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 | | From: | Tom Wheeler | | Subject: | ing. J Carter pres and wife. 10:06 | | Date: | Thu, 20 Jan 2005 11:13:22 -0500 |
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 | lat 20=B0 s. long 58=B08' sun 14720664km moon 396162 25=B04' n. 64=B0 28' e.
irs1a or aaccubesat
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 | | From: | Tom R Wheeler | | Subject: | Re: ing. J Carter pres and wife. 10:06 | | Date: | Thu, 20 Jan 2005 12:46:36 -0500 |
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 | a.u. distance to sun. 92,955,806 miles or 149,597,870 km kilometers. speed of light. 186,000 miles a second. go to moon and back in 3 seconds.
light years about 5.88 trillion miles. 800 times bigger then our solor system our nearest galaxsy is 2.2^6 million miles light years from earth.
10^18 =3D(follow by 18 zeros.) declination 0=B0to90=B0 right ascension. 1 hr=3D15=B0 24 hr =3D 23,9345 solrmean hr.
way to go bush I know f.u. lowtuc and uj mad mars marathon for lowtuc sick and tired this wek dudes them 10 beers we;ll u know. gives e a sniffle. oh I am lowtuc bike rider. just make some sence of this all here. looking from aau satilite aaucubeat one from webtv. could not move it. :>) your (_!_) my (!). from bike riding. down to 230 pounds from 240 pounds.
or contact. e-mail. WheelerpaintingTW@webtv.net
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 | | From: | Tom Wheeler | | Subject: | Re: ing. J Carter pres and wife. 10:06 | | Date: | Thu, 20 Jan 2005 12:20:01 -0500 |
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 | StarDate: January 20, 2005 Dragging Space=A0 When Earth turns on its axis, everything on its surface and in the skies above it gets pulled along for the ride. That's because they're held in place by gravity. But the ride doesn't end at the fringes of the atmosphere. Earth's gravity also pulls along space itself. Albert Einstein's theories of relativity describe gravity as a warp in the fabric of the universe. This effect was first observed during a solar eclipse in the early 20th century. Astronomers measured the positions of stars that popped into view near the Sun. The positions were off by a tiny amount from what they should have been. That's because the Sun's gravity bent the light from the more-distant stars, making them appear to shift position by a tiny amount. Relativity also suggests that any rotating object should twist the space around it -- an effect called frame-dragging. Astronomers have seen this effect in massive, compact objects like black holes. Earth's gravity is MUCH weaker than that of any black hole, so the effect is tougher to measure. But a few months ago a team of scientists measured it by carefully tracking the positions of two satellites. They found that Earth's effect on the space around it pulls the satellites forward by about six feet per year -- just what Einstein's equations would predict. Another satellite should provide a better measurement of the effect, giving scientists a better understanding of our planet's "draggy" gravity. ```````````````~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~sun moves about a 100 miles every 6 8 minutes. or something rat. math. just a guest now.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
What is the Sun's place in the Milky Way?=A0 The Sun and our solar system lie in the "thin disk" of our galaxy -- the collection of younger and middle-aged stars that forms the familiar spiral arms of the Milky Way. We lie in a band called the Orion-Cygnus arm, about 27,000 light-years from galactic center and 20,000 light-years from the outer edge.
StarDate: June 10, 2004 Phoebe=A0 In Greek mythology, Phoebe was one of the Titans -- the giants who ruled the world before the gods of Olympus. Her name means "brilliant." Phoebe might not feel too honored by a solar-system object that bears her name: one of the moons of Saturn. It's small and dark -- and it may darken the faces of a couple of other moons as well. Phoebe is almost 35 times farther from Saturn than our moon is from Earth. It's only about 130 miles in diameter. And it's as dark as chimney soot. These bare facts don't paint a very interesting picture of Phoebe. But a couple of other items are a little more intriguing. One is that Phoebe orbits Saturn in the opposite direction from its other major moons. That may mean that Phoebe started out as an asteroid, but was captured by Saturn's powerful gravity when it passed close to the planet. Another is that some of Phoebe's dark material may coat the surfaces of two other moons, Iapetus and Hyperion. Meteorite impacts may blast some of Phoebe's surface material into space, where it falls on to the two other moons, which are closer to Saturn. So far, our best views of Phoebe are from Voyager 2, which photographed the moon from more than a million miles away. But the view is about to get a whole lot better. The Cassini spacecraft is scheduled to sweep within about 1300 miles of Phoebe tomorrow -- the craft's first close encounter in a four-year exploration of the Saturn system.
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