Article Archive for November 2008
Mysterious Cosmic Rays from Nearby – More Evidence
(Nearby in space terms means hundreds of light years…)
For the last 8 years researchers in Antarctica have been flying a balloon carrying the NASA-funded cosmic ray detector known as the Advanced Thin Ionization Calorimeter. Results have shown that more high-energy cosmic rays are crashing into our atmosphere than expected. Their high-energy indicates that they must come from reasonably close by, for they lose energy over long distances.
Possible sources include dark matter (still theoretical), or “a nearby pulsar, a ‘microquasar’ or a stellar-mass black hole.”
More at NASA
Bunker for Sale in UK
Up for auction on Dec 16 is:
A nuclear bunker, with 2ft thick concrete walls and massive steel doors, is set to go under the hammer with a guide price of £240,000- £260,000 at a public sale.
…The site, a redundant Victorian reservoir, was built in countryside near Winchester as a survival pod in the Cold War to withstand a nuclear blast that would wipe out civilisation.
…“This is not your average property, what with blast-proof fittings, a chute for ejecting people in an emergency, air filters and independent power and water supplies.”
If I was planning my 2012 survival in the UK, I’d be very interested. Instead I shall buy a lottery ticket devoted to this bunker, and should I win, use the proceeds to enable some UK 2012ers to use it.
Ultrahigh-Energy Cosmic Rays – Local Origin?
Ultrahigh-energy cosmic rays (UHECRs) are the fastest moving objects ever found. If a ray of light travels through a void for 300 million years, and an UHECR travels on the same journey, light will get there a mere microsecond quicker.
Given the density of microwave radiation thought to fill the voids of space, scientists have been puzzled as to how the UHECRs are hitting Earth at full speed, without being slowed down by radiation (or anything else in their way).
According to Scientific American (April 2008, pages 14-15), the world’s largest array of cosmic ray detectors in Argentina has discovered that most UHECRs are coming from nearby galaxies. Strangely none are coming from the Virgo cluster of galaxies, only 60 million light years away.
One of the possible explanations is that super-massive black holes in Virgo are lacking the power of those in other nearby galaxies.
As usual, the super-massive black hole at …
The X-Files, 2012 and 11:11
A new article by Philip Coppins covers modern day madness (my opinion) of obsessing over the numbers of 11 and 23. Of interest to us is how they connect to the year 2012:
The question is whether there is an “11 phenomenon”, or whether perhaps there is even an 11:11 or 11:22 phenomenon, seeing that the two numbers are obviously related. It was 11:22 that was a favourite time for the producers of “The X Files”, many of the clocks shown in the series showing this time.
…There is also the total solar eclipse of August 11, 1999, which occurred at 11.11 AM (GMT).
…What to make of the fact that the winter solstice in 2012 will occur at 11:11 universal time? It is of course this event that is so deeply linked with the Mayan calendar and its ending – or, if you are a fan of “The X Files”, the date …