Prev: Telescopic Eclipse Technique, a new method in astronomy; Chapt10, Fiberglass Experiment #99; ATOM TOTALITY
Next: ask a Q for help!
From: Archimedes Plutonium on 20 May 2010 00:41 Enrico wrote: > On May 19, 8:07 am, Archimedes Plutonium > <plutonium.archime...(a)gmail.com> wrote: > > One of the first astro bodies to be Eclipse tested to really see if > > these bodies are moving towards us for a Doppler blueshift is that of > > Andromeda galaxy and the Barnard star in > > the Milky Way. Both, allegedly blueshifted and thus implying that they > > are moving > > towards Earth. > > > > But with my Fiberglass Experiment that a redshift can occur on white > > light headlights > > coming towards me. > > > > So what would it take for the Hubble Space Telescope to draw that > > final last slender > > line on Andromeda and Barnard star to eclipse them. Then wait a week > > or month or > > year, repeat the eclipse procedure and see if either one breached the > > former eclipse? > > If either one does breach the former eclipse, then the blueshift is > > truthful that these > > two objects are really moving towards Earth. But if it comes to pass > > that upon > > repeating the eclipse, that the second eclipse is a decreasing > > eclipse, means that > > the astro body is moving away from Earth and that we have the > > blueshift confused > > with something else. > > > > Now from my reading of the astro literature, the quasars are fuzzy > > images but that > > they are testable to the eclipse test. So that if we were to eclipse a > > highly redshifted > > quasar and wait a month or year and repeat the eclipse, would we find > > those quasars > > are really moving away? Or what I suspect they are moving towards > > Earth. > > > > Archimedes Plutoniumhttp://www.iw.net/~a_plutonium/ > > whole entire Universe is just one big atom > > where dots of the electron-dot-cloud are galaxies > > ============================================================= > > Measuring Size from Images: > A wrangle with angles and image scale > Purpose: > To learn how to make measurements of angular size on images from > MicroObservatory telescopes. > > http://www.cfa.harvard.edu/webscope/activities/pdfs/measureSize.PDF > > > Angular Size Calculator > > http://www.1728.com/angsize.htm > > > > Enrico |