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Rocky material on Temple 1



 
 
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  #1  
Old July 8th 05, 07:40 AM
Ray Vingnutte
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Default Rocky material on Temple 1



Note the date on this article, at the top of page, I guess this must be
thanks to Greysky...

http://www.gemini.edu/index.php?opti...sk=view&id=139

  #2  
Old July 10th 05, 01:46 PM
Raving Loonie
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Ray Vingnutte wrote:
Note the date on this article, at the top of page, I guess this must be
thanks to Greysky...

http://www.gemini.edu/index.php?opti...sk=view&id=139


Take another look at the ' date ' on the website ...

... from premonition to deja vue

Or should that be ...

... from deja vue to premonition.

RL

  #3  
Old July 10th 05, 02:03 PM
Ray Vingnutte
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On 10 Jul 2005 05:46:36 -0700
"Raving Loonie" wrote:

Ray Vingnutte wrote:
Note the date on this article, at the top of page, I guess this must
be thanks to Greysky...

http://www.gemini.edu/index.php?opti...sk=view&id=139


Take another look at the ' date ' on the website ...

... from premonition to deja vue

Or should that be ...

... from deja vue to premonition.

RL


Ha, ha now its dated to before the impact happened. Greysky, it has to
be Greysky


  #4  
Old July 10th 05, 03:52 PM
G=EMC^2 Glazier
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Hi gentlemen If you ground up the camera and all that went with it and
heated it up so that all its spectral lines were clearly shown how many
elements would you detect? Was this camera probe made exclusively of
cooper? (like the bullet) I think we should build a vacuum
cleaner space ship to do space probing and analyzing. We could name
it "Hoover",and have all the needed attachments. Space has lots of
dust,and a vacuum cleaner collects dust best. I hate bullets
and explosions. Makes NASA sound like a bunch of Muslim terrorists.
Bert

  #5  
Old July 10th 05, 07:35 PM
G=EMC^2 Glazier
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Like to add to my last post that the impactor weighed a lot more than
the 200 lb of cooper. Not sure but possibly 3 times more Hmmmm
Did it make a 140 ft deep crater as big as a foot ball field? Is it
possible the solar winds make the tail? In this comets case I can't see
any water making a vapor tail Temple 1 is starting to give me a
headache. Bert

  #6  
Old July 11th 05, 05:39 AM
nightbat
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nightbat wrote

G=EMC^2 Glazier wrote:

Hi gentlemen If you ground up the camera and all that went with it and
heated it up so that all its spectral lines were clearly shown how many
elements would you detect? Was this camera probe made exclusively of
cooper? (like the bullet) I think we should build a vacuum
cleaner space ship to do space probing and analyzing. We could name
it "Hoover",and have all the needed attachments. Space has lots of
dust,and a vacuum cleaner collects dust best. I hate bullets
and explosions. Makes NASA sound like a bunch of Muslim terrorists.
Bert


nightbat

We do Officer Bert, it's called the great Officer oc Wolter
Hoover in the sky.

carry on,
the nightbat
  #7  
Old July 12th 05, 11:45 AM
Raving Loonie
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Ray Vingnutte wrote:
On 10 Jul 2005 05:46:36 -0700
"Raving Loonie" wrote:

Ray Vingnutte wrote:
Note the date on this article, at the top of page, I guess this must
be thanks to Greysky...

http://www.gemini.edu/index.php?opti...Dview&id=3D139


Take another look at the ' date ' on the website ...

... from premonition to deja vue

Or should that be ...

... from deja vue to premonition.

RL


Ha, ha now its dated to before the impact happened. Greysky, it has to
be Greysky



' Little doubt remains that the unprecedented quality of the Gemini
data will keep astronomers busy for years. ... '


see http://tinyurl.com/crt44 for full source

Tuesday, July 12th. The excitement continues. ...

RL
--

" ...

Deep Impact Captured by Gemini Print

Saturday, 02 July 2005
Page 1 of 2
Resources

En Espa=F1ol - Versi=F3n adaptada en Chile

The Gemini North telescope on Mauna Kea successfully captured the
dramatic fireworks display produced by the collision of NASA's Deep
Impact probe with Comet 9P/Tempel 1. Researchers in two control rooms
on Hawaii's Big Island (on Mauna Kea and in Hilo) were able to keep
enough composure amid an almost giddy excitement to perform a
preliminary analysis of the data. They concluded from the mid-infrared
spectroscopic observations that there was strong evidence for silicates
or rocky material exposed by the impact. Little doubt remains that the
unprecedented quality of the Gemini data will keep astronomers busy for
years. ... "

  #8  
Old July 12th 05, 01:40 PM
Ray Vingnutte
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default

On 12 Jul 2005 03:45:05 -0700
"Raving Loonie" wrote:

Ray Vingnutte wrote:
On 10 Jul 2005 05:46:36 -0700
"Raving Loonie" wrote:

Ray Vingnutte wrote:
Note the date on this article, at the top of page, I guess this
must be thanks to Greysky...

http://www.gemini.edu/index.php?opti...3Dview&id=3D1=

39

Take another look at the ' date ' on the website ...

... from premonition to deja vue

Or should that be ...

... from deja vue to premonition.

RL


Ha, ha now its dated to before the impact happened. Greysky, it has
to be Greysky


=20
' Little doubt remains that the unprecedented quality of the Gemini
data will keep astronomers busy for years. ... '
=20
=20
see http://tinyurl.com/crt44 for full source
=20
Tuesday, July 12th. The excitement continues. ...


I reckon those numbers on the white board is someone trying to work out
the correct date, i can see 7-4-83, 9-4-98, 8-4-92, 7-5-78!! But not
9-7-05

=20
RL
--
=20
" ...
=20
Deep Impact Captured by Gemini Print
=20
Saturday, 02 July 2005
Page 1 of 2
Resources
=20
En Espa=F1ol - Versi=F3n adaptada en Chile
=20
The Gemini North telescope on Mauna Kea successfully captured the
dramatic fireworks display produced by the collision of NASA's Deep
Impact probe with Comet 9P/Tempel 1. Researchers in two control rooms
on Hawaii's Big Island (on Mauna Kea and in Hilo) were able to keep
enough composure amid an almost giddy excitement to perform a
preliminary analysis of the data. They concluded from the mid-infrared
spectroscopic observations that there was strong evidence for
silicates or rocky material exposed by the impact. Little doubt
remains that the unprecedented quality of the Gemini data will keep
astronomers busy for years. ... "
=20



 




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