Home  |  Contact  

Email:

Password:

Sign Up Now!

Forgot your password?

DESENMASCARANDO LAS FALSAS DOCTRINAS
 
What’s New
  Join Now
  Message Board 
  Image Gallery 
 Files and Documents 
 Polls and Test 
  Member List
 YHWH (DIOS PADRE) EL UNICO DIOS 
 JESUCRISTO NUESTRO MESIAS JUDIO 
 LOS DIEZ MANDAMIENTOS DE LA BIBLIA 
 MEJORE SU CARACTER Y SU VIDA 
 YOU TUBE-MAOR BA OLAM-LINKS 
 YOU TUBE-MAOR BA OLAM-LINKS II 
 BIBLIAS/CONCORDANCIA/LIBROS 
 MAYOR ENEMIGO DEL HOMBRE ES UNO MISMO 
 ¿LA TORA ES MACHISTA? -MENSAJE ESOTERICO Y EXOTERICO 
 ¿ES INMORTAL EL ALMA?- FALACIA DE LA ENCARNACION Y REENCARNACION 
 EL ISLAM TIENE ORIGEN UNITARIO ADOPCIONISTA 
 ANTIGUO TESTAMENTO-ESTUDIO POR VERSICULOS 
 NUEVO TESTAMENTO-ESTUDIOS POR VERSICULOS 
 NUEVO TESTAMENTO II-ESTUDIOS POR VERSICULOS 
 NUEVO TESTAMENTO III-ESTUDIOS POR VERSICULOS 
 CRISTO NO TUVO PREEXISTENCIA 
 ¿QUE ES EL ESPIRITU SANTO? 
 
 
  Tools
 
SEA UN CIENTIFICO CON LA BIBLIA: ¿PORQUE MOISES Y ELIAS FUERON TRASLADADOS EN EL TIEMPO EN LA TRANSFIGURACION?
Choose another message board
Previous subject  Next subject
Reply  Message 1 of 171 on the subject 
From: BARILOCHENSE6999  (Original message) Sent: 09/05/2015 02:23
MISTERIO
 
PERO TODO TIENE ESA REFERENCIA
 
TRANSFIGURACION ES SINONIMO DEL EXPERIMENTO FILADELFIA
 
268
BARILOCHENSE6999 08/05/2015 23:03
126
BARILOCHENSE6999 08/05/2015 23:02
2
BARILOCHENSE6999 08/05/2015 22:08
14
BARILOCHENSE6999 08/05/2015 21:37
27
BARILOCHENSE6999 08/05/2015 13:28
64
BARILOCHENSE6999 07/05/2015 14:02
23
BARILOCHENSE6999 06/05/2015 18:55
33
BARILOCHENSE6999 06/05/2015 18:45
94
BARILOCHENSE6999 06/05/2015 18:38
24
BARILOCHENSE6999 06/05/2015 15:39
16
BARILOCHENSE6999 06/05/2015 15:07
40
BARILOCHENSE6999 06/05/2015 13:03
23
BARILOCHENSE6999 06/05/2015 13:02
5
BARILOCHENSE6999 03/05/2015 14:40
28
BARILOCHENSE6999 03/05/2015 14:18
37
BARILOCHENSE6999 03/05/2015 13:20
5
BARILOCHENSE6999 02/05/2015 00:12
3
BARILOCHENSE6999 29/04/2015 17:19
13
BARILOCHENSE6999 25/04/2015 12:03
2
BARILOCHENSE6999 16/04/2015 22:05
8
BARILOCHENSE6999 19/03/2015 13:54
10
BARILOCHENSE6999 16/03/2015 14:26
1
BARILOCHENSE6999 14/03/2015 13:38
16
BARILOCHENSE6999 09/03/2015 17:08
13
BARILOCHENSE6999 07/03/2015 15:50
6
BARILOCHENSE6999 02/03/2015 15:20
1
BARILOCHENSE6999 21/02/2015 16:55
32
BARILOCHENSE6999 06/01/2015 22:25
19
BARILOCHENSE6999 05/01/2015 19:03
1
BARILOCHENSE6999 17/12/2014 18:05
23
BARILOCHENSE6999 06/12/2014 15:26
2
BARILOCHENSE6999 05/12/2014 02:34
5
BARILOCHENSE6999 04/12/2014 17:37
21
BARILOCHENSE6999 04/12/2014 15:26
2
BARILOCHENSE6999 03/12/2014 14:43
2
BARILOCHENSE6999 12/11/2014 23:30
1
BARILOCHENSE6999 20/10/2014 00:13
8
BARILOCHENSE6999 31/08/2014 13:54
9
BARILOCHENSE6999 31/08/2014 13:53
 


First  Previous  157 to 171 of 171  Next   Last  
Reply  Message 157 of 171 on the subject 
From: BARILOCHENSE6999 Sent: 24/11/2021 00:54
Resultado de imagen para eclesiastes 3:15
Resultado de imagen para eclesiastes 3:15
210 Diy Ideas | blessed friday, viral pins, viral
The Da Vinci Code Debunked
Hitler and the Occult History Through Film Disclaimer
Channel of the Grail : A Novel of Cathars, Templars, and a Nazi Grail  Hunter (Paperback) - Walmart.com - Walmart.com
Hitler's Holy Relics | Book by Sidney Kirkpatrick | Official Publisher Page  | Simon & Schuster
Hitler of the Andes" Hitler's Search for the Holy Grail (TV Episode 1999) -  IMDb
Libros: Himmler, Montserrat y el Santo Grial: la factura de una visita  desagradable
 
Heinrich Himmler, el nazi que buscó el Santo Grial en Cataluña -  ContraRéplica - Noticias
El Santo Grial: El objeto más deseado por Adolf Hitler - YouTube
Heinrich Himmler, el nazi que buscó el Santo Grial en Cataluña - YouTube
La Lanza Sagrada de Hitler. El Arma Mistica Que El Fuhrer Queria para  Dominar El | PDF | Adolf Hitler | Alemania nazi
Hitler y la lanza del destino - [PDF Document]
Templarios, nazis y objetos sagrados – Culturamas
La maldición de la lanza sagrada - La Esfera de los Libros
 
LA LANZA LOS NAZIS PATAGONIA Y LONGINOS by SERGIO CAPOZZI
La Historia de Longinos, el que Atravesó a Jesús con su Lanza en la Cruz –  Foros de la Virgen María
Longinos, el centurión que atravesó el costado de Jesús en la cruz; |  bottegadivina's Blog
San Longinos o Longino de Cesarea... - Magdalena Merbilhaa | Facebook
Misión San Andrés - San Longinos, mártir ~ 15 de marzo El centurión que  traspasó, con una lanza, el costado de Nuestro Señor cuando estaba en la  cruz. San Longinios fue el
15 marzo: San Longinos, centurión que traspasó el corazón de Jesús con su  lanza
 
 
Que necesitas: Hoja de trabajo de César - ppt descargar
 
Gaius Lulius Caesar (Cayo Julio César) - ppt descargar
Muerte de Julio Cesar Asesinato de Marco Bruto Porque lo Mataron? -  BIOGRAFÍAS e HISTORIA UNIVERSAL,ARGENTINA y de la CIENCIA
15 de marzo 44 a.C. Es asesinado Julio César – IMER
15 de marzo 44 a.C. : Es asesinado el general y político romano, Julio César  – IMER
El asesinato de Julio César fue un 15 de marzo del 44 a.C., hace ya 2060  años
TERMINATOR DESTINO OSCURO Película - Linda Hamilton es Sarah Connor - Vídeo  Dailymotion
Gears 5 le hace un guiño a la comunidad LGBT – OnlyGames
PlayGround - Sarah Connor, que participó en Terminator 1 y 2, vuelve en  Terminator 6 que será una continuación directa de Terminator 2 obviando el  resto de las películas de la saga.
14 Detalles escondidos en "Terminator: Destino Oculto" que seguro se te  fueron
El regreso de Sarah Connor en 'Terminator: Dark Fate' - YouTube
Amazon.it | Sarah connor chronicles, saison 2: Acquista in DVD e Blu ray
Amazon.com: Terminator: The Sarah Connor Chronicles, Season 1 : Lena  Headey, Thomas Dekker, Summer Glau: Películas y TV

Reply  Message 158 of 171 on the subject 
From: BARILOCHENSE6999 Sent: 02/03/2022 02:01
Si todos los caminos llevan a Roma...
Todo mi Sentir - Amor Eterno Con éste signo vencerás....... | Facebook
Con este signo vencerás”: Día de la Santa Cruz
Jóvenes Cristianos en Acción: Hace 1700 años del signo del triunfo  cristiano con Constantino
CON ESTE SIGNO VENCERÁS - Hacia el encuentro con Dios - YouTube
In hoc signo vinces
Parroquia Divino Niño, El Salvador - "In hoc signo vinces" "Con este signo  vencerás" Año 311. Roma enfrenta una gran batalla. El general Constantino,  hijo de Santa Elena, una noche, tuvo un
✝️Santoral Católico on Twitter: "..¡ Con este Signo Vencerás ! (La Santa  Cruz. Recuérdalo) http://t.co/lE3RB7w7EM http://t.co/Z3dRY2ULoD" / Twitter
Resultado de imagen para SANTIAGO Y JUAN EFESO Y ESPAÑA
Resultado de imagen para MARIANO URRESTI LIBROS
El Cisne
The Cygnus Mystery: Unlocking the Ancient Secret of Life's Origins in the  Cosmos: Collins, Andrew: 9781906787554: Amazon.com: Books
El Cisne
Briefing Materials: 1,284 Newly Validated Kepler Planets | NASA
Virginia Living Museum | Are Aliens All Wet? | Virginia Living Museum
Alien: El Montaje del Director - Movies on Google Play
Amazon.com: Destroyer: Cygnus 5: Book Two (Cygnus Five Series 2) eBook :  Oliver, Alex R, Gwaltney, Hannah E.: Kindle Store
KIC 8462852 - Wikipedia, la enciclopedia libre
Denisovan Origins: Hybrid Humans, Göbekli Tepe, and the Genesis of the  Giants of Ancient America : Collins, Andrew, Little, Gregory L.:  Amazon.com.au: Books
The Cygnus Key: The Denisovan Legacy, Göbekli Tepe, and the Birth of Egypt  by Andrew Collins - Audiobooks on Google Play
Gobekli Tepe: Genesis of the Gods | Book by Andrew Collins, Graham Hancock  | Official Publisher Page | Simon & Schuster UK
18 ideas de Extraterrestre en 2021 | extraterrestre, seres extraterrestres,  extraterrestres
Imagen relacionada
https://social.vcoins.com/twih/arch-constantine-july-25-315/
 
El Arco de Constantino. 25 de julio de 315.
 
 
 
 
 
El Arco de Constantino.  25 de julio de 315.

El  Arco de Constantino  se erigió para conmemorar  la victoria de Constantino  I sobre  Majencio  en el  Puente Milvio  que tuvo lugar el 28 de octubre de 312.

La Batalla tomó su nombre  del Puente Milvio , una ruta importante sobre el  Tíber . Constantino ganó la batalla y emprendió el camino que lo llevó a terminar con la  Tetrarquía  y convertirse en el único gobernante del  Imperio Romano . Maxentius se ahogó en el Tíber durante la batalla; su cuerpo fue luego sacado del río y decapitado, su cabeza desfiló por las calles de  Roma  al día siguiente de la batalla.

Según cronistas como  Eusebio de Cesarea  y  Lactancio , la batalla marcó el comienzo de la  conversión de Constantino  al  cristianismo . Eusebio de Cesarea cuenta que Constantino y sus  soldados  tuvieron una visión enviada por el  Dios cristiano . Esto se interpretó como una promesa de victoria si el signo de  Chi-Rho , las dos primeras letras del nombre de  Cristo en  griego , se pintaba en los escudos de los soldados. El Arco de Constantino, erigido en celebración de la victoria, ciertamente atribuye el éxito de Constantino a  la intervención divina ; Sin embargo, el  monumento no muestra ningún  simbolismo abiertamente cristiano .

Aunque está dedicado a Constantino, gran parte del material decorativo incorporó trabajos anteriores de la época de los emperadores  Trajano ,  Adriano  y  Marco Aurelio , y por lo tanto es un  collage . El último de los  arcos triunfales existentes  en Roma, también es el único que hace un uso extensivo de la  espolia , reutilizando varios relieves importantes de los monumentos imperiales del siglo II   , que dan un llamativo y famoso contraste estilístico con la escultura recién creada para el  arco .

Cualesquiera que sean las fallas de Maxentius, su reputación en Roma estuvo influenciada por sus contribuciones a  la construcción pública . En el momento de su acceso al trono en 306, Roma se estaba volviendo cada vez más irrelevante para el  gobierno  del imperio, la mayoría de los emperadores eligieron vivir en otros lugares y se centraron en defender los frágiles  límites , donde con frecuencia fundaron nuevas ciudades. Este factor contribuyó a su capacidad para tomar el poder. Por el contrario, Maxentius se concentró en restaurar la  capital , siendo su epíteto  conservator urbis suae  (preservador de su ciudad). Así, Constantino fue percibido, entre otras cosas, como el deponente de uno de los mayores benefactores de la ciudad y necesitaba adquirir legitimidad. Mucha  controversia ha rodeado el  mecenazgo  de las obras públicas de este período. El filósofo alemán  Walter Benjamin  observó que la historia se ve a través de los ojos del  vencedor , y Constantino y sus biógrafos no fueron una excepción. Emitiendo una  damnatio memoriae  , se dispuso a borrar sistemáticamente la  memoria  de Majencio. En consecuencia, sigue existiendo una incertidumbre considerable con respecto al patrocinio de los edificios públicos de principios del siglo IV, incluido el Arco de Constantino, que originalmente pudo haber sido un  Arco de Majencio .

El Arco De Constantino Es Un Arco De Triunfo En Roma Situado Entre El  Coliseo Y La Colina Del Palatino Fue Erigido Por El Senate Romano Para  Conmemorar La Victoria De Constantino
Soleil & Michael's Trip to Italy
Bridge milvian: imágenes, fotos de stock y vectores | Shutterstock
The Arch of Constantine, Rome - World History Encyclopedia
Arco de Constantino - Fuentes, Plazas y Monumentos en Roma | eluleka.es
Arch of Constantine - Wikidata

Reply  Message 159 of 171 on the subject 
From: BARILOCHENSE6999 Sent: 04/03/2022 00:55
Resultado de imagen para MARK 1:19
Resultado de imagen para MARK 1:19
Resultado de imagen para MARK 1:19
Resultado de imagen para MARK 1:19
Resultado de imagen para MARK 1:19
Resultado de imagen para MARK 1:19
Resultado de imagen para MARK 1:19
Resultado de imagen para MARCOS 1:19
Resultado de imagen para VIAJAR EN EL TIEMPO ES POSIBLE
Resultado de imagen para VIAJAR EN EL TIEMPO ES POSIBLE
sermón barca
 
 

9- Boanerges, ¿los Hijos del Trueno?

Jesús y sus discípulos          Es un tópico común la interpretación moralista y sui géneris que se hace el nombre dado por Cristo a los hermanos Santiago y Juan, los dos hijos de Zebedeo, como Marcos nos refiere en su Evangelio (Mc. 3:17) al hablar de los doce apóstoles elegidos por Cristo: “…  a Jacobo hijo de Zebedeo, ya Juan hermano de Jacobo, a quienes dio el sobrenombre de Boanerges, es decir, Hijos del trueno  «.

          Aunque de etimología discutida, parece que Boanerges es un nombre arameo procedente de la transliteración de los términos “ benê ” y “ regês ”, cuya traducción es, efectivamente, hijos del trueno, y donde trueno se viene a interpretar como estruendo e ira, en alusión a un supuesto temperamento fogoso y enérgico, con una disposición a la acción impetuosa y agresión que se etiquetan como “ira” y “ambición”, aspectos temperamentales que no encajan en unos jóvenes y modestos pescadores del mar de Galilea. En otros casos se alude a su afán en la difusión por el mundo de la buena nueva evangélica, en modo que se propone que el nombre hace alusión al futuro ardor como predicadores.

          Y para ilustrar demostrativamente la interpretación propuesta, se recurre a pasajes de las escrituras supuestamente clarificadoras.

          En Lucas 9: 51-56 se cuenta que, cerca ya su partida de este mundo, Jesús decide ir a Jerusalén, pasando por una aldea samaritana en la que, al mandar emisarios para su alojamiento, son rechazados. “ Viendo esto sus discípulos Jacobo y Juan, dijeron: «Señor, ¿quieres que mandemos que descienda fuego del cielo, como hizo Elías, y los consuma ”. Jesús les reprende, les explica su destino y se van a otra aldea.

          En otro pasaje evangélico (Mt.20:20-28) los hermanos envían a su madre que pida al maestro les reserve un lugar privilegiado para ellos, al parecer traduciendo una ambición desmedida en sus aspiraciones personales.

Dibujo_2_terminado_sepia_convertido

          Ambos pasajes son ya próximos a la entrada en Jerusalén y la Pasión de Cristo, es decir, cronológicamente postreros en la sucesión de relatos evangélicos, y más que aspectos temperamentales de los apóstoles, expresan cuestiones doctrinales sobre la misión de Cristo en este mundo, con mensajes de enseñanza en uno y otro caso, como que él no ha venido a ser servido, sino a servir y dar su vida. Parece pueril pensar que los Zebedeo ofrecieran una propuesta realmente destructiva en términos irascibles o que ambicionaran un poder que desconocían y para el que no estaban preparados.

z_juan_evangelista          Santiago y Juan eran personas humildes, no creo que ocasionalmente irascibles ni ambiciosos, y no se puede deducir en estos pasajes ni en otros de las escrituras cual era el carácter temperamental que se les adjudica de un modo interpretativo bastante aleccionador y moralista, que además no encaja con un rasgo evidente de Juan, como la dulzura e ingenio del “discípulo amado” de Cristo acorde con una edad muy joven, diría incluso que adolescente, que justifica un trato más especial con el Maestro, ni con la más que segura humildad y carácter silencioso de Santiago que parece pasar de puntillas por las escrituras a pesar de que gusta pintar su temperamento enérgico totalmente inventado.

          Siempre me han parecido muy pocos objetivos y demasiado moralizantes y aleccionadoras estas interpretaciones que nacen de explicaciones con formato de sermón o lección; disertaciones en que se busca un sentido muy dirigido a modo de moraleja o enseñanza. No doy mucho valor a estas interpretaciones, y no creo que los pasajes reflés permitan alusiones al temperamentos de los Zebedeo, no solo porque apenas hay en las escrituras datos que permitan hacer muchas precisiones de aspectos caracterológicos y temperamentales, sino porque además no creo que el nombre Boanerges buscará identificar a los dos hermanos por un rasgo temperamental común de ambos y pienso que las explicaciones dadas no son convincentes ni objetivas.

          El nombre de Boanerges es concedido a los Zebedeo en época temprana, en todo caso muy anterior a los pasajes referidos, lo que invita a pensar que el nombre no está relacionado con supuestos aspectos temperamentales comunes a ambos hermanos, sino con algo más bien próximo en el tiempo vivido por ambos. Es bien sabido que los hermanos Zebedeo fueron de los primeros apóstoles llamados por Cristo, y por diferentes referencias de las escrituras (Mt 27:56 y Jn 19:25) se deduce que eran parientes cercanos de Jesús por vía materna, seguramente primos.

llamado de santiago y juan          No hace mucho tiempo que han decidido dejarlo todo e irse es pos de su carismático primo, y han tenido que mostrar su decisión a un padre contrariado que tenía otros planes para sus hijos. Más que relacionado con el temperamento intuyo que el término es debido a una razón doméstica más y cercana, como un guiño familiar a una situación que frecuentemente tendrá su vis cómica y su faceta engorrosa, pero en todo caso genera un trance tenso y relevante. Me refiero a la reacción de enojo paterno, pues el apodo de Boanerges lo concede simultáneamente a los dos hermanos que, seguramente con colaboración materna, como ocurrió en otros pasajes, abandonó a su padre en la tarea de las redes, lo que también hicieron Pedro y Andrés, jornaleros en la hacienda de Zebedeo, Pedro en grado de capataz.

Saduceos - copia          La reacción de enojo es mas que comprensible al perder de golpe su personal más fiel y cercano, incluido su mujer Salomé, que también fue del grupo de mujeres que seguían a Jesucristo. De modo que ahí tenemos a Zabedeo abandonado de su gente con su próspero negocio que había creado para ellos y que ellos abandonaban en bloque. No parece que Zebedeo fuera el santo Job de modo que no resulta difícil imaginar al viejo Zebedeo en  clara actitud de enojo practicando algun gesto apotropaico incontenible dirigido al cielo y mandando a su parentela a algun lugar poco recomendable.20080126105837-pesca-milagrosa1Y seguramente después bajando los brazos subiendo los hombros y asumiendo los singulares valores de su extraordinario sobrino a cuya mirada se apagó todo su enojo, tras escuchar atónito su sermón desde su propia barca y protagonizar una pesca inexplicable.

sermón barca          Benei Regesh, en griego Boanergês, se ha convertido como «hijos de cólera», «hijos del estruendo» o «hijos de ira». Jesús dio este nombre a los hijos de Zebedeo, pero no por el temperamento de los hermanos, sino de su progenitor que, antes de rendirse a la evidencia, juró en arameo.

160 ideas de Volver al futuro en 2022 |  volver al futuro, regreso al futuro, viaje al futuro
 
62 ideas de Black hacia el futuro |  volver al futuro, volver al futuro, carros de peliculas
 
Regreso al futuro Reunión anunciada, organizada por Josh Gad - La Neta Neta
 
Volver al Futuro - playlist de estudiourbanoba |  Spotify
 
¿Qué significa hijo del trueno en la Biblia?
Marcos 3:17 BJ3 - a Santiago el de Zebedeo ya Juan, el hermano de Santiago, a quienes puso por nombre Boanerges, es decir,…
La Biblia - Marcos - 3:17
Marcos 3:17 BHTI - Santiago y su hermano Juan, hijos de - Biblics
Marcos 3:17 (ntv) - Santiago y Juan (los hijos de Zebedeo, a qui...
 
Ultra Tendencias: Fabulosas piezas de fan art de carteles de BACK TO THE FUTURE, ET e INDIANA JONES para la próxima muestra de arte de Amblin

Reply  Message 160 of 171 on the subject 
From: BARILOCHENSE6999 Sent: 27/09/2022 00:56
Matthew 13:55 KJV - Is not this the carpenter's son? is not his

Reply  Message 161 of 171 on the subject 
From: BARILOCHENSE6999 Sent: 23/01/2023 04:53
Las principales rutas del Camino de Santiago

Reply  Message 162 of 171 on the subject 
From: BARILOCHENSE6999 Sent: 01/04/2023 13:41


Reply  Message 163 of 171 on the subject 
From: BARILOCHENSE6999 Sent: 08/08/2023 15:11


Reply  Message 164 of 171 on the subject 
From: BARILOCHENSE6999 Sent: 12/08/2023 18:21


Reply  Message 165 of 171 on the subject 
From: BARILOCHENSE6999 Sent: 29/08/2023 05:05


Reply  Message 166 of 171 on the subject 
From: BARILOCHENSE6999 Sent: 04/04/2024 15:08

Reply  Message 167 of 171 on the subject 
From: BARILOCHENSE6999 Sent: 03/06/2024 14:56
 BARILOCHENSE6999 Enviado: 24/05/2024 11:22
Apollo 11 Moon Landing 50th Anniversary — Little Village Toy & Book Shop

Respuesta Ocultar Mensaje Eliminar Mensaje  Mensaje 60 de 60 en el tema 
De: BARILOCHENSE6999 Enviado: 24/05/2024 11:02
July 25: Arch of Constantine | FCIT


Reply  Message 168 of 171 on the subject 
From: BARILOCHENSE6999 Sent: 11/06/2024 14:44
Si todos los caminos llevan a Roma...
Resultado de imagen para SANTIAGO Y JUAN EFESO Y ESPAÑA
Resultado de imagen para MARIANO URRESTI LIBROS
Famous face on Mars photo was taken by Viking 1 and other important events  in history |Oneindia News - YouTube
 

The James Webb telescope: part alien life detector, part time machine

 

In the lead-up to the launch of the James Webb telescope, we look at the scientific objectives of the most powerful space observatory ever sent into orbit.

Are we alone in the universe? What did the first galaxies formed after the Big Bang look like? How did the planets in our solar system emerge? The James Webb telescope hopes to find answers to these existential questions.

Set to launch on December 22, the James Webb is the product of the combined scientific prowess of NASA, the European Space Agency (ESA) and the Canadian Space Agency (CSA) – and by extension, Université de Montréal (UdeM). The CSA contributed a scientific instrument and a guidance sensor to the massive observatory and René Doyon, Director of UdeM’s Institute for Research on Exoplanets (iREx) and a professor in the Physics Department, is the principal investigator on the Canadian scientific team.

Together, the components supplied by the CSA, NASA and the ESA form the most complex, accurate and powerful space observatory ever built, one that promises revolutionary discoveries in astronomy.

The unparalleled power of the observatory will help scientists throughout the world scrutinize the distant reaches of the universe to learn more about the composition and inhabitability of exoplanets and study the life cycle of stars.

Exploring new worlds in search of life

The James Webb Telescope is the successor to the Hubble space telescope but is more precise and efficient because of the size of its mirror, the range of light it can detect and its location.

These attributes will enable the Webb to study the planets in our solar system and other planetary systems in unprecedented detail. Moreover, the scientific instrument developed by Doyon’s team is designed to analyze many types of celestial bodies, including the atmospheric composition of distant exoplanets.

“What we’re looking for, our holy grail, are ‘biosignatures,’ that is, signs of extraterrestrial life,” explained iREx coordinator Nathalie Ouellette, an astrophysicist who does communications for the James Webb.

She hastened to add that we shouldn’t imagine these signs of life the way they are depicted in science fiction films: “We’re talking about finding signs of biological activity or the signature of certain molecules that we have identified as essential to life, such as oxygen, water vapour, carbon dioxide, methane and ozone. Based on the presence of such molecules, particularly in certain combinations, we may be able to determine that conditions are conducive to the development of life when we explore an exoplanet using the telescope.”

Casting light on the dawn of the universe

Telescopes are also time machines of a sort. “Looking into space is like looking into the past,” said Ouellette. “Light waves travel so fast that, to the naked eye, they seem to flash instantly from one point to another. In space, however, the distances are so vast that the time it takes light to travel is perceptible.”

That makes the Webb a marvellous time machine. It will be able to see back in time to 200 million years after the Big Bang, something that has never been done before. “With the Hubble, we could go to 500 million years after the Big Bang, so now we’re going 300 million years further,” noted Ouellette. “That’s remarkable, considering that the beginning of the universe was a tumultuous period. Galaxies were colliding and stars were forming at a rapid pace.”

“Tell me where you come from and I’ll tell you who you are”

The Webb will thus improve our understanding of the development of the first luminous objects (galaxies) over time. Ouellette believes the telescope will also provide insight into the creation of our own solar system.

“We still have many questions about the origins of life in our solar system. We don’t know exactly how we came to be on Earth and how the planets were formed,” Ouellette pointed out. “By studying other systems, stars and planets at various stages of development, we hope to be able to trace our own history and understand ourselves better.”

That is the ultimate goal of the James Webb: to revolutionize our understanding of the universe and, above all, to place the Earth, in all its fragility and uniqueness, in a broader context.

https://nouvelles.umontreal.ca/en/article/2021/12/09/the-james-webb-telescope-part-alien-life-detector-part-time-machine/

Reply  Message 169 of 171 on the subject 
From: BARILOCHENSE6999 Sent: 11/06/2024 14:49

Webb telescope is a ‘time machine’ for astronomers to see the cosmic dawn

The James Webb Space Telescope inside Northrop Grumman’s factory in Redondo Beach, California. Credit: Northrop Grumman

The James Webb Space Telescope, set for launch in the coming days, will look back more than 13.5 billion years in time to see the faint infrared light from the first galaxies, revealing a previously unseen era of cosmic history that shaped the universe of today.

It’s a cosmic time machine, capable of seeing galaxies and stars as they were as few as 100 million years after the Big Bang, the unimaginably violent genesis of the universe.

“This telescope is so powerful that if you were a bumble bee 240,000 miles away, which is the distance between the Earth and the moon, we will be able to see you,” said John Mather, the mission’s senior project scientist at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Maryland.

“So what are we going to do with this great telescope? We’re going to look at everything there is in the universe that we can see.”

That runs the gamut from the most distant galaxies in the cosmos, to planets, moons, asteroids, and comets in our own solar system. Webb will be able to observe everything from Mars out, seeing details undetected by every other space observatory since Galileo revolutionized astronomy with his first telescope in 1609.

“We want to know how did we get here,” said Mather, winner of the Nobel Prize in Physics in 2006. “The Big Bang, how did that work? So we’ll look. We have ideas, we have predictions, but we don’t honestly know.”

“This is a once in a generation event,” said Pam Melroy, NASA’s deputy administrator. “NASA continues to push the boundaries of what’s possible, and this is such an exciting moment. For centuries, people have looked up at sky and dreamed of trying to understand the big questions. What was the start of the universe? And is there life out there beyond Earth?”

“Webb is going take the blinders off and show us the formation of the universe,” Melroy said. “This telescope represents the kind of public good for science and exploration for which our space program was established.”

Developed over a quarter-century — with concepts dating even earlier — the James Webb Space Telescope is the largest astronomical observatory ever shot into space. Its primary mirror is composed of 18 hexagonal segments, each made of beryllium, coated with a thin layer of gold, and polished to exacting cleanliness standards.

Four infrared instruments are buried inside the telescope, each tuned for a specific job. Together, the instruments will give astronomers their most powerful tool in history.

“Webb will be able to see stars and galaxies 100 times fainter than what was previously possible,” said Klaus Pontoppidan, the mission’s project scientist at the Space Telescope Science Institute in Baltimore, where Webb will be controlled after launch.

Liftoff of the James Webb Space Telescope, a successor to the 31-year-old Hubble Space Telescope, is set for 7:20 a.m. EST (1220 GMT) Saturday aboard a European Ariane 5 rocket from the Guiana Space Center in South America. That’s about 14 years later than scientists in the 1990s hoped the mission — then known as the Next Generation Space Telescope — would be ready to go to the launch pad.

The mission’s launch date slipped repeatedly, and the development cost ballooned to $9.7 billion as engineers struggled with technical problems.

The James Webb Space Telescope inside a Northrop Grumman factory in 2020. The observatory’s primary mirror, made of 18 individual segments, is pictured at center, with part of its sunshield below. Credit: NASA/Chris Gunn

The observatory followed a winding journey to the launch. The mirrors were fabricated, polished, and tested at locations in Ohio, Alabama, California, and Colorado at contractor Ball Aerospace, then transported to NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Maryland for assembly into Webb’s telescope element.

Webb’s four science instruments were delivered to Goddard from the United Kingdom, Germany, California, and Canada. Engineers at Goddard assembled the instruments into Webb’s science module, and started putting together the telescope in 2013.

The telescope was shipped to NASA’s Johnson Space Center in Houston in 2017 for cryogenic testing, then to Northrop Grumman in Southern California for integration with the spacecraft element, which hosts communications and propulsion systems, and the thermal sunshield.

Finally, in October, Webb rode to French Guiana on a French transport ship to begin final preparations for liftoff. Once there, Webb was fueled with rocket propellant and hoisted on top of its Ariane 5 rocket. A Swiss-made payload fairing was lowered over the spacecraft Dec. 17, and the Ariane 5 moved to the launch pad at the tropical spaceport Thursday.

The observatory is named for James Webb, the NASA administrator who helped the space agency for seven years in the 1960s. His tenure was a pivotal time for NASA, during which the first Americans launched into space and plans matured for the Apollo program, which culminated in Neil Armstrong’s first steps on the moon in 1969, less than a year after Webb left the job.

Webb is folded up to fit inside the Ariane 5’s payload shroud. The spacecraft will pop off the top of the Ariane 5 about 27 minutes after liftoff, then begin a series of critical deployments to reconfigure itself into a science-ready discovery machine.

A solar array and steerable antenna will unfurl, then a sunshield will open to the size of a tennis court to start cooling the science instruments and mirrors to an operating temperature of minus 388 degrees Fahrenheit, just 40 Kelvin degrees above absolute zero.

Two articulating wings, each with three of the 18 mirror segments, will swing into place, allowing the primary mirror to reach its final shape. And a boom with the secondary mirror will deploy, lining up just right to bounce light collected by the primary mirror directly into Webb’s instrument module, which houses a suite of sophisticated infrared detectors.

Within a month, Webb will arrive in orbit around the L2 Lagrange point, a gravitationally-stable location nearly a million miles (1.5 million kilometers) from Earth. Ground teams operating Webb using remote control will spend the next five months perfectly lining up the mirrors, bringing the telescope into focus as it settles to its final operating temperature.

In six months, Webb will take its first science images for public release.

The GN-z11 galaxy, pictured by Hubble 400 million years after the Big Bang, against a deep field of galaxies. Credit: NASA/STSCi/Hubble

The mission will see through clouds of dust to study star-forming regions opaque to telescopes like Hubble, which see in the visible part of the light spectrum. The light collecting power of Webb will also allow scientists to measure the chemical make-up of atmospheres on planets around other stars, revealing for the first time which alien worlds might be habitable for life.

And Webb will peer into the universe in search of the first light after the Big Bang some 13.8 billion years ago.

“If you look back over the decades, the questions that defined the telescope we built today are still relevant,” said Mark McCaughrean, a senior advisor at ESA and an interdisciplinary scientist on Webb. “So looking for the very first galaxies and the first stars that formed in the early universe, roughly 100 million or 200 minion years — we don’t know — after the birth of the universe in the Big Bang.

“Those galaxies are not only far back in time and distant from us, but they’re also redshifted,” McCaughrean said.

The universe is expanding, causing light waves to become stretched as they ripple across the cosmos.

“Because of the expansion of the universe, there’s no light in the visible wavelength,” McCaughrean said. “So Hubble has gone back a certain distance, but to see the next step, the even younger galaxies, even closer to the first light, you need an infrared telescope.”

The oldest galaxy spotted by astronomers using Hubble appeared as a faint speck of red. Named GN-z11, the galaxy was observed as it was 400 million years after the Big Bang.

The record established by GN-z11 has stood more than five years, but if all goes well with Webb, is likely to be broken next year or in 2023, according to Swara Ravindranath, a Canadian astronomer working on the Webb mission at the Space Telescope Science Institute.

Hubble, coupled NASA’s Spitzer Space Telescope, revealed the GN-z11 galaxy is a tiny fraction of the size of our Milky Way galaxy, but it churns out stars at a rate about 20 times faster than our galaxy does today. Scientists can determine a galaxy’s age by measuring how much its light is redshifted before reaching our solar system.

This is a Hubble Space Telescope view of a portion of GOODS-South, the southern field of a large deep-sky study by several observatories to trace the formation and evolution of galaxies. The image shows a rich tapestry of 7,500 galaxies stretching back through most of the universe’s history. The farthest galaxies, a few of the very faint red specks, are seen as they appeared more than 13 billion years ago, or roughly 650 million years after the Big Bang. Soon, the James Webb Space Telescope will peer back even farther into this field to trace the formation and evolution of the very first galaxies. Credits: NASA, ESA, R. Windhorst, S. Cohen, M. Mechtley, and M. Rutkowski (Arizona State University, Tempe), R. O’Connell (University of Virginia), P. McCarthy (Carnegie Observatories), N. Hathi (University of California, Riverside), R. Ryan (University of California, Davis), H. Yan (Ohio State University), and A. Koekemoer (Space Telescope Science Institute)

The stars in the earliest galaxies likely burned hot and fast, consuming their hydrogen and helium fuel within a few million years, the blink of an eye on cosmic time scales. Scientists think the first stars helped fuse together heavier elements, like carbon, nitrogen, and oxygen, that eventually became the building blocks for life.

Astronomers have measured the cosmic microwave background signal from the universe as it was 380,000 years after the Big Bang, before any stars and galaxies were born. The background is like a fingerprint, showing subtle density variations that hint at the complex structures that came later — stars, galaxies, and ultimately massive galactic clusters stretched along filaments in a web of dark matter.

Dark matter, along with dark energy, are the unseen components of the universe. The visible universe, the part made of regular matter we can see and touch, makes up just 5% of the cosmos.

A fog of hydrogen gas spread like a blanket through the early universe, preventing any light from escaping in a period known as the cosmic dark ages. The cosmic expanse finally became transparent as stars lit up, an event poetically called cosmic dawn.

“The Hubble Space Telescope has pushed the limit to 400 million years after the Big Bang,” said Antonella Nota, the European Space Agency’s project scientist for Webb. “There is a gap that Webb has to fill between 400 million years and 100 million years. So there is an entire interval in which we have a baby universe to observe, and Webb will present a view that we’ve never seen before, and it will be just spectacular.”

“This is Webb’s new frontier,” Ravindranath said.

To make its deepest observations, Webb will aim its telescope toward patches of the sky previously seen in Hubble’s famous deep field images.

“Hubble created this extreme ultra deep field,” Pontoppidan said. “It was days and days of exposure time. Webb will do it in a couple of hours in a wavelength range where there’s overlap. Of course, there’s this huge infrared wavelength range where Hubble could not operate, so what we’ll see there, there’s no comparison.”

Webb’s larger primary mirror has six times the light-gathering power of Hubble’s primary mirror. This is important at the longer, dimmer wavelengths of light Webb looks at. Hubble can see some infrared wavelengths, but it was optimized to see shorter ultraviolet and visible light. As observing partners, their observations will complement each other, providing us with views across a broad range of wavelengths.
Credits: NASA, J. Olmsted (STScI)

Astronomers will also use a technique called gravitational lensing to magnify distant galaxies. The technique, pioneered with Hubble, takes advantage of gravitational distortion caused by a massive structure, like a galaxy cluster, between the telescope and its target.

The gravity from the foreground structure can bend the light like a magnifying glass, adding to Webb’s already improved imaging capability.

“With Hubble, we don’t quite have the power to resolve structure in these most distant galaxies,” Ravindranath said. “Webb will be able to show us the very first galaxies and also the earliest stages of galaxy assembly.”

By breaking apart the components of light, Webb will unveil what elements comprised the earliest stars.

“Webb’s infrared spectra will show us the composition of these first galaxies, what type of stars are present, what are the properties of the gas and dust, and what is their chemical composition?”

Finding the earliest galaxies was one of the first major objectives for Webb when astronomers dreamed up the observatory in the 1990s. Webb’s instruments will also trace the evolution of galaxies over the 13 billion years since the first ones formed.

“For almost a century, we’ve been trying to answer this question of how did galaxies form?” Ravindranath said. “How did they evolve over cosmic time, and how did they end up having these regular beautiful spirals that we see in the present day.”

“I think we’re expecting to see galaxies grow over time,” Mather said. “They grow as gravity pulls little bits together.”

Cosmologists will study data from Webb to see how well it matches their understanding of the Big Bang, when the universe came to be in an instant. Much the early history of the universe is in the realm of models, and Webb will add cold, hard data to the mix.

Webb may also see some of the earliest supernovas, the violent explosions at the end of a star’s life. The explosions may have spread heavy elements, such as metals, through the universe to seed the creation of a new generation of stars more like the ones astronomers know today.

The James Webb Space Telescope could image stars in the early history of the universe that formed around primordial black holes. The strong tug of gravity from black holes may have influenced the motion and behavior of the stars. Future missions, like the LISA gravitational wave observatory, will search for signatures created by merging proto-black holes. Credit: ESA

Webb will also search for clues about the first black holes, objects that suck up matter, and even light, with super-strong gravitational fields. Black holes in the present-day universe form after supernova explosions, but they can grow by merging with other black holes.

The largest of these objects, called supermassive black holes, are at the centers of most galaxies, including our own. But there are unanswered questions about the origin of the first black holes.

Primordial black holes may have mysteriously formed immediately after the Big Bang, and then grown over millions of years. If that’s true, the first stars could have been born around the earliest black holes, rather than the other way around.

It’s a classic chicken or egg question played out on a cosmic scale.

“For us, one of the big mysteries is do those stars make the black holes, or do the black holes help make the stars?” Mather said. “So that’s the chicken and egg question we’re really worried about.”

Email the author.

Follow Stephen Clark on Twitter: @StephenClark1.

https://spaceflightnow.com/2021/12/23/webb-telescope-is-a-time-machine-for-astronomers-to-see-the-cosmic-dawn/

Reply  Message 170 of 171 on the subject 
From: BARILOCHENSE6999 Sent: 25/11/2024 20:07
Time Travel between Science Fiction and Biblical Scripture - YouTube

Reply  Message 171 of 171 on the subject 
From: BARILOCHENSE6999 Sent: 15/12/2024 15:25
James watt. - ppt download
Amazon.com: James Watt and the Steam-Engine eBook : Rupert Sargent Holland:  Kindle Store
James Watt: Father of the Industrial Revolution - Engineer's Planet
80's Classic Back To The Future Doc Brown "Great Scott!" Custom Tee Any  Size | Back to the future, Doc brown, Great scott
great scott! on Tumblr
Great Scott GIFs - Get the best GIF on GIPHY
great_scott-s400x341-252428 - Un geek en Colombia
Great Scott! 1.21 JINGLE WATTS! (Back to the Future) Luxury Lined Notebook  - Journal Diary Writing Paper Note Pad Book Movie Prop Replica 1.21  Gigawatts BTTF Flux Capacitor Christmas: Wheeler, Jay: 9798583643912:  Amazon.com: Books
DeLorean of 'Back to the Future' fame is back with a new electric car -  YouTube
Pegatinas: Doc Brown | Redbubble
Fumo blu - Fumo blu added a new photo.
If it really is jif Does that mean doc brown was pronouncing it correctly  all along? - Overdue Insight Doc Brown - quickmeme
DeLorean Hire - Hire from Sandstone Productions
Docbrown Backtothefuture GIF - Docbrown Backtothefuture Gigawatt - Discover  & Share GIFs
80s Quotes - BACK TO THE FUTURE Doc Brown: 1.21 gigawatts!...
A very detailed map of Scotland I made to celebrate the beauty of Scottish  Landscapes and its fascinating physical geography ! ????????????????????????????????️ :  r/MapPorn
Scotland | History, Capital, Map, Flag, Population, & Facts | Britannica
Scotland - Geography, Culture and Economy - YouTube


First  Previous  157 a 171 de 171  Next   Last  
Previous subject  Next subject
 
©2024 - Gabitos - All rights reserved