Showing posts with label m57. Show all posts
Showing posts with label m57. Show all posts

Friday, April 26, 2013

Power Dynamic Telescope PDT - through the Ring Nebula M57

The center of the Ring seen through the Power Dynamic Telescope PDT
POWER DYNAMIC TELESCOPE PDT
FANTASTIC JOURNEY THROUGH M57 RING NEBULA
M57 like you've never seen it before!

Small telescope M57 view
LOOKING INTO & THROUGH THE RING NEBULADiscover What’s Inside and On the Other Side!

At Left: a small telescope barely shows the 9th magnitude Ring Nebula. The center hole is featureless.


We give you permission to embark on a great Telenaut mission of exploration and discovery. Travel to the giant smoke ring - the famous Ring Nebula. Like astronauts using space ships, Telenauts use powerful telescopes to achieve their space missions.

When we arrive at this celestial wonder, we will enter into, explore inside, and then travel beyond the place that no man has ever gone before using the Big Brain's newest Adjunctive telescope.

Spectacular, mind boggling, and fantastic are the named results that come to mind when describing the newest journey into deep space made with the new Power Dynamic Telescope, bringing forth shocking new discoveries (that reside within and on the other side of the Ring).

No telescope this large ever attempted to penetrate the center hole of M57 until now. This is just the beginning of a new era in space exploration by the Big Brain Inititive. The Ring Nebula appears as a kind of cylinder, with spatial depth that can be penetrated and reveal space time on the opposite side. The things that materialized in the first exploratory image are astounding!

BREAKING NEWS! Spectacular results were imaged last night when the newest and most powerful Adjunctive telescope, the Power Dynamic Telescope PDT, was slewed towards the famous Ring Nebula, diving into the center hole to reveal the treasures hidden inside.

Supercomputer driven, the very powerful and complex Discovery Class Power Dynamic Telescope was pointed at the center of the Ring Nebula M57, and when doing Molecular calibrations - it inadvertently began looking inside the hole where we expected to only see a couple dim magnitude stars for tweaking the cams. Unexpectedly, not only could we see materialization inside, but we could see all the way through the Nebular Cast Sheen (attributed to M57) to the other side where new objects were discovered, arranged in space - resident beyond the ring!

— Telescope shows more than expected: looking into and through the ring to the other side! — 


Our Discovery List

1) The PDT allows one to look inside M57 Ring Nebula’s center hole and to look inside some distance as the ring is really a cylinder implying depth of field.


2) A Blue Cast Sheen BCS molecular window is discovered, which was created by the Ring's connecting molecular dust and gas.

3) The PDT Telescope was able to penetrate the blue cast sheen all the way to the other side of space and time.

4) There are objects both within and beyond this ring - inside and beyond the window of exploded star dust, many new faint stars and objects are seen.

5) Inside the ring we see two parallel bands of star dust and matter apparently residing inside the cylinder walls, appearing to have some connection with the matter curvature of the Ring's cylindrical shape.

6) Beyond the BCS boundary, there are many rifts, voids, stars, galaxies, nebula, and objects in space.

A star map, showing the plot of more stars and objects, can be created using the telescope’s Paradigmic Light Processor and this image.

Friday, April 12, 2013

PGT-ET Ring Nebula New Discoveries

RING NEBULA SPECTACULAR BREAKTHROUGH IMAGE
The PGT-ET Telescope Shakes Loose New Discovery - COSMIC STRIATIONS

Last night we pointed the new massive Paradigmic Adjunctive PGT-ET telescope at M57, the Ring Nebula in Lyra. For the first time with M57, we fully utilized the Molecular Processor on the telescope, looked at a portion of the "smoke" Ring's puffy arm and a spectacular view appeared, blazing with new discoveries.

The massive PGT ET Telescope borrows high technology from the GMM Genius Molecular Microscope for extreme performance. Coupling together the molecular technology of the GMM microscope with the PGT-ET telescope has created an unprecedented machine within the Big Brain Initiative. The Molecular Processor was introduced on the PGT Telescope. The telescope has an unprecedented light gathering ability and exemplifies extremely high resolving power in this image, a highly detailed section of the ring is magnified.

The PGT-ET Telescope rattles the cage of the Universe —

PRIMARY INITIAL DISCOVERIES 
 1) The tiny ring, at 2,300 light years distance, was never seen with this appearance — showing a massively large and fully interconnecting molecular striation pathways of glowing red hydrogen and nitrogen "flames" blazing across and within the ghost ring's annular.

2) In places, the ring is so tenuous, it has gaps and large holes that "see through" to not only a deeper interior but penetrate to another side of space time.

3) Looking into and through the largest hole, we can actually see new objects in space, likely never before seen.
 
THROUGH A SMALL TELESCOPE
At left, through a smaller telescope, the ring is relatively featureless and uneventful. Visually, the Ring Nebula appears as a tiny puff of smoke, without color, like a smoke ring. Larger telescope begin to show the 15th magnitude central star.

CONCLUSION
The PGT-ET Telescope changes the previously known appearance of M57 completely. Casting the massive telescopic aperture onto the ring's annular brings in spectacular detail and has yielded at least three new initial discoveries. It will take weeks and months to fully analyze this data.

ABOUT THE RING
"The Ring Nebula (also catalogued as Messier 57, M57 or NGC 6720) is a planetary nebula in the northern constellation of Lyra.[5] Such objects are formed when a shell of ionized gas is expelled into the surrounding interstellar medium by a red giant star, which was passing through the last stage in its evolution before becoming a white dwarf."
Wikipedia