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And I saw a City New Jerusalem.


HAZARD

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SPACE JUNK 3..gif

SPACE JUNK 1..jpg

SPACE JUNK 2..jpg

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Matt 17:1-3)-And after six days jesus taketh Peter,james,,John,his brother, and bringeth them up unto an high mountain apart.And was transfigured before them,and his face did shine as the son,and His raiment was white as light,and,behold,there appeared unto them MOSES and ELIAS talking with him....

 

MOSES-with stood the King of Egypt,demanding the release of the Israelites.

ELIJAH-With stood Ahab,the wicked King of Israel.

Their Ministries were angaged in the Political process.They stood against Govermental Injustic.This certainly qualifies them to stand together against the Anti-Christ.

 

Whats your thoughts?

 

Blessings,With Gods Grace,

7Dove77

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How do I delete a post I made here,,ty

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1 hour ago, HAZARD said:

SPACE JUNK 3..gif

SPACE JUNK 1..jpg

SPACE JUNK 2..jpg

Thanks Hazard

These pictures look like drawings to me, do they look like that to you?

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No, the bottom picture looks a little like that but its in fact a dead satellite covered in gold leaf which makes it look that way. It was officially declared dead on Wednesday May 9 last year. I have pictures showing astronaut's outside the shuttle and pictures taken from inside the space station and shuttles. Some pieces are nothing more than flakes of paint, others are huge and if they impacted with a space station or shuttle it would destroy it and them inside. The photo's are crystal clear because there is no atmosphere in space and its ice cold, and this makes them appear as unreal.

Space station astronauts take shelter from space junk:

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) — A piece of space junk forced the three space station astronauts to seek emergency shelter Thursday.

For nearly an hour, the American and two Russians hunkered down in their Soyuz capsule, which is docked to the International Space Station, in case they had to make a quick getaway. The fragment from an old Russian weather satellite ended up passing harmlessly, about 1½ miles away.

"Happy there was no impact," NASA astronaut Scott Kelly said via Twitter. "Great coordination with international ground teams. Excellent training."

It's only the fourth time in the 16-year history of the space station that a crew has had to rush into a Russian Soyuz for protection from potentially dangerous debris. The exact size of the object was unknown, according to a NASA spokesman.

Normally, NASA learns about incoming junk sooner, and the space station moves out of the way. But there wasn't time for that Thursday; the crew was notified just 1½ hours in advance.

The three men were already up and working when Mission Control ordered them into the Soyuz on Thursday morning. They did not need to put on their Soyuz flight suits, and there was no rush, said NASA spokesman Dan Huot.

The all-clear came 1½ hours after the initial alert, around 8 a.m. EDT. It took the astronauts more than an hour to get their 250-mile-high home back to normal operation, following the "shelter in place," as NASA calls it. Research work that was interrupted will be rescheduled, according to Mission Control.

Kelly and his Russia roommates, Mikhail Kornienko and Gennady Padalka, are getting used to junk in their neighborhood.

Twice since the trio arrived in March, the space station has had to dodge pieces of orbiting debris, in April and June. Three more men are due to arrive next week.

The last time a station crew had to jump into their Soyuz for protection was in 2012.

Space junk is at an all-time high because of all the clutter in orbit, the result of accidentally colliding spacecraft, exploding satellites and rocket stages, and deliberate run-ins ordered up as tests by China and the United States several years back. Just last February, a U.S. military meteorological satellite blew up, presumably because of a failed battery, scattering dozens of pieces of debris.

The Defense Department is currently tracking about 22,000 dead satellites, spent rocket bodies and all other forms of orbital debris. These items are at least 4 inches across. NASA estimates there could be more than 500,000 smaller objects, nearly a half-inch and bigger, that could pack a dangerous punch to an orbiting craft like the space station, given the high orbital speed of 17,500 mph.

Satellite makers now try to make their spacecraft as non-breakable as possible.

Kelly and Kornienko are four months into a one-year space station mission. It will be a record for NASA, but not for the Russians, who have a history of long space flights.

https://uk.news.yahoo.com/space-station-astronauts-shelter-space-junk-153135241.html

AND THE TRASH WE HAVE LEFT ON OUR MOON IS DISGRACEFULL.

Most of that debris is accounted for by the wreckage of spacecraft -- more than 70 vehicles in all, their remains scattered at intervals over the lunar surface. The rest of it, however, is accounted for by smaller pieces of detritus, objects jettisoned because they had served their purpose, and then outlived their utility, to their respective missions: geological tools, bodily waste, solemn monuments to accomplishment and sacrifice. Buzz Aldrin and Neil Armstrong alone left more than 100 items on the Sea of Tranquility, some of those being shovels and rakes, one being the plaque announcing to the world -- and the worlds beyond it -- that "we came in peace for all mankind."

So. With that in mind, here is a rough (and only partial) inventory of the stuff mankind has left on the moon:

• more than 70 spacecraft, including rovers, modules, and crashed orbiters
5 American flags
2 golf balls
• 12 pairs of boots
• TV cameras
• film magazines
• 96 bags of urine, feces, and vomit
• numerous Hasselbad cameras and accessories
• several improvised javelins
• various hammers, tongs, rakes, and shovels
• backpacks
• insulating blankets
• utility towels
• used wet wipes
• personal hygiene kits
• empty packages of space food
a photograph of Apollo 16 astronaut Charles Duke's family
• a feather from Baggin, the Air Force Academy's mascot falcon, used to conduct Apollo 15's famous "hammer-feather drop" experiment
a small aluminum sculpture, a tribute to the American and Soviet "fallen astronauts" who died in the space race -- left by the crew of Apollo 15
a patch from the never-launched Apollo 1 mission, which ended prematurely when flames engulfed the command module during a 1967 training exercise, killing three U.S. astronauts
a small silicon disk bearing goodwill messages from 73 world leaders, and left on the moon by the crew of Apollo 11
a silver pin, left by Apollo 12 astronaut Alan Bean
a medal honoring Soviet cosmonauts Vladimir Komarov and Yuri Gagarin
a cast golden olive branch left by the crew of Apollo 11

http://www.theatlantic.com/technology/archive/2012/12/the-trash-weve-left-on-the-moon/266465/

 

 

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No, the bottom picture looks a little like that but its in fact a dead satellite covered in gold leaf which makes it look that way. It was officially declared dead on Wednesday May 9 last year. I have pictures showing astronaut's outside the shuttle and pictures taken from inside the space station and shuttles. Some pieces are nothing more than flakes of paint, others are huge and if they impacted with a space station or shuttle it would destroy it and them inside. The photo's are crystal clear because there is no atmosphere in space and its ice cold, and this makes them appear as unreal.

Space station astronauts take shelter from space junk:

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) — A piece of space junk forced the three space station astronauts to seek emergency shelter Thursday.

For nearly an hour, the American and two Russians hunkered down in their Soyuz capsule, which is docked to the International Space Station, in case they had to make a quick getaway. The fragment from an old Russian weather satellite ended up passing harmlessly, about 1½ miles away.

"Happy there was no impact," NASA astronaut Scott Kelly said via Twitter. "Great coordination with international ground teams. Excellent training."

It's only the fourth time in the 16-year history of the space station that a crew has had to rush into a Russian Soyuz for protection from potentially dangerous debris. The exact size of the object was unknown, according to a NASA spokesman.

Normally, NASA learns about incoming junk sooner, and the space station moves out of the way. But there wasn't time for that Thursday; the crew was notified just 1½ hours in advance.

The three men were already up and working when Mission Control ordered them into the Soyuz on Thursday morning. They did not need to put on their Soyuz flight suits, and there was no rush, said NASA spokesman Dan Huot.

The all-clear came 1½ hours after the initial alert, around 8 a.m. EDT. It took the astronauts more than an hour to get their 250-mile-high home back to normal operation, following the "shelter in place," as NASA calls it. Research work that was interrupted will be rescheduled, according to Mission Control.

Kelly and his Russia roommates, Mikhail Kornienko and Gennady Padalka, are getting used to junk in their neighborhood.

Twice since the trio arrived in March, the space station has had to dodge pieces of orbiting debris, in April and June. Three more men are due to arrive next week.

The last time a station crew had to jump into their Soyuz for protection was in 2012.

Space junk is at an all-time high because of all the clutter in orbit, the result of accidentally colliding spacecraft, exploding satellites and rocket stages, and deliberate run-ins ordered up as tests by China and the United States several years back. Just last February, a U.S. military meteorological satellite blew up, presumably because of a failed battery, scattering dozens of pieces of debris.

The Defense Department is currently tracking about 22,000 dead satellites, spent rocket bodies and all other forms of orbital debris. These items are at least 4 inches across. NASA estimates there could be more than 500,000 smaller objects, nearly a half-inch and bigger, that could pack a dangerous punch to an orbiting craft like the space station, given the high orbital speed of 17,500 mph.

Satellite makers now try to make their spacecraft as non-breakable as possible.

Kelly and Kornienko are four months into a one-year space station mission. It will be a record for NASA, but not for the Russians, who have a history of long space flights.

https://uk.news.yahoo.com/space-station-astronauts-shelter-space-junk-153135241.html

AND THE TRASH WE HAVE LEFT ON OUR MOON IS DISGRACEFULL.

Most of that debris is accounted for by the wreckage of spacecraft -- more than 70 vehicles in all, their remains scattered at intervals over the lunar surface. The rest of it, however, is accounted for by smaller pieces of detritus, objects jettisoned because they had served their purpose, and then outlived their utility, to their respective missions: geological tools, bodily waste, solemn monuments to accomplishment and sacrifice. Buzz Aldrin and Neil Armstrong alone left more than 100 items on the Sea of Tranquility, some of those being shovels and rakes, one being the plaque announcing to the world -- and the worlds beyond it -- that "we came in peace for all mankind."

So. With that in mind, here is a rough (and only partial) inventory of the stuff mankind has left on the moon:

• more than 70 spacecraft, including rovers, modules, and crashed orbiters
5 American flags
2 golf balls
• 12 pairs of boots
• TV cameras
• film magazines
• 96 bags of urine, feces, and vomit
• numerous Hasselbad cameras and accessories
• several improvised javelins
• various hammers, tongs, rakes, and shovels
• backpacks
• insulating blankets
• utility towels
• used wet wipes
• personal hygiene kits
• empty packages of space food
a photograph of Apollo 16 astronaut Charles Duke's family
• a feather from Baggin, the Air Force Academy's mascot falcon, used to conduct Apollo 15's famous "hammer-feather drop" experiment
a small aluminum sculpture, a tribute to the American and Soviet "fallen astronauts" who died in the space race -- left by the crew of Apollo 15
a patch from the never-launched Apollo 1 mission, which ended prematurely when flames engulfed the command module during a 1967 training exercise, killing three U.S. astronauts
a small silicon disk bearing goodwill messages from 73 world leaders, and left on the moon by the crew of Apollo 11
a silver pin, left by Apollo 12 astronaut Alan Bean
a medal honoring Soviet cosmonauts Vladimir Komarov and Yuri Gagarin
a cast golden olive branch left by the crew of Apollo 11

http://www.theatlantic.com/technology/archive/2012/12/the-trash-weve-left-on-the-moon/266465/

 

 

Hi Sister.

There is space junk out there and it continues to build, some are even 75 millions of miles away. Read this.

NASA is trying to resuscitate its planet-hunting Kepler spacecraft

April 11, 201611:47am.
 

NASA is trying to resuscitate its planet-hunting Kepler spacecraft, in a state of emergency 75 million miles away.

The treasured spacecraft — responsible for detecting nearly 5,000 planets outside our solar system — slipped into emergency mode sometime last week.

The last regular contact was April 4; everything seemed normal then.

Ground controllers discovered the problem Thursday, right before they were going to point Kepler toward the centre of the Milky Way as part of a new kind of planetary survey.

Kepler was going to join ground observatories in surveying millions of stars in the heart of our galaxy, in hopes of finding planets far from their suns, like our own outer planets, as well as stray planets that might be wandering between stars.

This is the latest crisis in the life of Kepler.

Launched in 2009, the spacecraft completed its primary mission in 2012.

Despite repeated breakdowns, Kepler kept going on an extended mission dubbed K2 — until now. The vast distance between Kepler and Earth make it all the harder to fix.

From 75 million miles away, signals would take 13 minutes to go back and forth, according to mission manager Charlie Sobeck at NASA’s Ames Research Center in Mountain View, California.

Recovering from this emergency condition “is the team’s priority at this time,” Sobeck said in a web update this weekend.

Full report link;

http://www.news.com.au/technology/science/space/nasa-is-trying-to-resuscitate-its-planethunting-kepler-spacecraft/news-story/5876eb453a9dd71cc449dfca356afd98

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On 08/04/2016 at 6:37 AM, Sister said:

Thanks Hazard

These pictures look like drawings to me, do they look like that to you?

They are CGI (animations) .. notice the amount of CGI satellites in picture #1 ? Then compare with picture #3 .. NO satellites to be seen ANYWHERE .. curious that considering those "satellites" apparently occupy every possible "orbit", some "high orbit" and some "mid" and some "low orbit" .. apparently.

THEN imagine what would happen to picture #1's satellites and what would happen to picture #3's "satellite" in regards to all that debris in picture #2 (let alone the volume of picture #1's apparent traffic) .. result if true .. one gigantic junkyard derby where nothing in orbit would be safe !! 

Simple test .. look up at the next full moon, in relation to all those satellites, you should EASILY spot anywhere up to 12 satellites crossing in front of the moon at any given time (given that most are apparently the size of a sedan upwards to a bus .. BUT .. we NEVER do .. WHY?

LOL .. hmmmmmmmmmm.

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