Scientists Are Building a Real-Life Version of the Starship Enterprise's Life Scanner | |
Anonymous Coward User ID: 71908685 Philippines 08/23/2019 05:13 AM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | By Adam Mann a day ago Space Quoting: +Maza12+ Spiral light reveals living creatures. When the crewmembers of the starship Enterprise pull into orbit around a new planet, one of the first things they do is scan for life-forms. Here in the real world, researchers have long been trying to figure out how to unambiguously detect signs of life on distant exoplanets. They are now one step closer to this goal, thanks to a new remote-sensing technique that relies on a quirk of biochemistry causing light to spiral in a particular direction and produce a fairly unmistakable signal. The method, described in a recent paper published in the journal Astrobiology, could be used aboard space-based observatories and help scientists learn if the universe contains living beings like ourselves. In recent years, remote-life detection has become a topic of immense interest as astronomers have begun to capture light from planets orbiting other stars, which can be analyzed to determine what kind of chemicals those worlds contain. Researchers would like to figure out some indicator that could definitively tell them whether or not they are looking at a living biosphere. [link to www.livescience.com (secure)] sounds good~ |
+Maza12+
(OP) User ID: 77387335 Bosnia and Herzegovina 08/23/2019 05:15 AM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | Indeed. Fascinating. “All sacrificing without faith and divine desire is an abonimation before God, and does not reach the gate of divine glory; but if man enters therein with the power of faith, he surrenders to it his free will, and desires by that means, and through its instrumentality, to enter into the eternal free will of God.” (Mysterium, xxvii. 13.) -Personal Christianity. A Science. (p.223) - Jakob Böhme ~ I am Cerberus, the Long Necked "Monster' |
Miss Bunny Swan
User ID: 77759132 Australia 08/23/2019 05:16 AM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | |
CitizenPerth
User ID: 77944460 Australia 08/23/2019 05:22 AM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | That would be cool!... however?.. I like the Doc's one that heals just about anything... It's life as we know it, but only just. [link to citizenperth.wordpress.com] sic ut vos es vos should exsisto , denego alius vicis facio vos change , exsisto youself , proprie |
Anonymous Coward User ID: 76651449 Canada 08/23/2019 06:17 AM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | By Adam Mann a day ago Space Quoting: +Maza12+ Spiral light reveals living creatures. When the crewmembers of the starship Enterprise pull into orbit around a new planet, one of the first things they do is scan for life-forms. Here in the real world, researchers have long been trying to figure out how to unambiguously detect signs of life on distant exoplanets. They are now one step closer to this goal, thanks to a new remote-sensing technique that relies on a quirk of biochemistry causing light to spiral in a particular direction and produce a fairly unmistakable signal. The method, described in a recent paper published in the journal Astrobiology, could be used aboard space-based observatories and help scientists learn if the universe contains living beings like ourselves. In recent years, remote-life detection has become a topic of immense interest as astronomers have begun to capture light from planets orbiting other stars, which can be analyzed to determine what kind of chemicals those worlds contain. Researchers would like to figure out some indicator that could definitively tell them whether or not they are looking at a living biosphere. [link to www.livescience.com (secure)] Scientists... Right. |
Anonymous Coward User ID: 71004694 United States 08/23/2019 06:53 AM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | |
Anonymous Coward User ID: 75758325 United States 08/23/2019 07:43 AM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | Everything living gives off a spiral of light SPIRAL The ONLY way for it to form a spiral is if it were to be spinning. So we have an energetic extension of our body that can be seen on cameras, so they consider it light rather than basic EMFs. I presume what they are actually doing is measuring the magnetic field produced by the hearts of living organisms, which is always spinning, and using a special camera to be able to 'see' it. Being they eventually 'see' the magnetic field, they just call it light. I did not read the article lol i'm just guessing |
Anonymous Coward User ID: 75758325 United States 08/23/2019 07:46 AM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | This is 100% bioelectric photography. That is their method of identifying life forms on distant planets. I Just realized they're going to need a supercomputer in order for this method to work in real time |
Desert Dude
User ID: 77873600 United States 08/23/2019 09:27 AM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | Mr. Spock. Are there any females detected on that planet? Or within scanner range in this sector? Last Edited by Desert Dude on 08/23/2019 09:42 AM Yeah I did it, and it can't be undone. |
Relativity
User ID: 77860815 United States 08/23/2019 10:21 AM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | By Adam Mann a day ago Space Quoting: +Maza12+ Spiral light reveals living creatures. When the crewmembers of the starship Enterprise pull into orbit around a new planet, one of the first things they do is scan for life-forms. Here in the real world, researchers have long been trying to figure out how to unambiguously detect signs of life on distant exoplanets. They are now one step closer to this goal, thanks to a new remote-sensing technique that relies on a quirk of biochemistry causing light to spiral in a particular direction and produce a fairly unmistakable signal. The method, described in a recent paper published in the journal Astrobiology, could be used aboard space-based observatories and help scientists learn if the universe contains living beings like ourselves. In recent years, remote-life detection has become a topic of immense interest as astronomers have begun to capture light from planets orbiting other stars, which can be analyzed to determine what kind of chemicals those worlds contain. Researchers would like to figure out some indicator that could definitively tell them whether or not they are looking at a living biosphere. [link to www.livescience.com (secure)] “In finding balance between lies and trust there will never be a better source than to speak your truth or make your peace some other way.” ~Sully Erna Many that live deserve death. And some that die deserve life. Can you give it to them? Then do not be too eager to deal out death in judgment. For even the very wise cannot see all ends. -Gandalph "A fool thinks himself to be wise, but a wise man knows himself to be a fool." - William Shakespeare |
Anonymous Coward User ID: 77945054 United Kingdom 08/23/2019 12:34 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | |
UH User ID: 77843044 United States 08/23/2019 12:40 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | |
Nonentity
User ID: 77013656 United States 08/23/2019 01:30 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | Everything living gives off a spiral of light Quoting: Anonymous Coward 75758325 SPIRAL The ONLY way for it to form a spiral is if it were to be spinning. So we have an energetic extension of our body that can be seen on cameras, so they consider it light rather than basic EMFs. I presume what they are actually doing is measuring the magnetic field produced by the hearts of living organisms, which is always spinning, and using a special camera to be able to 'see' it. Being they eventually 'see' the magnetic field, they just call it light. I did not read the article lol i'm just guessing This is a interesting because I invented a type of radio receiver that responds to rotating waves while self cancelling standard radio waves propagated by broadcast stations. Plants give off rotating EM when rustled by wind or other life forms. |
Out of orbit User ID: 77946250 Turkey 08/23/2019 02:26 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | |
Anonymous Coward User ID: 70732847 United States 08/23/2019 03:14 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | |
Anonymous Coward User ID: 75758325 United States 08/23/2019 03:27 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | Everything living gives off a spiral of light Quoting: Anonymous Coward 75758325 SPIRAL The ONLY way for it to form a spiral is if it were to be spinning. So we have an energetic extension of our body that can be seen on cameras, so they consider it light rather than basic EMFs. I presume what they are actually doing is measuring the magnetic field produced by the hearts of living organisms, which is always spinning, and using a special camera to be able to 'see' it. Being they eventually 'see' the magnetic field, they just call it light. I did not read the article lol i'm just guessing This is a interesting because I invented a type of radio receiver that responds to rotating waves while self cancelling standard radio waves propagated by broadcast stations. Plants give off rotating EM when rustled by wind or other life forms. Correct, as plants also have their own version of a nervous system which uses electricity to communicate with other parts of the plant. And as the versed know, electricity cannot exist without a magnetic field. The magnetic field rotates innately depending on the direction of the energetic flow (n to s or s to n) Your device is coded to identify and disallow standard radio wave bands to play through the speaker? How do you identify a rotating wave in comparison to a 'linear' wave? |
Anonymous Coward User ID: 75758325 United States 08/23/2019 03:29 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | When light interacts with long chains of these different-handed arrangements, it becomes circularly polarized, meaning that its electromagnetic waves will travel in either clockwise or counterclockwise spirals. Inorganic molecules won’t generally impart this property to rays of light. Quoting: Anonymous Coward 75758325 This is 100% bioelectric photography. That is their method of identifying life forms on distant planets. I Just realized they're going to need a supercomputer in order for this method to work in real time there really is no difference between electromagnetism and light. they are the same thing vibrating at a different speed, so I find an issue with them calling this 'light' |
Nonentity
User ID: 77013656 United States 08/24/2019 10:07 AM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | Everything living gives off a spiral of light Quoting: Anonymous Coward 75758325 SPIRAL The ONLY way for it to form a spiral is if it were to be spinning. So we have an energetic extension of our body that can be seen on cameras, so they consider it light rather than basic EMFs. I presume what they are actually doing is measuring the magnetic field produced by the hearts of living organisms, which is always spinning, and using a special camera to be able to 'see' it. Being they eventually 'see' the magnetic field, they just call it light. I did not read the article lol i'm just guessing This is a interesting because I invented a type of radio receiver that responds to rotating waves while self cancelling standard radio waves propagated by broadcast stations. Plants give off rotating EM when rustled by wind or other life forms. Correct, as plants also have their own version of a nervous system which uses electricity to communicate with other parts of the plant. And as the versed know, electricity cannot exist without a magnetic field. The magnetic field rotates innately depending on the direction of the energetic flow (n to s or s to n) Your device is coded to identify and disallow standard radio wave bands to play through the speaker? How do you identify a rotating wave in comparison to a 'linear' wave? Create a rotating magnetic field in a toroid with coils. Make more than 1 toroid coil, run a ferrite rod down the center of multiple toroids. Reverse the polarity of toroid flux on one side. The ferrite rod inherits the magnetic rotation. Clockwise on one side, counter clockwise on the other side. Now imagine the magnetic flux on a ferrite rod, how it rotates opposite on each end. What happens to the magnetic flux between the two opposing, rotating fields? Make a coil but wind it perpendicular to what a normal coil would be wound like. This is the pickup coil that goes to the preamp. Of the toroids, add another set of coils that will self cancel. That will remove the normal radio signals. All that remains is a ferrite rod under rotational tension. This amplifies the response to rotating flux from environment. Hard to explain and Im sure there are other ways to achieve rotational reception. Basically, create rotating tension and induce that tension into a ferrite rod. Pick up flux changes at the rod center where rotation direction switches. Linear waves can be self canceled at the toroid, not the rod. I've used DC current to apply the magnetic tension in the coils around the toroid. It takes some imagination.... |
Nonentity
User ID: 77013656 United States 08/24/2019 10:11 AM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | The plants "brain" is the canopy. Animal brains are internal, bodies external. Plant brains are external, bodies internal. The leaf pattern spread is the same as a brain but opposite direction. Leaf is macro folding and brain is micro folding. Animals can perceive other animals bodies but not each others minds. Plants can perceive each others minds but not their bodies. In animals, the mind is private while the body is the social aspect. In plants, the body is private while the mind is the social aspect. |
Nonentity
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