Thursday, April 25, 2013

Power Dynamic Telescope PDT Sees Super Giant Star

POWER DYNAMIC TELESCOPE FINDS SUPER GIANT STAR DISK!

EXPLORER CLASS TELESCOPE: Spectacular new view of a giant sun located across the galaxy..

THIS IS JUST CRAZY TELESCOPIC VIEWING — SEEING This Giant Bubbling Star Image Close Up!

A giant red super sun is living across the galaxy. It's so large, we decided to try pointing the PDT telescope there to see what could materialize. Stars are generally only tiny pinpoints, unresolved pin-tip dots in the largest telescopes. However, through the giant PDT Telescope, a giant full disk bubbling sun is resolved, showing the enigmatic face of Betelgeuse, a bright super red giant star in the constellation Orion.


Gazing upon the starry heavens we've seen the orange reddish hew of the Star Betelgeuse on countless clear nights and wondered what it looks like close up. Telescopes of moderate to large size simply do not show the tiny stars as anything more than a pinpoint of featureless light. It takes very large telescopes and special techniques of interferometry to bring forth a disk and not much more is discerned. The PDT however, is so large in aperture, and with techniques of supercomputer molecular envisioning and processing with Adjuncts, that optically it can see an image with a large amount of unprecedented detail. This giant star is amazing with a massive bubbling boiling surface!

NINE NEW DISCOVERIES!
With just one observation of one star, the Explorer Class telescope has made more discoveries at a rate higher than any previous Big Brain Initiative telescope.

1) Resolving the disk is remarkable and unexpected.

2) Seeing topical features extending out from the solar perimeter is remarkable.

3) The detail in the photosphere is unprecedented.

4) At the left side, the disk appears to have a giant solar storm raging. The star itself is 700 million miles in diameter according to estimates.

5) This fierce storm reaches about 233 million miles out into space, and is perhaps the largest solar storm ever observed.

6) It also effects 1/7th of the star's side facing the Earth, as the largest sunspot ever discovered, covering about 100 million miles of the star's surface diameter.

7) The star also has continuous extremely large solar storms covering the entire perimeter.

8) It appears the red giant has eight super storms going on at the same time, the highest number of super storms ever discovered at one time on any sun.

9) The main stellar disk of this sun appears to show extrapolated giant sections and regions of massive bubbling and boiling effects.