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Change (Peace, Love & Unity) is in the Air ... Time to GET IT !

(Solar and Heliospheric Observatory - website / spaceweather.com)

The Key to Life is Balance

The Key to Life is Balance
President Barack Obama "It was because the precepts of Jesus Christ spoke to me in terms of the kind of life that I would want to lead -- being my brother's and sister's keeper, treating others as they would treat me," he said.

"And I think also understanding that, you know, that Jesus Christ dying for my sins spoke to the humility we all have to have as human beings -- that we're sinful and we're flawed and we make mistakes, and that we ... achieve salvation through the grace of God." - (Sep 28, 2010.)

"Barack Obama (Indigo leader) is a major part of the Golden Age master plan"

2010 with Shaman, Kiesha Crowther in workshop in Zurich, Switzerland of early November 2010.

Kiesha Crowther Little Grandmother, one of the 12 young Shaman wisdom keepers to establish the "Tribe of many colors" recently was on a European Tour spreading her message on how to start living from the heart. She also speaks about our ancestors, the pole shift, where the extraterrestrials are hiding and what we can do to change our world and heal Mother Earth. This is a 25 minutes summary of her workshop in Zurich, Switzerland of early November 2010.

UFO's / ET's

UFO's / ET's
One of the first of many UFO photographs taken by Carlos Diaz-Mexico.

Greg Braden "If we are honest, truthful, considerate, caring and compassionate, if we live this each day, we have already prepared for whatever could possibly come on 2012 or any other day, any other year, any time in our future."

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Thursday, April 28, 2011

The World's Biggest Space Experiment Launches Tomorrow, Ready to Find Dark Matter and Alternate Universes

The ultra-sensitive Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer will hunt for the nature of matter

POPSCI, by Rebecca Boyle, 04.28.2011

In the Cargo Bay The Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer is loaded into space
shuttle Endeavour's cargo bay (Michele Famiglietti/AMS-02 Collaboration)

Friday’s space shuttle launch will be much more than the final hurrah for the shuttle Endeavour. Riding in its cargo bay is a massive and controversial physics experiment that could help answer some of the most confounding mysteries in science. With the delivery of the Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer, the space shuttle’s penultimate mission could turn out to be one of its greatest achievements.

Soaking up cosmic rays from its permanent perch on the International Space Station, the AMS is designed to study the universe’s deepest secrets — what happened to all the antimatter, and what, in the name of all creation, is dark matter?

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The nature of dark materials is the great mystery of our time,” said Peter Fisher, an MIT physicist involved in the project.

The AMS traveled a long and circuitous path to reach Friday’s launch. The Department of Energy experiment, nearly two decades in the making, involves some 600 researchers at 60 institutions across 16 countries. It cost somewhere between $1.5 and $2 billion — apparently, no one has quite nailed down a price tag. It was almost canceled entirely when NASA dropped it from the launch manifest after the Columbia disaster, but scientists, most notably Nobel laureate and principal investigator Samuel Ting, convinced NASA to put it back on the schedule.

The AMS is Ting’s brainchild — some would even argue his albatross — and if it works as planned, detecting the telltale signs of dark matter, it could potentially win him another Nobel.

The AMS is kind of like an orbiting version of the particle detectors in the Large Hadron Collider. At its heart is a powerful cryogenically cooled permanent magnet that bends incoming particles, in this case from cosmic rays, beams of high-energy materials belched toward Earth from dying stars, black holes and other cosmic phenomena. The way the particles bend in the magnetic field reveals their charge.

The 7-ton AMS canister also contains trackers to measure incoming particles’ energy and velocity, which will tell physicists exactly what they’re looking at.





AMS was built at CERN and tested inside the LHC, which helped calibrate its instruments. It was already detecting cosmic particles while being prepared for launch, Ting said last fall.

The system is so sensitive that it can detect one single anti-nucleus in a sea of billions of atomic nuclei. It can measure particles with energies of 100 million TeV — to put that in perspective, the LHC, often called the world’s biggest science experiment, sends particles zooming around at a comparably trivial 7 trillion electron volts and measures their collisions.

The atmosphere strips these ultra-high-energy cosmic particles of some of their qualities, so physicists have long been angling for a space-based detector. The AMS is technically called AMS-02, because an earlier version flew on the shuttle Discovery in 1998. Incidentally, that was also the last mission to the Russian outpost Mir.

That mission, which lasted just 10 days, detected some very bizarre signatures — including a possible “strangelet,” an elementary particle made up of strange quarks as well as up and down quarks. The standard model of particles and forces says there are six flavors of quarks (the building blocks of protons and neutrons), but as far as scientists can tell, everything is made of just two — the up and down flavors. If these strangelet particles exist in any sort of abundance in the cosmos, AMS will see them.

Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer With Endeavour: The AMS canister is
prepared for loading into the cargo bay of space shuttle Endeavour.
(Michele Famiglietti/AMS-02 Collaboration)

Along with unmasking strangelets, the AMS will look for signatures of primordial antimatter, if any of it persists in the universe. This could help solve the question of why everything exists.

From a purely mathematical point of view, nothing should — antimatter and normal matter should have annihilated each other in the first moments after the Big Bang. But they didn't, and the universe was left with a preponderance of matter over antimatter, and therefore something rather than nothing. Some recent studies at ground-based particle detectors have shed some light on why this is the case, but the AMS will take better measurements. It will be able to detect anti-helium or anti-hydrogen — so far only trapped in a lab — which could be evidence for antimatter galaxies, or even parallel universes made of antimatter.

The AMS will also sniff out the weak signatures of dark matter, which is six times more abundant than the “normal” matter we can see. AMS is sensitive enough to detect new classes of weakly interacting massive particles (WIMPs), and signals in the background positron, anti-proton, or gamma ray flux that could show dark matter is present.

Such lofty goals are a fitting finale for the space shuttle, which helped scientists discover dark matter in the first place, through its delivery of the Hubble Space Telescope.

While all these bizarre possibilities are exciting, in an interview with BBC, Ting said he hoped the experiment would go beyond even his wildest dreams.

“To my collaborators and me, the most exciting objective of AMS is to probe the unknown, to search for phenomena that exist in Nature but yet we have not the tools or the imagination to find them,” he said.


Related Articles:

"The Quantum Factor" – Apr 10, 2011 (Kryon channeled by Lee Carroll) (Subjects: Galaxies, Universe, Intelligent design, Benevolent design, Aliens, Nikola Tesla (Quantum energy), Inter-Planetary Travel, DNA, Genes, Stem Cells, Cells, Rejuvenation, Shift of Human Consciousness, Spontaneous Remission, Religion, Dictators, Africa, China, Nuclear Power, Sustainable Development, Animals, Global Unity.. etc.) - New


According to Gaia - Mother Earth - is Stephen Hawking a reincarnation of Sir Isaac Newton, confirmed in a channeling thru Pepper Lewis in the Shirley Maclaine Radio Show 2, including other subjects: BP Oil spill, Dark Matter, God/God/Local God..., ET Disclosure, 3/5/7 dimension, Money, - Global - Currency ...etc.)

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