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least common denominator
Join Date: Aug 2001
Location: San Pedro,CA
Posts: 22,506
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Quote:
![]() IIRC a space ship arrives, asks for volunteers to go back to their planet with them, after the ship leaves someone on earth finds they left that book behind.
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Gary Fisher 29er 2019 Kia Stinger 2.0t gone ![]() 1995 Miata Sold 1984 944 Sold ![]() I am not lost for I know where I am, however where I am is lost. - Winnie the poo. Last edited by scottmandue; 01-29-2009 at 09:52 AM.. |
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Registered Usurper
Join Date: Sep 2005
Posts: 13,824
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I can't remember anything about the first time I was abducted.
Except that it happened at exactly 8:12:43 pm on a Sat. night. They kept me for 4 hrs. in a time warp of some sort. I know that because when they returned me it was exactly 8:12:43 pm. On that same Sat. night! Every abduction since, same thing, always on a Sat. night, same time. I can't remember anything about any of them! Nobody believes me. Even people I'm with when it happens! Personally, I think they're probably evil (my abductors).
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'82 SC RoW coupe |
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Banned
Join Date: Sep 2006
Location: South of Heaven
Posts: 21,159
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Quote:
http://www.nicap.org/babylon/missile_incidents.htm Great, one more thing to worry about. Thanks Tabs.... :-/ Hehe, i'm sure i am. But i extend that to all of us. :-P |
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Bandwidth AbUser
Join Date: Nov 2001
Location: SoCal
Posts: 29,522
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in today's interweb:
Attempts to Contact Aliens Date Back More Than 150 Years Michael Schirber Astrobiology Magazine space.com – Thu Jan 29, 9:20 am ET The desire to contact intelligent life on other planets is much older than the UFO craze and the SETI movement. Several 19th century scientists contemplated how we might communicate with possible Martians and Venusians. These early proposals - which predate by 150 years the first extraterrestrial message that was sent in 1974 - were based on visual signals, as the invention of radio was still decades away. In fact, as history shows, ideas for interplanetary communication have largely been driven by whatever the current technology allowed - be it lamps, radios or lasers. "You go with what you know," said Steven Dick, NASA Chief Historian. Are we alone? Over two thousand years ago, the ancient Greeks argued over the existence of life on other planets, but the idea really took off after the Copernican revolution. "Once it was realized that all the planets go around the sun, it was not hard to imagine that the other planets could be like Earth," Dick said. Galileo, Kepler and others considered the inhabitability of the planets, while being careful not to upset Church authority. "The idea blossomed in the 17th century into the 'plurality of worlds' debate, but it remained controversial," said Dick, who has written several books on the topic. One of the most influential proponents for extraterrestrial life was Bernard le Bovier de Fontenelle, who wrote Conversations on the Plurality of Worlds in 1686. Despite the interest, there was no recorded discussion of how we might locate or contact these potential aliens until more than a century later. Crop triangles and burning canals Florence Raulin-Cerceau of the Alexandre Koyre Center in Paris has documented the early attempts at communication with extraterrestrial intelligence (CETI), or what is now often called active SETI. "As early as the 19th century, inventors imagined "sky telegraph" equipment to communicate with the supposed inhabitants of the solar system's planets," Raulin-Cerceau recently wrote with her colleague in the French magazine Pour la Science. The first of these inventors was Carl Friedrich Gauss, the German mathematician. In the 1820s, he spoke of reflecting sunlight towards the planets with his land surveying invention, the heliotrope. He is also credited with the idea of cutting a giant triangle in the Siberian forest and planting wheat inside. "The size and color contrast should have made the object visible from the moon or Mars, and the geometric figure could only be interpreted as an intentional construction," Raulin-Cerceau wrote. Twenty years later, the astronomer Joseph von Littrow came up with a similar idea to pour kerosene into a 30-kilometer-wide circular canal that would be lit at night to signal our presence. Concentrated light The second half of the 19th century saw more realistic proposals, according to Raulin-Cerceau. In 1869, the French inventor and poet Charles Cros imagined using a parabolic mirror to focus the light from electric lamps towards Mars or Venus. He figured the light could be flashed on and off to encode a message. "Cros granted that the planets could be inhabited by beings not able to respond, but he was still persuaded that 'the eternal isolation of the spheres [will be] vanquished,'" wrote Raulin-Cerceau. A light-based "Morse code" was also considered by the British statistician Francis Galton in 1896. He took care not to assume that Martians would have our same base-10 counting system, as they probably wouldn't have 10 fingers. Around the same time, A. Mercier, a member of the Astronomical Society of France, devised a plan to place several reflectors on the Eiffel Tower that could direct sunlight towards Mars. He also considered using the moon as a giant screen on which to project light beams. Could aliens have seen any of these light displays? "It depends on how much money you think the Martians are spending on their telescopes," said Seth Shostak of the SETI Institute. Radio turns on It is now generally assumed that radio is a more suitable means of extraterrestrial communication. Radio waves are less affected by cosmic dust than visible light, and there is less of a radio background to deal with in the sky. Two of radio's pioneers showed interest in interplanetary radio communication. In 1901, Nikola Tesla reported receiving a strange signal, possibly from Mars, on his giant transmitting tower in Colorado Springs. Nineteen years later, Guglielmo Marconi told reporters about his detection of radio emissions that appeared to come from outer space. However, the switch to radio-based SETI did not happen immediately. As late as the 1920s, many people (including Albert Einstein) still considered visual-based communication more practical, since radio transmitters were not yet capable of focusing a beam on a distant planet. What's more, scientists gradually became convinced that Mars did not have the right conditions to support life, so any presumed extraterrestrials likely lived much, much further away. "It seemed hopeless to receive messages from other stellar systems, so people said 'Forget it.'" Shostak explained. It wasn't until 1959 that radio-based SETI started to be taken seriously. In that year, Giuseppe Cocconi and Philip Morrison showed that radar transmitters of the time were already powerful enough to send signals many light years through space. "If we can do it, then the aliens might be doing it," Shostak said. In the year that followed, Frank Drake performed Project Ozma, the first radio sky survey to look for intelligent signals. And then in 1974 - a century and half after Gauss - Drake transmitted the first actual SETI message using the Arecibo radio telescope. Scientists are still waiting for a response.
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Jim R. |
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least common denominator
Join Date: Aug 2001
Location: San Pedro,CA
Posts: 22,506
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I miss read the title of this thread and spent all morning searching for my extra testicle.
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Gary Fisher 29er 2019 Kia Stinger 2.0t gone ![]() 1995 Miata Sold 1984 944 Sold ![]() I am not lost for I know where I am, however where I am is lost. - Winnie the poo. |
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Registered Usurper
Join Date: Sep 2005
Posts: 13,824
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Quote:
The morning after my first abduction, I discovered my extra one was gone! WTF! Do they keep on abducting me to see If I've grown another one? ![]()
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'82 SC RoW coupe |
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Registered
Join Date: Jul 2004
Location: Maryland
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I've been up close and personal twice, which I posted about before.
Laugh all you want, Sports Fans...denial isn't a metric.
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1996 FJ80. |
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Registered Usurper
Join Date: Sep 2005
Posts: 13,824
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Hey, I'm serious!
![]() Post link to your posts, please. Mebbe they'll help jog my memory. ![]()
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Air Medal or two
Join Date: Jul 2003
Location: cross roads
Posts: 14,081
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For anything to happen you have to get to light speed
What the USA is doing is equivalent to a slug crawling from LA to NYC and wanting funding for it. In fact when it comes to space travel in this illustration the slug is FAST !!
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D troop 3/5 Air Cav,( Bastard CAV) and 162 Assult Helicopter Co- (Vultures) South of Saigon, U Minh Forest, Delta, and all parts in between |
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Bandwidth AbUser
Join Date: Nov 2001
Location: SoCal
Posts: 29,522
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Jim R. |
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Bandwidth AbUser
Join Date: Nov 2001
Location: SoCal
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oh yeah, denial is a river in Egypt.
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Jim R. |
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So, more reading (thanks, Jim) shows that one of the pioneers of the SETI concept calculated that a huge radio telescope, if turned into a huge focused radio transmitter, would be "just powerful enough" to send a signal to the nearest star.
Obviously, an ordinary FM or TV broadcast signal is going to be much weaker than the hypothetical huge transmitter, and it won't be focused either hence subject to the inverse square law. And there is no particular reason to think there is intelligent life on the "nearest star", that would be entirely too lucky. So, I am now quite convinced that no alien civilization is watching "I Love Lucy". It seems pretty clear to me that if we want to be found, we will have to try very, very, very hard to be found. Otherwise we will live, love, and die alone. As a species, that is. A few days later, Cocconi realized that the newly completed radio telescope at Jodrell Bank would be just powerful enough to transmit a detectable signal to the nearest star.
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1989 3.2 Carrera coupe; 1988 Westy Vanagon, Zetec; 1986 E28 M30; 1994 W124; 2004 S211 What? Uh . . . “he” and “him”? |
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Bandwidth AbUser
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John, one can transmit a signal with some "features" that can be recovered at the distant receiver by processing the extremely weak signal (that's buried in the background noise) over a long period of time. So, even though the signal is not obvious to the "casual listener," long-term observations may actually be able to detect it.
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Jim R. Last edited by Jim Richards; 01-29-2009 at 04:37 PM.. |
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AutoBahned
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also used effect for affect - but that's nothing in comparison... |
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AutoBahned
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AutoBahned
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besides, we measure red shifts to determine this - you don't really hold a set of calipers up to a galaxy... "tersesial" is how unintelligent life posts about intelligent life.... |
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I accept that. But again, you have to really try to do that. That's what I meant, we won't be found unless we are really trying to be found.
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Bandwidth AbUser
Join Date: Nov 2001
Location: SoCal
Posts: 29,522
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and someone is really trying to hear us.
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Jim R. |
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Registered
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And they are hungry . . .
. . . for company . . . |
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