Andechs 15.12.05 - 6.1.06 (+) ???

Geschrieben von basecampUSA am 10. Januar 2006 19:39:29:

http://f27.parsimony.net/forum67523/messages/26232.htm

5.1.06: GRB 060105A


http://fc1.parsimony.net/user1004/cygnus_figure.JPG

http://grb.sonoma.edu/details.php?id=281

http://fc1.parsimony.net/user1004/skycross.jpg

http://grb.sonoma.edu/details.php?id=281


This is the first GRB (gamma ray burst) alert from ECM (Earth Changes Media). I have begun to monitor more closely GRB activity and will report when moderate to high events occur. Let’s see if there is a consistent causal effect with the Sun and the Earth’s magnetic field. I am looking for a rapid shift which will register on the GOES X-Ray flux. http://www.sec.noaa.gov/rt_plots/xray_5m.html

This was a bright, long burst, with many peaks of gamma-ray emission in its 60-second duration. The X-Ray Telescope on Swift detected a bright, fading source, though no unambiguous optical counterpart was seen by the Ultraviolet/Optical Telescope; a faint source was seen but it\'s not clear if this is the afterglow.

GRB I.D. – 060105A detected by the SWIFT satellite on January 5th 2006. Coordinates are (Galactic Longitude 80.23 ; Galactic Latitude 10.08) from constellation ‘Cygnus’.

Gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) are the most powerful explosions the Universe has seen since the Big Bang. They occur approximately once per day and are brief, but intense, flashes of gamma radiation. They come from all different directions of the sky and last from a few milliseconds to a few hundred seconds. So far scientists do not know what causes them. Do they signal the birth of a black hole in a massive stellar explosion? Are they the product of the collision of two neutron stars? Or is it some other exotic phenomenon that causes these bursts?

With Swift, a NASA mission with international participation, scientists will now have a tool dedicated to answering these questions and solving the gamma-ray burst mystery. Its three instruments will give scientists the ability to scrutinize gamma-ray bursts like never before. Within seconds of detecting a burst, Swift will relay a burst's location to ground stations, allowing both ground-based and space-based telescopes around the world the opportunity to observe the burst's afterglow. Swift is part of NASA's medium explorer (MIDEX) program and was launched into a low-Earth orbit on a Delta 7320 rocket on November 20, 2004.

http://www.earthchangestv.com/

sooo... hab ich'n vogel gehabt -- oder kommt der noch (grosse "plage" hab ich mal im vision gesehen - 2006?)


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