[click image].
Amazing.
.











No one has to "marry" anyone else politically; no one has to embrace every tenet or belief that an anti-imperialist ally might hold. You simply have to say: "All of us, regardless of our other views, believe this truth to be self-evident: dismantling the empire will bring immediate and enormous benefits to our nation and to the world."





















If in your travels you meet the Buddha, throw him through your tv set.
—Davis Fleetwood

I've found that culture, however useful and important, is neither the foundation nor the ceiling of human experience, even if it is commonly used for walls.












I really consider President and Mrs. Mubarak to be friends of my family. So I hope to see him often here in Egypt and in the United States. —Hillary Clinton







Here you go - get your binoculars...
ReplyDeletehttp://www.heavens-above.com/PassSummary.aspx?satid=36514&lat=38.582&lng=-121.493&loc=Sacramento&alt=0&tz=PST
That schedule is from my coordinates.
If the link doesn't work (I log in automatically), or to enter your own coordinates go to
http://www.heavens-above.com and enter your coordinates.
You can also track the International Space Station (ISS), the Hubble Space Telescope (HST) and Shuttle missions there as well as planets etc.
The magnitude (MAG) column tells you the brightness. The higher the number the dimmer the object.
This is a measure of the brightness of a celestial object. The lower the value, the brighter the object, so magnitude -4 is brighter than magnitude 0, which is in turn brighter than magnitude +4. The scale is logarithmic, and a difference of 5 magnitudes means a brightness difference of exactly 100 times. A difference of one magnitude corresponds to a brightness difference of around 2.51 (the fifth root of 100).
The brightest star - Sirius - is -1.44.
Just for you!!!
ReplyDeletehttp://en.rian.ru/photolents/20100524/159140068.html
I'm going to go out on a limb here and postulate that the curator of that museum is heterosexual.....
ReplyDeleteBluebear thanks for the link. I thought I saw this the other morning around 4AM but what I saw was going the other way in an opposite orbit. It wasn’t the normal north/south path.
ReplyDeletejo6pac