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Originally posted by mustangcobra1970
Wow has anyone seen the magnetic field tonight its off the chain .....its been all over the place check out this link !!!
www2.nict.go.jp...
Originally posted by jpsdasnake
reply to post by Human_Alien
You are joking,right?
(yes i know you didint write that)
Originally posted by jpsdasnake
reply to post by Human_Alien
Well if you are referring to the LCROSS mission,thats not a bomb,is a impact probe,the most damage it can create is from the knetic impact of the "crash". and jupiter? seriously? its hundreds of times bigger than earth...i wont say almost as big as the sun,but it does gets pretty damn close...plus...say one thing that we "smashed" at jupiter... like more than half the mass of planet is not even solid!edit on 6/1/2011 by jpsdasnake because: (no reason given)
Originally posted by mustangcobra1970
reply to post by Human_Alien
I was just starting to do research on haarp lastnight it seems very destructive !!! I did see the magnetic fields when the birds died and that time frame they were all over the place but they also didnt report any activity about what went on that night with the sun ....till much later but it looks like as of tonight were back in the same crazy ride we were that night and we are expecting some activity from the sun so im very curious to see if we get more activity such as animal deaths and im sure at some point some big earthquakes ...yet still dont get this green water and mist its strange as hell!!
On 10 September 2008, the proton beams were successfully circulated in the main ring of the LHC for the first time,[6] but 9 days later operations were halted due to a serious fault.[7] On 20 November 2009 they were successfully circulated again,[8] with the first proton–proton collisions being recorded 3 days later at the injection energy of 450 GeV per beam.[9] After the 2009 winter shutdown, the LHC was restarted and the beam was ramped up to 3.5 TeV per beam,[10] half its designed energy.[11] On 30 March 2010, the first planned collisions took place between two 3.5 TeV beams, which set a new world record for the highest-energy man-made particle collisions