Friday, May 28, 2010

The stickman mystery

If you wish to explore the stickman mystery and the science surrounding it.

Find a copy of Mysteries of Deep Space by Reader's Digest Presents (1998)


Friday, May 21, 2010

More "Cosmic Stickman" and the Shroud


The shape of the deep-field galactic clusters, known as the "Stick Man" is used as a scientific gauge to explain the structure of the universe.

This is sometimes referred to to as the "Finger of God."



















The images immediately below are a positive image of the face of the shroud and the reverse image of the shroud face.

See the last images that show how the Stick Man figure and the image from the shroud align with each other.

Enlarge the images and note how the red dot on the center of the nose in the shroud images align with the orange dots on the Stick Man chart to again align with the shroud face.

God made us in his image!

Place any orange dot over the red dot in the center of the positive image on the center of nose and the chart will reproduce some aspect of the face.

The Stick Man can be rotated 360 degrees to reproduce the aspects of the face.








Monday, May 17, 2010

M-82 Star Cluster with the Shroud image over it, see how it lines up!

In the infrared light, M82 is the brightest galaxy so far know. It exhibits an infrared excess – much brighter at infrared wavelengths than in the visible part of the spectrum. "Our results provide a set of constraints for detailed starburst modeling, which we present in a companion paper. We find that purely foreground extinction cannot reproduce the global relative intensities of H recombination lines from optical to radio wavelengths." says N. M. Förster Schreiber (et al), "The excitation of the ionized gas indicates an average effective temperature for the OB stars of 37,400 K, with little spatial variation across the starburst regions. We find that a random distribution of closely packed gas clouds and ionizing clusters and an ionization parameter of 10-2.3 represent well the star-forming regions on spatial scales ranging from a few tens to a few hundreds of parsecs. From detailed population synthesis and the mass-to-K-light ratio, we conclude that the near-infrared continuum emission across the starburst regions is dominated by red supergiants with average effective temperatures ranging from 3600 to 4500 K and roughly solar metallicity. Our data rule out significant contributions from older, metal-rich giants in the central few tens of parsecs of M82."

For more information on M82, and the rest of the above article, see http://www.universetoday.com/guide-to-space/messier-objects/messier-82/

counter

Free Web Site Counter

The face of Jesus from the shroud over the "Stickman"