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First Words: The IndigoET Connection
YOWBOOKS.COM, 29-December-2003
A Serialized Book by Marshall Masters
Copyright 2003, Marshall Masters All Rights Reserved
By Marshall Masters
In
the previous chapter, we used the analogy of how gamblers rely on ???tells??
as way of listening with their eyes.? In most cases, the ???tells?? are easy
to spot for the trained eye.? However, when faced with a savvy player
with a polished poker face you must provoke the tell.? That being said,
what if you find yourself face-to-face with an extraterrestrial and you??re
unable to spot a ???tell?? ?? what do you do?
Chapter
1 Who Will Speak for Us? Read for Free
www.crossingthecusp.com
Notable Celestial Events in 2004
Space.COM, 16 May 2003
Mark your calendars for this time next year, when a rare, bright naked-eye
comet might grace the spring evening sky. Then again, maybe not.
Back on Aug. 28, 2001, the International Astronomical Union (IAU) announced
the discovery of a new comet spotted by Near Earth Asteroid Tracking team
at Palomar Observatory in southern California. Like several other comets,
this one has come to be called NEAT, the acronym for the discovery program.
If it indeed stays on its current prescribed path, Comet NEAT will pass
closest to the Earth on May 7, 2004 at a distance of just under 30 million
miles (48.3 million kilometers). It will appear to rise out of the evening
twilight during the first week of May 2004 and move northward from Canis
Major, through Cancer by midmonth and on into Ursa Major by months
end.
Eyeonthesky.com, 10-December-2003
The two recently discovered comets, Comet Q4 (NEAT) and Comet T7 (LINEAR)
are both expected to brighten to first magnitude, about as bright as the
brightest stars (but whose brightness is not concentrated in a pinpoint
of light). Comet Hyakutake (brightest in March 1996) was the last first-magnitude
comet seen from Earth. It had a bright head (coma) about two degrees in
diameter and a tail reported at 70-100 degrees in length (your fist held
at arm's length is about 10 degrees).
Comet Q4 (NEAT) should be visible to the naked eye in early April in
the southern hemisphere, and by early May should present an excellent
appearance in the northern hemisphere. Comet T7 (LINEAR) isn't at as great
an angle from the sun, but should be visible in some latitudes from mid-April
to mid-June, first before dawn and then after dusk.
There are periodic astronomical events that could never be observed by
any human alive today. One of these is the transit of Venus on June 8,
2004.
On this day half our globe will be able to watch the tiny black dot of
the planet Venus moving across the disc of the sun. Given a cloudless
sky, all you'll need is a sun filter to follow the spectacle for several
hours by your naked eyes (check your eyes).
The previous transit of Venus occurred on December 6, 1882 -
one of merely five events of its kind ever watched by mankind.
The transit of Venus will be visible from Europe, Africa, Asia, and eastern
parts of America
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