Posted on 05/03/2005 8:23:05 PM PDT by Mo1
Silly Shark.
Have a ball, yall.
About the same as before....
.....Westy.....
Well in a month or two the poison from that tooth should be out of your system!
Not to worry everyone. I have them and intend to give some thought to black-mail......heh heh heh.....
Sighhhhhhhhhh....can't hep myself...
I've had my grandson here over-night, so it's been a bit confusing around here.
Mommy took him home for the night, so now Al and I can have a nice steak for supper instead of chicken fingers, or hotdogs.
Yeeehaw. Steaks, grilled asparagus and sweet potato french fries.
Tomorrow, on the other hand is another day....:( I love kids when they grow up and eat eeeeverything.
Do you slice your sweet potatoes for frying lengthwise or around? And what is your recipe, please?
Hi babe... I just slice mine like regular french fries...maybe a little thinner. I don't know why you couldn't do them round tho..as in cottage fries?
I agree with Resty...infected teeth can do a lot of damage to your system. I have a scar in my neck from an operation when I was young from an infected tooth that my Mom thought was mumps for a few days. I was in the hospital for over two weeks.
A dentist later told me that I was probably near death with it. The infection had gone thru my whole system and I had to have a drain and shots several times a day.
I wouldn't doubt you that you will feel some better soon, and I certainly hope you do...smooooooooooch...
How about a linecloth so we could see what it was! LOL
Hi Resty, did you see the great popsicle melt?
Yes, but I know where you live.......:-).......both places..........:-)
:-)
Good plan with the steak tonight - I'm paying bills (and hating that) and thinking about dialing in a pizza this evening.
Our deckeffects.net guys are here putting in a better back step for Mrs.L and replacing the rotten, or missing, expansion joints around the house and driveways...really top-notch folks doing excellent work for us. It will be a pleasure to cut their check this afternoon.
Back to the stack...
I am a hermit sorry don't roam like I use too!:)
Well I hope it help Westy to feel somewhat better every little bits helps for relief!:)
Al's out back finishing up the rose bush trimming that I couldn't reach this morning.
He hit the clinic today for a check-up. They put him on BP pills, and he's having his blood work done at eight in the morning.. (the colonoscopy will be later) so we have to plan an early supper tonight. I just took a carrot cake out of the oven, and it had better cool fast so I can frost it for his dessert. No food after eight..:(
Sounds like you're really happy with the work being done there. Now there's a new experience for most...
I hope he enjoys his meal. After he drinks the "clean out solution" tonight, he will spend hours on the throne. LOL
Here's a neat link to some Northern Lights...
http://www.iww.is/art/shs/pages/thumbs.html
He's just having his blood work tomorrow. No cleaning out tonight..;)
A fasting blood sugar, etc. Sheesh I wouldn't waste this meal on the cleaning process. (Not that his own doesn't work just fine.)
I think you missed understood sharky just wonder what you look like most of us here have shown our mug!:)
I know your not shy so how about a coming out party! LOL
Back to Story - Help
Hubble Confirms Young Planet at Nearby Star Robert Roy Britt
Senior Science Writer
SPACE.com
Wed Jun 22, 1:57 PM ET
New observations of a star suspected of harboring a planet provide the most convincing evidence yet of the young world's existence.
Rather than spotting the planet, however, astronomers have photographed an odd-shaped ring of dust that surrounds the star. They assume that the unseen planet sculpted the arrangement.
The star, Fomalhaut, is the 17th brightest in our night sky and is easily found with the unaided eye and a sky chart. It is a relatively young star, still shrouded in the dust of its birth.
Fomalhaut is about 25 light-years away.
Distortions explained
In 2002, astronomers said they had found distortions in Fomalhaut's disk-like dust ring and calculated that a Saturn-sized planet must be orbiting the star. Observations also hinted that the ring was offset in relation to the star a manner that suggested the presence of a planet, but that speculation was based partly on computer models.
The new optical view, from the Hubble Space Telescope, reveals the exact dimensions of the swirling mass of star-formation leftovers.
The dust ring is not centered on star as would be expected if only the star's gravity had sculpted it. Instead, the center is 1.4 billion miles (15 times the distance from Earth to the Sun) away from the star. That is strong evidence of a planet tugging on the ring, scientists said today.
"Our new Hubble images confirm those earlier hypotheses that proposed a planet was perturbing the ring," said Paul Kalas of the University of California at Berkeley.
A familiar ring
Kalas and his colleagues assume the mystery object is a planet and not something larger, such as a dim failed star known as a brown dwarf, because they say Hubble would have spotted a brown dwarf directly with the observations that were made.
The investigation is important because the Fomalhaut (Fo-mal-ought) system is thought to resemble our own solar system when it was about 200 million years old (ours is now 4.6 billion years old). Astronomers have a theoretical model for how the planets formed, but only by looking at young solar systems can they confirm that the process played out as expected.
The ring around Fomalhaut resembles our solar system's Kuiper Belt, a region of comet-like objects beyond Neptune. Astronomers think that as planets, asteroids and comets develop out of dust, a lot of material is kicked either inward to the star our outward into a leftover ring of debris.
Importantly, the theory holds that the region near a newborn star, such as the location of Earth, is bereft of water in a solar system's early years. Some of icy material that develops farther out is, however, expected to be booted inward after planet formation, bringing precious water ice to nascent planets and providing the ingredients for life.
While confident that such a process set up conditions for biology on Earth, scientists are eager to learn if the scheme is common.
More evidence
Hubble provided more clues suggesting a planet.
The ring's inner edge is sharper than the outer edge, consistent with computer models of a planet sweeping material up in the manner of a snowplow. The width of the ring, now measured to be about 2.3 billion miles, is also what would be expected if it's shaped by a nascent world. With no planet to keep material in check, the ring would be wider.
The shepherding of the ring is similar to what is seen in the rings of Saturn, which are confined by the gravitational influence of moons, Kalas said.
Despite similarities to our solar system, the setup at Fomalhaut is also distinct.
"While Fomalhaut's ring is analogous to the Kuiper Belt, its diameter is four times greater than that of the Kuiper Belt," Kalas said. That suggests "that not all planetary systems form and evolve in the same way."
Indeed, many of the other 150 or so extrasolar planets found to date orbit incredibly close to their host stars. In some systems, Jupiter-sized worlds orbit a star in just a few days. Other planets take wildly eccentric paths around their stars.
The findings are detailed in the June 23 issue of the journal Nature.
Early Earth Not So Hellish, New Study Suggests 10 Years of Planet Hunting: Amazing Variety Out There Eccentric Worlds: Strange Orbits Puzzle Astronomers
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