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Email from John DiNardo...

It's really just basic physics. Visualize iron filings evenly sprinkled on a tabletop. Then visualize a strong magnet slowly sliding across the tabletop. The magnet attracts the iron filings in its pathway, leaving a clear swath in the midst of the field of iron filings.

In the late 1990s, Dr. John Murray of the Open University in Britain, and Dr. John Matese of the University of Louisiana, unknown to one another, discovered that there are "non-random" bare zones or sparse zones in the comet-filled Oort Cloud, a spherically shaped blizzard of comets, way beyond, and surrounding, our Solar System. Normally, this comet-filled Oort Cloud looks like a dense swarm of gnats flying around your head at sundown on a summer evening.

When Murray and Matese observed these "non-random" comet field patterns in the Oort Cloud, they logically and correctly concluded that some massive object is acting like that strong magnet on your tabletop, gravitationally clearing a pathway through the Oort Cloud's cometary blizzard, like a plow truck clears a snow filled highway.

This massive gravitational magnet, a NASA-discovered incoming dwarf star, holds captive thousands of comets, asteroids, meteors, boulders, rocks, and red iron-oxide dust in its intense gravitational grip. Therefore, we must face facts, and accept what NASA and its supervisory parent, the National Security Agency, have barred from media reportage for the past three decades, ever since The Washington Post heralded, on its front page, the discovery of this incoming dwarf star, which the past decade's records prove is the cause of all of these extremely severe meteorological and geological events. Currently, the denser inner region of this celestial flying beehive's surrounding swarm of space objects is approaching the environs of our inner Solar System, on its way toward its inexorable gravitational rendezvous with our Sun, in what newtonian physics principles indicate will be its looping trajectory around the Sun.

Why would a dwarf star be heading through our inner Solar System, toward the Sun? Simply explained, gravity works! You see, the mass of this incoming brown dwarf star is a thousand or more Earth-masses. Yet, the mass of our Sun is one-third of a million Earth-masses! So, our Sun is like that powerful magnet on the tabletop, with this incoming dwarf star being like a steel ball bearing rolling, by magnetic attraction, toward the magnet.

By maintaining daily awareness of God's presence, we can protect ourselves from falling debris. Also, the majority of people -- those who will escape a future impact -- can prepare in case such an impact leaves us abruptly thrown into a less technological civilization, as of a past era, in an Amish-like lifestyle. Check out whentechfails.com.

John DiNardo

http://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=10151302419027774&set=pb.673732773.-2207520000.1360948869&type=3&theater

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February 15, 2013

BREAKING NEWS
Did Asteroid 2012 DA 14 Hit a Satellite? Of Did It's Gravity Dis-orbit One of Several Meteorites?
 
by Mitch Battros - Earth Changes Media

A bolide streaked across the sky and broke up Friday morning over the Ural Mountain city of Chelyabinsk, unleashing a tremendous shock wave that smashed windows, collapsed roofs and injured more than 980 people.

 

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The intense flash of light was recorded on video as far away as Nizhny Tagil, nearly 300 miles to the north. The trail of the meteor was also visible in Kazakhstan, more than 80 miles to the south.

 

Regional Health Minister Marina Mokvicheva in Chelyabinsk said 985 people sought medical help for injuries and 43 were hospitalized.

 

STUNNING VIDEO

 Meteor shards hit Russia after explosion in the sky 

The Russian Academy of Sciences estimated that the meteor weighed around 10 tons and was traveling at 10 to 12 miles per second (roughly 30,000 to 45,000 mph) when it disintegrated.

 

***Visit Earth Changes Media Website for Several Articles Covering Pre and Post Events. 

 

VIDEO-FULL ARTICLE - http://bit.ly/Z34Uud

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Yekaterina Pustynnikova / Chelyabinsk.ru via AP

A huge meteor flared through the skies over Russia's Chelyabinsk region, triggering a powerful shock wave that injured nearly a thousand people, blew out windows and reportedly caused the roof of a factory to collapse.

By Alan Boyle and Matthew DeLuca, NBC News


A meteor 15 meters across flared through the skies over Russia's Chelyabinsk region early Friday, triggering an atomic bomb-sized shock wave that injured nearly a thousand people, blew out windows and caused some Russians to fear the end of the world.

It was the largest reported fireball since the Tunguska event in 1908 – an asteroid that flattened millions of trees over a wide area in Siberia – according to NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory.

Multiple amateur videos posted online showed the meteor’s flaring arc – called a bolide by scientists – as it crossed the western Siberia sky. Others from the scene included the sound of a loud boom, followed by a cacophony of car alarms. One video showed the hurried evacuation of an office building in Chelyabinsk.

Eugeny Khazheev / EPA

Collapsed wall


Cars drive past the site of a collapsed wall and roof of a zinc plant warehouse in Chelyabinsk on Feb. 15. The destruction was caused by the shock wave from a meteoroid that streaked explosively through the skies above Chelyabinsk in Siberia.
chelyabinsk.ru via Reuters

Broken glass


Damage caused after a meteorite passed above the Urals city of Chelyabinskon Feb. 15.


“There was panic. People had no idea what was happening. Everyone was going around to people’s houses to check if they were OK,” Chelyabinsk resident Sergey Hametov told The Associated Press. “We saw a big burst of light then went outside to see what it was and we heard a really loud thundering sound.”

Another resident described the meteorite's “flash."

"I was standing at a bus stop, seeing off my girlfriend," Andrei, a local resident who did not give his second name, told Reuters. "Then there was a flash and I saw a trail of smoke across the sky and felt a shock wave that smashed windows."

The fireball’s trail, which JPL reported was visible for about 30 seconds and said was “brighter than the sun,” lit up one man’s morning commute. “I was driving to work, it was quite dark, but it suddenly became as bright as if it was day,” Viktor Prokofiev told Reuters. “I felt like I was blinded by headlights.”

Estimates of the number of people injured swelled throughout the day, with early reports putting those hurt around 500, with close to 100 people hospitalized. Chelyabinsk health official Marina Moskvicheva later said as many as 985 people had requested medical assistance in the city, many for injuries caused by flying glass. More than 200 children at Chelyabinsk schools, which had just opened, were among the injured, according to officials.

Russia’s interior ministry said the shock wave caused the roof of a zinc factory's warehouse to collapse, but that no fatalities were reported.

The fireball entered Earth’s atmosphere at 18 km per second, and released hundreds of kilotons of energy, JPL said. The blast's force was the equivalent of the nuclear weapons dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki during WWII – many times over.

Chelyabinsk Region Branch Of Rus / EPA

Landing spot


A photo provided by the Russian Interior Ministry's Chelyabinsk regional branch shows people standing near a 26-foot-wide hole in the ice of Chebarkul Lake, reportedly created by a meteorite that fell to Earth on Feb. 15.


Read Full Article and Watch Video Here

...

Massive meteor rocks Russia, 1k+ injured

 
 
 
 
 
 


Published on Feb 15, 2013

On Friday, the people of Chelyabinsk had their world rocked after a meteor streaked across the sky and made contact in the region. The blast in the industrial region injured over one thousand people and blew out windows of building in the area. According to reports, the meteor weighed approximately 11 tons and RT's Lindsay France brings us more on the damage from this rare phenomenon.

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February 14, 2013


BREAKING NEWS: The UN Braces for Space Weather Storms
 UPDATE:-Asteroid 2012 DA14


by Mitch Battros - Earth Changes Media

NASA Television will provide commentary starting at 2 p.m. EST (11 a.m. PST) on Friday, Feb. 15, during the close, flyby of a small near-Earth asteroid named 2012 DA14. NASA places a high priority on tracking asteroids and protecting our home planet from them. This flyby will provide a unique opportunity for researchers to study a near-Earth object up close.

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The half-hour broadcast from NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) in Pasadena, Calif., will incorporate real-time animation to show the location of the asteroid in relation to Earth, along with live or near real-time views of the asteroid from observatories in Australia, weather permitting.

RELATE ARTICLE - http://bit.ly/YKxdh8

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UPDATE: Space Data Association -  
Asteroid 2012 DA14

 

The Space Data Association (SDA), established by commercial satellite operators to improve the safety and efficiency of space operations, today announced the results of its analysis related to the imminent approach of the DA14 asteroid, concluding that there should be no satellites threatened by the asteroid.

 

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A comparison between the asteroid trajectory and the public space catalog - shows that DA14 will come no closer than 1,000 km to any space object, and should not threaten any operational objects or create debris in any orbit. Additionally, an analysis of SDA participating satellites, GPS and GLONASS, shows that DA14 will come no closer than 3,500 miles (5,630 km) to any of those operational satellites.

 

FULL ARTICLE - http://bit.ly/12l0TWT

 

 

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BREAKING NEWS: The UN Braces for Space Weather Storms

 

Industrialized countries can keep track of local magnetism, ground currents, and ionization, and provide the data to researchers. Developing countries are where the gaps are, particularly at low latitudes around Earth's magnetic equator. With assistance from the UN, researchers may be able to extend sensor networks into regions where it was once politically unfeasible.

 

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Strong solar storms can knock out power, disable satellites, and scramble GPS. "It's a global problem made worse by increasing worldwide reliance on sensitive electronic technologies." says Lika Guhathakurta of NASA Headquarters in Washington. Guhathakurta states: "By adding space weather to the regular agenda of the COPUOS Science and Technical Subcommittee, the UN is recognizing solar activity as a concern on par with orbital debris and close-approaching asteroids."

 

Space weather plays an important role in Earth's climate. For example, the Maunder minimum, a 70-year period almost devoid of sunspots in the late 17th to early 18th century, coincided with prolonged, very cold winters in the northern hemisphere. Researchers are increasingly convinced that variations in solar activity have regional effects on climate and weather that pay no attention to national boundaries, and thus can only be studied in meaningful detail by an international consortium.

 

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"Space weather is a significant natural hazard that requires global preparedness," says Prof. Hans Haubold of the UN Office for Outer Space Affairs. "This new agenda item links space science and space technology for the benefit of all humankind."

 

FULL ARTICLE - http://bit.ly/12l16th

 

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