The document discusses the author's passion for astronomy and their perspective as an astronomer. They describe how gazing at the night sky can be both mesmerizing yet disorienting for a common person, but astronomers find patterns and beauty in the apparent randomness. The author feels both insignificant yet profoundly significant when contemplating humanity's role in studying the vast cosmos. While some question the practical applications and funding of astronomy, the author argues it was born from curiosity to understand the heavens and continues to quench humanity's thirst for knowledge, as other once theoretical fields have revolutionized society. For the author, exploring the mechanisms that drive the universe through astronomy provides the highest pleasure.
A waterproof theory shows, that Santa Claus is real. So little boys and girls...it is time to tell the truth to your parents! Finnish version is also available on Slideshare: "Joulupukki on totta."
A waterproof theory shows, that Santa Claus is real. So little boys and girls...it is time to tell the truth to your parents! Finnish version is also available on Slideshare: "Joulupukki on totta."
A Mathematician's Journey to the Edge of the Universe: What's the Ultimate Qu...Manjunath.R -
We refer to the totality of all objects that exist in space as the "universe." It contains countless stars, galaxies, black holes, vast gas clouds, and a variety of other amazing objects. A few beliefs about how our Universe was born and how it will perish were irrevocably altered by the unexpected discovery that space is not only expanding, but expanding ever faster. Most people find it too difficult and overwhelming to consider the subject of our universe. We can identify with it. Our mind begins to stumble when the topic is brought up, and we begin to doubt one's intelligence in our search for an understanding of the Universe we live in. We spend time looking at the amazing story of how humankind's understanding of the universe has evolved, from Copernicus and Newton through Einstein, Hubble, and beyond. Detailed with the most interesting facts about the universe − this book will extend your mind for a better understanding of our intriguing cosmos whether you're an astrophysicist collecting nice pics of the night sky, a casual viewer of the constellations, or a dedicated scholar working in the field of physics and astronomy. This book takes readers on a journey through the Laws of the Cosmos to the origins and structure of the cosmos, covering the Big Bang, stellar evolution, and gravitational waves. Beginners looking for an accessible introduction to the contemporary understanding of the Universe should pick up this book. It's an interesting read that serves as a fantastic starting point for further research on any subject that grabs the reader's attention.
How Astronomy Has Changed The World
Astronomy Research Paper
I Want To Be An Astronomer
Astronomy Essay
Astronomy: A Career Essay
Reflective Essay On Astronomy
Astronomy Essay
History of Astronomy
Ancient Greek Astronomy Essay
Reflection Paper On Astronomy
Astronomy : My Goals In Life, My Dream Career
Mayan Astronomy Essay
Astronomy Observations
Astronomy Essay
Astronomy Essay
Socrates On Astronomy
Essay about Telescopes in Astronomy
Astronomy Research Paper
A Career In Astronomy
Women In Astronomy Essay
A Mathematician's Journey to the Edge of the Universe: What's the Ultimate Qu...Manjunath.R -
We refer to the totality of all objects that exist in space as the "universe." It contains countless stars, galaxies, black holes, vast gas clouds, and a variety of other amazing objects. A few beliefs about how our Universe was born and how it will perish were irrevocably altered by the unexpected discovery that space is not only expanding, but expanding ever faster. Most people find it too difficult and overwhelming to consider the subject of our universe. We can identify with it. Our mind begins to stumble when the topic is brought up, and we begin to doubt one's intelligence in our search for an understanding of the Universe we live in. We spend time looking at the amazing story of how humankind's understanding of the universe has evolved, from Copernicus and Newton through Einstein, Hubble, and beyond. Detailed with the most interesting facts about the universe − this book will extend your mind for a better understanding of our intriguing cosmos whether you're an astrophysicist collecting nice pics of the night sky, a casual viewer of the constellations, or a dedicated scholar working in the field of physics and astronomy. This book takes readers on a journey through the Laws of the Cosmos to the origins and structure of the cosmos, covering the Big Bang, stellar evolution, and gravitational waves. Beginners looking for an accessible introduction to the contemporary understanding of the Universe should pick up this book. It's an interesting read that serves as a fantastic starting point for further research on any subject that grabs the reader's attention.
How Astronomy Has Changed The World
Astronomy Research Paper
I Want To Be An Astronomer
Astronomy Essay
Astronomy: A Career Essay
Reflective Essay On Astronomy
Astronomy Essay
History of Astronomy
Ancient Greek Astronomy Essay
Reflection Paper On Astronomy
Astronomy : My Goals In Life, My Dream Career
Mayan Astronomy Essay
Astronomy Observations
Astronomy Essay
Astronomy Essay
Socrates On Astronomy
Essay about Telescopes in Astronomy
Astronomy Research Paper
A Career In Astronomy
Women In Astronomy Essay
This is a presentation on time travelling, here i mainly focused on main sub topics to understand the concept of time travelling, i.e.
1) Parallel Space
2) Paradox
3) How to travel through time
4) Evidence
#scichallenge2017 #multiverse
Multiverse - theory that says that out there may be other universes making multi universe. That means that all of us could have a twin in one of those universes.
P.S. please press the like button
The universe is full of mystery
The Truth about Manifestation, and what they don't want you to know...
Our earth is but tiny speck, in this unimaginably large universe. Great and powerful civilizations have risen, and fallen… and with these civilizations, vast amounts of knowledge have been lost.
#Ma
Can We Know the Universe The following excerpt was publ.docxhacksoni
Can We Know the Universe?
The following excerpt was published in Broca's Brain (1979).
by Carl Sagan
"Nothing is rich but the inexhaustible wealth of nature. She shows us only
surfaces, but she is a million fathoms deep." — Ralph Waldo Emerson
Science is a way of thinking much more than it is a body of knowledge.
Its goal is to find out how the world works, to seek what regularities
there may be, to penetrate the connections of things—from subnuclear
particles, which may be the constituents of all matter, to living
organisms, the human social community, and thence to the cosmos as a
whole. Our intuition is by no means an infallible guide. Our
perceptions may be distorted by training and prejudice or merely
because of the limitations of our sense organs, which, of course,
perceive directly but a small fraction of the phenomena of the world.
Even so straightforward a question as whether in the absence of friction
a pound of lead falls faster than a gram of fluff was answered
incorrectly by Aristotle and almost everyone else before the time of
Galileo. Science is based on experiment, on a willingness to challenge
old dogma, on an openness to see the universe as it really is.
Accordingly, science sometimes requires courage—at the very least the
courage to question the conventional wisdom.
Beyond this the main trick of science is to really think of something: the
shape of clouds and their occasional sharp bottom edges at the same
altitude everywhere in the sky; the formation of the dewdrop on a leaf;
the origin of a name or a word—Shakespeare, say, or "philanthropic";
the reason for human social customs—the incest taboo, for example;
how it is that a lens in sunlight can make paper burn; how a "walking
stick" got to look so much like a twig; why the Moon seems to follow us
as we walk; what prevents us from digging a hole down to the center of
the Earth; what the definition is of "down" on a spherical Earth; how it
is possible for the body to convert yesterday's lunch into today's muscle
and sinew; or how far is up—does the universe go on forever, or if it
does not, is there any meaning to the question of what lies on the other
side? Some of these questions are pretty easy. Others, especially the
last, are mysteries to which no one even today knows the answer. They
are natural questions to ask. Every culture has posed such questions in
one way or another. Almost always the proposed answers are in the
nature of "Just So Stories," attempted explanations divorced from
experiment, or even from careful comparative observations.
But the scientific cast of mind examines the world critically as if many
alternative worlds might exist, as if other things might be here which
are not. Then we are forced to ask why what we see is present and not
something else. Why are the Sun and the Moon and the planets
spheres? Why not pyramids, or cubes, or dodecahedra? Why not
irregular, jumbly shapes? Why so sym.
Thule/Haunebu: Rotating, magnetized iron ring around a sphere/gyro + 3 charged hollow spheres below.
Vril/Schumann Levitator: 2 counter rotating disks between static disk with magnetisable iron ring around it.
―Sarah Connor, Nuclear War in Parallel Quantum Universes
These entities themselves are slaves. All these entities are set up under that entity who has presented himself in the midst of the seat of power known as the Anti-Christ. This Awareness indicates this entity as having control upon this hierarchy system, intent upon gaining power and control of the earth, in order to set up his realms. These entities have great power in terms of physical and occult controls. These entities have machines which allow them to listen to the thoughts of others, which allow them to teleport. These powers these entities use comes from an understanding of the electromagnetic spectrum and the super spectrum. In these various vibratory rates there are powers that echo and reflect from one octave to another. This Awareness suggests that entities read the book by John Keel, called ‘The Eighth Tower.’ ―Cosmic Awareness Communications, 1979
Everything that surrounds us, ourselves included, can be described as macroscopic collections of fluctuations, vibrations, and oscillations in quantum mechanical fields. Matter is confined energy, bound within fields, frozen in a quantum of time. Therefore, under certain conditions (such as the coupling of hyper-frequency axial spin with hyper-frequency vibrations of electrically charged systems) the rules and special effects of quantum field behavior also apply to macroscopic physical entities (macroscopic quantum phenomena). ―NextBigFuture, If These US Navy Patents are Made Then We Are in a Star Trek World
Salvatore Cezar Pais 2017 Patent US20180229864A1: High-Frequency Gravitational Wave Generator
The thrust of this theory was a string of sixteen incredibly complex quantities (tensors: 10 for gravity and 6 for electromagnetism). A pure gravitational field can exist without an electromagnetic field, but a pure electromagnetic field cannot exist without an accompanying gravitational field. An electric field created in a coil induces a magnetic field at right angles to the first; each of these fields represents one plane of space. But since there are three planes of space, there must be a third field, perhaps a gravitational one. By hooking up electromagnetic generators so as to produce a magnetic pulse, it might be possible to produce this third field through the principle of resonance. ―Einstein's Unified Field Theory, The Philadelphia Experiment
And now imagine a technology that allows you to move through space and time like the transporter in the Star Trek movies and which is so genuinely simple and inexpensive to manufacture, that every human being could afford it. ―HOLOFEELING 1996
Teleport system US20060071122A1
Project Pegasus: Portal Tech
They Live: Gravity Lens
Event Horizon: EM-Field+Gravitons
Mocomi TimePass The Magazine - Issue 34Mocomi Kids
Are you curious about black holes, asteroids and all things related to space? Mocomi TimePass Magazine Issue 34 is just for you! Open it up and get exploring! Every issue has something fun for everyone! In each magazine you will find folktales, trivia, puzzles, health tips, jokes and much more!
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If you assume a girl is perfect only because she's super cute and is into you, you may be setting yourself up for some disaster later on. Learn More: http://mindpersuasion.com/kundalini.
Learn how to use the law of attraction for your success and wealth and development of the life you want.
Learn how to use this powerful method to your advantage and use to law of attraction today.
1. I am an Astronomer…..
You look above and gaze at the bosom of the colossal sky and you are lost! It is an unknown territory,
you are so much among the strangers, there are just too many unfamiliar things, the milky white patch,
small circular and elliptical fudges, the twinkling stars and the almost identical looking planets (which
you can hardly differentiate).They are all so random, disoriented, with little or no pattern whatsoever.
These are exactly the sentiments which reflects in the following anecdote:
One night, Mirza Ghalib was lying in his courtyard, gazing at the sky. After few moments of looking
and frustration, referring to God, he said, “When you do stuffs without anyone’s advice, you always
end up in such disarray and being so disoriented”.
Well, any common man would think that way, for they do not understand the Heavens. Little did
Ghalib knew of the patterns in the sky, the beauty in that randomness and the infinite pleasure of
finding things out. When I look up at the sky, I get lost too, for all the different reason. I do not lose my
way because I do not understand them, because I find myself in an unknown territory. I lose myself
because I am mesmerized by the beauty of the randomness, I am hypnotized by the exotic patterns out
there, for I can identify them. No matter what time it is or what part of the year I am in, when I look up
I always find myself among a few friends. Some gods, some sea monster, some warriors and sometimes
a Princess!
And not just that, I can make my own pictures, almost anything that I want. Just connect the
dots and there you are. The beautiful images comes out and the sky is no more just a ceiling, it comes
to life!
Tell me which branch of science can give you the pleasure of such kind at so primitive level. With one
simple instrument that nature gifted you, your eyes, you can explore that most massive thing that ever
existed. You can probe the cosmos! Think about it! Doesn’t that give you the feel of the subject? If that
can’t then nothing ever will!
Say you are looking at a star, take the brightest one, Sirius for instance. Do you realize that the photon
which just enabled you to see that star has been traveling through the interstellar medium for 8.6 years!
And in all that time it came across billions of atoms and molecules and yet it chose to interact with
nothing but the cells of your retina! Isn’t that awesome? A photon traveled for 8.6 years through the
turmoil of the space just to say hi to you! Wow...this realization always sends a shiver through my
spine! Where else can you feel such a thing?
All this fantasy of observation is just a small part of a much larger, wider subject of astronomy.
Everything is so huge, so big, the scale is so large I feel almost insignificant and yet profoundly
significant for I know we are the only species so far who are studying the subject. This always invokes
in me what I call Schrödinger feeling. Consider this, 13.72 billion light years across, 10 11 galaxies, 1022
stars, potentially trillions of planets and I live on a small rocky planet, the Pale Blue Dot...gosh I am
insignificant, we are insignificant! Consider this, 13.72 billion light years across, 1011 galaxies, 1022
stars, potentially trillions of planets, and there is one Sun, one Earth, millions of species, and yet it is us
who are studying the universe, trying to understand the mechanism that drives the cosmos...how
significant are we?
2. I feel so significant and so insignificant at the same time. This simultaneity of feeling kills me and
revives at the same instance. And it is an exotic feeling. Too deep to not to be involved in, too addictive
to resist!
All this is great if we chose to live in our cocoon, oblivious to the world. But we live in a society that
interacts and is symbiotically dependent on every member of it. Astronomy is no different. In order to
continue our quest for knowledge something has to be given to get something. Very often I come across
people who will ask me questions about this field of science. And invariably one of the question would
be about the utility of the astronomy. How it is helping the general public? Is it of any practical use?
Can we get out anything of this? And almost everyone would say, “Hey it is not that we don’t like
astronomy, we in fact love it, it’s just that I don’t see why countries should be spending billions on a
subject of fantasy!”
Well, who did ever say that astronomy was invented to help the mankind? Has any astronomer ever
said that? It was the sheer curiosity of the mankind which gave birth to this field (after all it is the
oldest branch of science for a reason). The gregariousness to understand the heavens, the way the stars
move, the way the planets wander and the way the universe works! It is the same thing that we do
today. Though, with time, like everything else the approach has changed. The way of doing things have
changed, and of course has become costly, but everyone is still in the quest of that ultimate knowledge.
All that the astronomers are trying to do is to quench the perpetual thirst of knowledge of the mankind,
in their own field. How is that different from any other field of science? May be today it looks too
much theoretical, far beyond the track to be of any significance of the mankind, but so was once the
concept of atoms and electrons. There was apparently no use of Quantum Mechanics and General
Relativity. Who needed them anyways? It was the thirst of knowledge which drove the mankind
towards them and revolutionized the entire planet. It could be the same with astronomy as well. May be
today it seems useless, but after a century or two...who knows what the scene would be! This
uncertainty in the future coupled with my zeal to understand the mechanism which drives the universe
are the persuasive enough points for me to convince me to dedicate my life to the subject!
And to everyone who ask why I study such a subject, I just have one answer,
I love to do what I do, there are no other reason and for me there is no higher pleasure.
Yes, I am an astronomer!
Ahmad Ryan