The Optical Man







The galaxy
---A composite photo of the galaxy---
Hubble Ultra Deep Field (HUDF), the million-second-long exposure (11.57 days)

Representation of galaxy
The Copernicus satellite, otherwise known as the Orbiting Astronomical Observatory 3 (OAO-3), obtained
a series of high resolution far- (900-1560 Å) and near- (1650-3150 Å) ultraviolet
spectral scans of 551 objects, primarily bright stars, from 1972 to 1981.

Compare ground and HST views
---Ground and HST views (Cluster M4 white dwarfs)---
HST sees: M16: Stars Upon Pillars
---M16: Stars Upon Pillars---
HST at work
---THE Hubble Space Telescope (HST)---
Some of what HST sees
---Planetary Nebula---
HST Wide Field Planetary Camera VLT Astronomical Images - Index The Multimission Archive at STScI
Hale-Boppin
---Comet Hale-Bopp Image---Location: European Southern Observatory, La Silla, Chile---

Is this a dirty snowball??? NOT!!!
---Comet Halley nucleous---
Hale-Bopp from Arizona
---Hale-Bopp from Arizona---
All 9 planets and the sun of our Solar System
---A composite photo of all 9 planets and the sun of our Solar System---
Earth Observation
Movie Studio
'THE' timeline of the 'experts' NASA... UFO's ???
The International Space Station
---The International Space Station---
Mir
---The Mir Space Station---
The Shuttle hooked to the Mir
---The Shuttle hooked to the Mir---



SOHO - Our Sun Watcher
Solar and Heliospheric Observatory (S.O.H.O.)
Coronal Mass Ejections
Coronal Mass Ejections
Comet Branfield (April 2004)
Comet Branfield




Space walkin
---Space walkin---
Space walkin Space walkin
Space walkin Space walkin
Space walkin Space walkin
Space walkin Space walkin
Click on a picture for it's story
Buzz on the moon
Buzz on the moon
Earth from the moon
Earth from the moon

Earth and moon from Mars
Earth and moon from Mars
The America's from Mars
The America's from Mars

Shuttle Columbia
Blastoff


Earth

Earth at night
A composite photo of Earth at night

U.S.A. westcoast
U.S.A. westcoast

Do you want to know when a spacecraft will be flying over your city? Check out a list of quick and easy sightings by city...


Science at NASA NASA Breakthrough Propulsion Physics (BPP) Project

NASA has a realtime java console that you can track all man-made orbiting objects
HST, ISS, Shuttles, space junk and MUCH more !!! This you gotta see!


Antigravity R&D

Astronomy pic of the day High-Energy Astrophysics Dictionary Schematic of the ISS


Astronomical Information via portable Java SpaceWeather.com Planetarium and sky simulation programs







Click on the globe and it will change the view!
A sundial described in 1300 BCE reveals that the Egyptians determined a daily cycle to be made up of ten hours of daylight from sunrise to sunset, two hours of twilight and twelve hours of night. Their calendar year was divided into 36 decans, each ten days long, plus five extra days, totaling to a 365 day year. Each decan was equivalent to a third of the zodiacal sign and was represented by a decanal constellation. The night corresponded to about twelve decans, half a day to eighteen decans. Similar to the system used in Oriental clocks, the night was thus divided into twelve hours, with seasonable variations of the hour's length. Later, Hellenistic astronomers introduced equinoctial hours of equal length.
The Babylonians (in about 300-100 BCE) performed astronomical calculation in the sexagesimal (base-60) system. This was extremely convenient for simplifying time division, since 60 is divisible by 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, and 10. What we now call a minute derives from the first fractional sexagesimal place; the second fractional place is the origin of the second.

    




Official U.S. Atomic time




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Internet Clocks, Counters,
and Countdowns
Atomic Clock Sync, automatically sync your computer! FREE


A to Z
Time and Frequency Glossary





Earth 3d Weather movie
Windows Media Player Movie
3d Weather modeling
WOW!!! Tesla movie
Windows Media Player Movie
Check out these 10-12
foot long spikes in
this guys garage !!!
Earth

Internet Glossary of Nuclear Terminology and more... Extensive Satellite Dish coverage and Q&A Topo Maps for anywhere.

Java Radio Radio History Shortwave Shortwave/Ham

H.A.A.R.P.
H.A.A.R.P.
H.A.A.R.P.

Earthquakes



Click here to go to this source


Pyramidial Periodic Table
Pyramidial Periodic Table







Anatomy of man
Anatomy of man




An animal cell

Gene/DNA/Chromosome/Cell structure
Chromosome Genes
DNA replication
DNA working

An Enzyme (white blob) shown copying and then releasing a DNA strand
DNA structural views
DNA structural views
Animated wire frame
Animated wire frame
The slice viewer

Click here for Windows Media Player movie (.mpeg)

Please note: This is VERY graphic, maybe not for kids,
and takes a few minutes to load.
I usually run it a 2nd time for smoothness.
Man in computer
Clicking on this picture runs a java app
console (in a seperate window) on 3d views
of humans sliced and diced.

(Requires a redirect and long load time)

Click here for this source
Molecules drive IBM's smallest computer The Digital Man DNA Test Confirms Dead Czar's Identity


DNA evidenced migratory pattern of man






Click here for this source




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It appears that I have this "thing" for ETYMOLOGY...
Having actually purchased a Black's 6th Law Dictionary (the LANGUAGE of Lawyers) I understood the wordcraftingly "doublespeak" of Billy Bob Clinton when he stated (without batting an eye) "that depends on what the meaning of the word 'IS' is...". He wasn't kidding folks! There are 8 (EIGHT!!!) definitions of the word "IS" in the legal dictionary. This is one of the reasons why YOU are PRESUPPOSED to be INCOMPETENT in the eyes of the law and require REpresentation (just READ that word).

Bouviers Law Dictionary 1856 Edition

Can YOU pass an 1895 8th grade exam? Don't bet on it!

The history of England and the English tongue is a history of invasions: the Celts, who had invaded England in the fourth century B.C. and had become the original "Britons," were in turn invaded by the Angles and the Saxons in the sixth century A.D., who brought this Germanic tongue to the "British Isles" in what we call THE OLD ENGLISH PERIOD; who were in turn beset by the "Danes" (tribes of Scandinavians) who raided their towns, burned their churches, settled in the north, and contributed vocabulary and structure to English from their related language. In 1066, William of Normandy invaded England, encouraged by a tenuous promise, the blessing of the Pope, and Halley's Comet which he took to be a sign of his conquest, and Norman French changed the face of English forever. This is the beginning of what we call the MIDDLE ENGLISH PERIOD. The Hundred Years War with France gave England a new literary and linguistic solidarity in the fourteenth century, and technology, in the form of the printing press (introduced by Caxton in the late fifteenth-century) changed the nature of writing, making the book almost a household item. At the same time, The Great Vowel Shift warped the sounds of English, cutting it off from European phonetic conventions and giving us our fronted long "a" and "e," and our peculiar, fractured long "i." Thus commences, by 1500, THE EARLY MODERN ENGLISH PERIOD. Scholars and writers started bringing "inkhorn" terms into English--words in Latin and Greek that provided the breadth of vocabulary that English is known for--and one of the most influential of writers in this respect was Shakespeare, who has given us such words as catastrophe, critical, demonstrate, prodigious, and vast. Spelling conventions in English never quite caught up with English pronunciation which is why English poses particular difficulty to many foreigners (French also has an archaic spelling system, retaining all those final consonants that aren't pronounced anymore, but nothing to rival English with its "cough," "knight," and "neighbor"). Rivalry with France's Academy spurred English scholars in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries to try and regularize the English language, which is what gives us our proscriptions against double negatives and split infinitives, but also our great dictionaries by Samuel Johnson and Noah Webster at the start of THE MODERN ENGLISH PERIOD. The American Revolution turned English in a new direction with a new spelling, and a host of new vocabulary borrowed from Native American languages. The nineteenth century saw the rise of the most comprehensive dictionary of the English language, The Oxford English Dictionary or "OED," compiled by James Murray and hundreds of contributing lexicographers--still used now. Today, debates rage over the use of the generic pronoun, "sexist" language and spelling, and the status of English and American dialects such as "Ebonics."


Translations
Translations
JOSHUA to JESUS
Transliterations


Project Gutenberg
11,000 FREE
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[ Translator ]
Roget's II
The New Thesaurus
Third Edition
1995
Online Libraries, Museums and more


HTML tutor HTML Validation site HTML help Out of the can DHTML !!!


i-net archive Hyper History Global Networking
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1960-1989


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Excellent Scientific Links Check out the wierd






Need an SSN? John.14 [6] Jesus saith unto him,
I AM THE WAY, THE TRUTH, AND THE LIFE:
no man cometh unto the Father, but by ME.
The good stuff!