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Originally posted by RadeonGFXRHumanGTXisAlien
Originally posted by Chadwickus
reply to post by RadeonGFXRHumanGTXisAlien
Yeah...good humans convince underage girls to send nude photos of themselves to him...
Get real would you.
I can name many other instances where people have done bad but are given a blind eye.
It would make me a hypocrite to not give Von Helton a 2nd chance.
I am as real as it gets.
The visual of the messenger is at first makes one go no. Then if you discount that....he is showing stuff and making a well organized point that Elenin is not broken up. In fact there are others on the net that say the same thing. I would take it with moderate truth because he has no reason to lie.
We located an earlier image of comet Elenin from and we have processed the image to highlight what we believe is the initial breakup of Elenin a week ago.
The three white specks in our picture are what we believe to have been the initial broken pieces of Elenin’s nucleus a week ago. If our image is correct, this means that Elenin’s nucleus broke up initially into 3 pieces. Since then it appears those pieces have broken up into smaller pieces.
We are still analyzing this picture further to confirm it shows the breakup.
Originally posted by Monkeygod333
The Death of Comet Elenin?
[atsimg]http://files.abovetopsecret.com/images/member/0558bd499fb8.jpg[/atsimg]
Please see the link, there are more frames in the pic.
sydneystargazers.com...
edit on 5-9-2011 by Monkeygod333 because: (no reason given)
Interesting, so it broke up that quick by chance?
I'm not attacking you, or insulting you, seemingly which is what most people i think do, beyond me.
But a genuine question, so it's disintegrated that quick?
Originally posted by RadeonGFXRHumanGTXisAlien
Originally posted by Monkeygod333
The Death of Comet Elenin?
[atsimg]http://files.abovetopsecret.com/images/member/0558bd499fb8.jpg[/atsimg]
Please see the link, there are more frames in the pic.
sydneystargazers.com...
edit on 5-9-2011 by Monkeygod333 because: (no reason given)
Interesting, so it broke up that quick by chance?
I'm not attacking you, or insulting you, seemingly which is what most people i think do, beyond me.
But a genuine question, so it's disintegrated that quick?
Originally posted by DJW001
reply to post by RadeonGFXRHumanGTXisAlien
Interesting, so it broke up that quick by chance?
I'm not attacking you, or insulting you, seemingly which is what most people i think do, beyond me.
But a genuine question, so it's disintegrated that quick?
How quickly would you expect it to break up? (Hint: it is loosely packed and has virtually no gravity.)
Originally posted by Monkeygod333
Originally posted by RadeonGFXRHumanGTXisAlien
Originally posted by Monkeygod333
The Death of Comet Elenin?
[atsimg]http://files.abovetopsecret.com/images/member/0558bd499fb8.jpg[/atsimg]
Please see the link, there are more frames in the pic.
sydneystargazers.com...
edit on 5-9-2011 by Monkeygod333 because: (no reason given)
Interesting, so it broke up that quick by chance?
I'm not attacking you, or insulting you, seemingly which is what most people i think do, beyond me.
But a genuine question, so it's disintegrated that quick?
Dude, don’t get me wrong. I’m with you. Go to the link I posted underneath the pic and look at the entire thing frame by frame. Every day is a frame, the thing is to take a look at the pic frame by frame.
1-First we have the comet in all it’s glory, with a few orbs (not saying anything, they are just round) to the left and down. Lets assume these are planets or stars, whatever.
2-5- We can see the comet as it passes objects behind it from our view. Like the bright dot appearing in frame 2,3 and 4. Note with this also the other objects in the rear that pass and do not change.
7-9- Note how the comet is getting smaller and smaller, up to frame 9. Note its size compared to the original comet.
FRAME 9- Now this is where it gets confusing. There is a bright flash, I don’t know what caused it, bit strange. But note in the flash right at the top of the screen is three dots.
10- 12- Here the three dots, which are now larger than the comet itself, move downwards to the centre of the screen where the comet was.
NOTE THAT THROUGH ALL OF THE FRAMES THE COMET WAS IN THE CENTRE AND JUST BECAME SMALLER.
So what are the three dots? And why would they say that this is the remains of Elenin when clearly it moves into view through the last couple of frames?
Below is a link to the entire pic with all of the frames;
sydneystargazers.files.wordpress.com...
And here is the article stating that this image…
[atsimg]http://files.abovetopsecret.com/images/member/e8977d8b4919.jpg[/atsimg]
…is what is left of Elenin. And the link to the pic they published as ‘evidence’.
sydneystargazers.com...
Note how they say at the bottom, "We are still analyzing this picture further to confirm it shows the breakup."
edit on 6-9-2011 by Monkeygod333 because: add link
I wouldn't know how quick it would, hence the reason i asked.
As many readers already know, Comet Elenin has begun the irreversible process of breaking up. We spoke earlier about the probablility of such an outcome, but I considered it less than 50%. On the graph at left you can see a selection of ten comets that approach the Sun closer than 0.5 a.u. The red line shows the boundary, to the left of which, derived from J. Bortle’s formula, is the safe zone, but to the right is the zone of disintegration. The yellow color shows Comet Elenin, with absolute magnitude obtained by visual observations, and the blue is from JPL-NASA data. As we see, Bortle’s formula, all-in-all, doesn’t work too badly. Although there is a bright exception – the green triangle belongs to the unique comet 96P/Machholtz, about which I will speak next time. Now it is absolutely clear that the comet’s drop in brightness, first noted by Michael Mattiazzo on Aug. 20th, was not coincidental – the decay process had already begun, and over the course of the next several days the comet changed greatly. Its pseudo-nucleus became diffuse and extended, and later vanished completely. On images from Sept. 1st in the comet’s coma there was no condensation visible, and that meant the comet had already broken up into fairly small pieces, with a maximum size of not more than a hundred meters. Such a breakup of small comets passing near the Sun is not rare, and in that is nothing surprising. I note that this is a breakup, not an explosion. All the pieces continue to move on the comet’s trajectory. The large fragments are likely to continue to disintegrate into smaller ones. It is possible that in October when the comet moves into the morning sky, we will no longer be able to see what once was Comet Elenin. It is possible that something will be visible to large earth-based telescopes. The breakup of a long-period comet fairly close to the Earth (on a Solar System scale) is a rather rare event. During such a breakup we can see the interior of the comet to better understand its construction and composition.