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http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IqhlQfXUk7w
"Minister: (rising) Mr Pudey, (he walks about behind the desk in a very silly fashion) the very real problem is one of money. I'm afraid that the Ministry of Silly Walks is no longer getting the kind of support it needs. You see there's Defence, Social Security, Health, Housing, Education, Silly Walks ... they're all supposed to get the same. But last year, the Government spent less on the Ministry of Silly Walks than it did on National Defence! Now we get 348,000,000 a year, which is supposed to be spent on all our available products. (he sits down)." Sad news indeed. More sad news: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/connected...ecfgravb28.xml "Last week, an American probe began an 18-month mission to put Einstein's prediction to the test, 90 years after he unveiled his ideas in Berlin. Gravity Probe B was blasted into space from the Vandenberg Air Force Base in California on a Boeing Delta 2 rocket and will orbit the Earth for more than a year. The $700 million joint mission between Nasa and Stanford University, conceived in 1958, uses four of the most perfect spheres ever created inside the world's largest Thermos flask to detect minute distortions in the fabric of the universe.....Sir Martin Rees, the Astronomer Royal, said: "The project's a technical triumph, and a triumph of the persistence and lobbying power of Stanford University. But its gestation has been grotesquely prolonged, and the cost overruns have been equally gross. I recall hearing a talk about the project from Francis Everitt (principal investigator) when I was still a student - and it was already well advanced. "Back in the 1960s the evidence for Einstein's theory was meagre - just two tests, with 10 per cent precision. But relativity is now confirmed by several tests, with precision of one part in 10,000. It's still, in principle, good to have new and different tests. But the level of confidence in Einstein's theory is now so high that an announcement of the expected result will 'fork no lightening'. "Moreover, if there's an unexpected result, I suspect most people will suspect an error in this very challenging experiment rather than immediately abandon Einstein: There's now so much evidence corroborating Einstein, that a high burden of proof is required before he'll be usurped by any rival theory. "So the most exciting - if un- alluring - outcome of Gravity Probe B would be a request by Stanford University for another huge sum of money to repeat it." http://space.newscientist.com/articl...-proposal.html " Constellation-X has been part of NASA's Beyond Einstein programme, but in September a National Research Council advisory panel said that programme should be focused on understanding dark energy. That left the Constellation-X proposal in limbo, and its fate probably will not be decided until 2010, when an expert review panel is set to recommend NASA missions for the coming decade. At best, that could mean a launch for the mission, which is expected to cost $2.1 billion dollars, around 2020. That leaves NASA with only one modest X-ray mission in the queue - NuSTAR (Nuclear Spectroscopic Telescope Array), which will study high-energy X-rays." Pentcho Valev |
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On 8 nov, 09:54, Pentcho Valev wrote:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IqhlQfXUk7w "Minister: (rising) Mr Pudey, (he walks about behind the desk in a very silly fashion) the very real problem is one of money. I'm afraid that the Ministry of Silly Walks is no longer getting the kind of support it needs. You see there's Defence, Social Security, Health, Housing, Education, Silly Walks ... they're all supposed to get the same. But last year, the Government spent less on the Ministry of Silly Walks than it did on National Defence! Now we get 348,000,000 a year, which is supposed to be spent on all our available products. (he sits down)." Sad news indeed. More sad news: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/connected...id=K1U0KTMW3ZX... "Last week, an American probe began an 18-month mission to put Einstein's prediction to the test, 90 years after he unveiled his ideas in Berlin. Gravity Probe B was blasted into space from the Vandenberg Air Force Base in California on a Boeing Delta 2 rocket and will orbit the Earth for more than a year. The $700 million joint mission between Nasa and Stanford University, conceived in 1958, uses four of the most perfect spheres ever created inside the world's largest Thermos flask to detect minute distortions in the fabric of the universe.....Sir Martin Rees, the Astronomer Royal, said: "The project's a technical triumph, and a triumph of the persistence and lobbying power of Stanford University. But its gestation has been grotesquely prolonged, and the cost overruns have been equally gross. I recall hearing a talk about the project from Francis Everitt (principal investigator) when I was still a student - and it was already well advanced. "Back in the 1960s the evidence for Einstein's theory was meagre - just two tests, with 10 per cent precision. But relativity is now confirmed by several tests, with precision of one part in 10,000. It's still, in principle, good to have new and different tests. But the level of confidence in Einstein's theory is now so high that an announcement of the expected result will 'fork no lightening'. "Moreover, if there's an unexpected result, I suspect most people will suspect an error in this very challenging experiment rather than immediately abandon Einstein: There's now so much evidence corroborating Einstein, that a high burden of proof is required before he'll be usurped by any rival theory. "So the most exciting - if un- alluring - outcome of Gravity Probe B would be a request by Stanford University for another huge sum of money to repeat it." http://space.newscientist.com/articl...s-future-brigh... " Constellation-X has been part of NASA's Beyond Einstein programme, but in September a National Research Council advisory panel said that programme should be focused on understanding dark energy. That left the Constellation-X proposal in limbo, and its fate probably will not be decided until 2010, when an expert review panel is set to recommend NASA missions for the coming decade. At best, that could mean a launch for the mission, which is expected to cost $2.1 billion dollars, around 2020. That leaves NASA with only one modest X-ray mission in the queue - NuSTAR (Nuclear Spectroscopic Telescope Array), which will study high-energy X-rays." Pentcho Valev dear / CHER Pentcho Valev, j'ose espérer que ton anti-budget est moins important... tonton Albert. |
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THE BUDGET OF EINSTEIN CRIMINAL CULT
Tis big black budgie that squats upon your shoulder. |
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"Green-eyed lady, lovely lady...."
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On Nov 8, 1:48 am, "
wrote: On 8 nov, 09:54, Pentcho Valev wrote: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IqhlQfXUk7w "Minister: (rising) Mr Pudey, (he walks about behind the desk in a very silly fashion) the very real problem is one of money. I'm afraid that the Ministry of Silly Walks is no longer getting the kind of support it needs. You see there's Defence, Social Security, Health, Housing, Education, Silly Walks ... they're all supposed to get the same. But last year, the Government spent less on the Ministry of Silly Walks than it did on National Defence! Now we get 348,000,000 a year, which is supposed to be spent on all our available products. (he sits down)." Sad news indeed. More sad news: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/connected...id=K1U0KTMW3ZX.... "Last week, an American probe began an 18-month mission to put Einstein's prediction to the test, 90 years after he unveiled his ideas in Berlin. Gravity Probe B was blasted into space from the Vandenberg Air Force Base in California on a Boeing Delta 2 rocket and will orbit the Earth for more than a year. The $700 million joint mission between Nasa and Stanford University, conceived in 1958, uses four of the most perfect spheres ever created inside the world's largest Thermos flask to detect minute distortions in the fabric of the universe.....Sir Martin Rees, the Astronomer Royal, said: "The project's a technical triumph, and a triumph of the persistence and lobbying power of Stanford University. But its gestation has been grotesquely prolonged, and the cost overruns have been equally gross. I recall hearing a talk about the project from Francis Everitt (principal investigator) when I was still a student - and it was already well advanced. "Back in the 1960s the evidence for Einstein's theory was meagre - just two tests, with 10 per cent precision. But relativity is now confirmed by several tests, with precision of one part in 10,000. It's still, in principle, good to have new and different tests. But the level of confidence in Einstein's theory is now so high that an announcement of the expected result will 'fork no lightening'. "Moreover, if there's an unexpected result, I suspect most people will suspect an error in this very challenging experiment rather than immediately abandon Einstein: There's now so much evidence corroborating Einstein, that a high burden of proof is required before he'll be usurped by any rival theory. "So the most exciting - if un- alluring - outcome of Gravity Probe B would be a request by Stanford University for another huge sum of money to repeat it." http://space.newscientist.com/articl...s-future-brigh... " Constellation-X has been part of NASA's Beyond Einstein programme, but in September a National Research Council advisory panel said that programme should be focused on understanding dark energy. That left the Constellation-X proposal in limbo, and its fate probably will not be decided until 2010, when an expert review panel is set to recommend NASA missions for the coming decade. At best, that could mean a launch for the mission, which is expected to cost $2.1 billion dollars, around 2020. That leaves NASA with only one modest X-ray mission in the queue - NuSTAR (Nuclear Spectroscopic Telescope Array), which will study high-energy X-rays." Pentcho Valev dear / CHER Pentcho Valev, j'ose espérer que ton anti-budget est moins important... tonton Albert. :-) |
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