probe has completed three of 24 planned passes through never-before-explored parts of the Sun's atmosphere with it's latest pass at a mere 15 million miles from the suns surface. It's last expected pass distance will be about 3.7 million miles from the surface, closer to the sun than any mission ever before. It has captured plasma speeding away from the sun at 311,000 mph, and then in an instant recording speeds of plasma moving at 620,000 mph sustained for a couple of minutes over and over and over, showing that the sun is Hectic and unpredictable as all hell at all times!

                                Good article to read.
                                Re.The Sun.
                                The physical surface of the Sun is not hot. I'm informed it is about 50degC on the actual surface. Think to yourself tornado plasma field when you read about the Sun's plasma field. The center of all tornadoes/cyclones is dead calm and quite. Around the surface/center is a tremendous raging storm.

                                Scientist are going to have an involuntary bowel motion when they eventually realise they are watching the fundamental mechanics of the hydrogen atom at work.

                                It is the fundamental law of the universe in motion.
                                Delve into Fourier transforms in correlation with matrix mathematics , magic squares and cymatic principles, and you will stride leaps and bounds towards understanding how the particle universe is created out of pressure waves up on the fabric of infinite space.

                                Re. Space.
                                It is not space/time as many scientists so falsely believe ,it is just empty infinite space in all directions. Time is just the measured distance(man's rules) between two points of relative motion. For if you have no "motion" ,you have no "time".
                                Last edited by NeoMatrix; 02-22-2020, 12:54 AM.
                                Inauguration to the "AI cancel-culture" fraternity 1997...
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