Posted on 11/21/2012 3:19:55 AM PST by djf
Atomic Force Microscope at the ready.
ATM scans a microprobe over a surface...works in air (and in biological materials) and has a resolution down to large atoms.
Either that or my car keys...
I hope their next “major announcement” is that they won’t be making any more “major announcements”!
Just put out a press release. That’s how everyone else does business.
New game on FB:
NASA Trolling for Dollars...
Zynga could make a billion, if even one of them was a decent programmer!
Perhaps Curiousity will finally settle the matter. But I doubt it. Nothing short of a sample return mission will suffice to remove all doubt.
Like the “rabbit on Mars”? Hoagland says that after a few days, NASA drove the rover over it and crushed it.
http://marsrovers.nasa.gov/spotlight/opportunity/b19_20040304.html
Close on the opener.
There’s an asian woman who reports NASA stuff for NHK or some other Japanese station. Supposedly they found a a metallic CocaCola bottle cap (the ones that require a bottle opener). Today most of them are screw off caps except for Mexican coke that still uses glass bottles and caps that also need openers.
DRILL BABY DRILL!
Maybe it’s a macro organism. ;-)
They would announce they found the Loch Ness monster on Mars before they would announce something like that.
A Coke bottle cap on Mars would mean one thing, and one thing only.
Man has already been there.
OK, two things.
Man was there.
And he was thirsty.
And so what, the magic is in the lenses. They obviously can tote lenses and cameras. We’d be talking about a custom instrument, not the sensitive and finicky apparatus we knew in biology class.
Finding biological stuff on Mars is not implausible even without some abiogenesis theory, as asteroid impacts on Earth splash material into outer space fairly frequently on a geological time scale.
And seriously, it wouldn’t surprise me.
I’ve heard a couple interviews with people involved in black ops and they say “Whatever you think we have, take that and add 100 years tech to it”.
They wouldn’t have retired the shuttle unless they had a replacement.
The next question becomes what other instrument or capability you give up in order to fit the interplanetary cellular microscope in the mass budget.
Maybe they found the flag that was planted there by the astronauts (according to Sheila Jackson Lee.)
CCD.
Charge-coupled device.
It’s a chip, basically a photo-sensitive computer chip. The lens could literally be bonded onto the surface. Total weight? Maybe an ounce, with shielding...
Same kind of tech they use in cell phone cameras.
The magnification is dependent on the lens, the resolution is a function of the chip.
So what is the Shuttle replacement now that they have stopped flying?
Well it does not seem to me that it would replace any shuttle flights to the ISS. Just a recon platform if it is indeed real and in some sort of production!
It’s anti-gravity.
Pressurize it and you can go anywhere.
Actually, “anti-gravity” is a misnomer. The electric field is at right angles to the magnetic field and there is a third vector force that is perpendicular to both.
I have a book on my coffee table by a renowned physicist who had proved it theoretically (using math and physics equations), and actually done it experimentally (measured decrease in weight after the hardware was set up).
Anti-gravity is no longer just a theory or something you see in 1950’s sci-fi movies. It exists and we are using it.
The power source is nuclear, used to gen the electricity needed to maintain the varying pulsing fields.
Jus kiddin...
;-)
Ok like to see it unclassified!
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