For
many generations various human cultures have had great
knowledge about the star constellations. However, these
days most of the so-called modernized breed of human
couldn’t tell you much about what’s around us in the
infinite Universe. The funny thing is, technically we
now know more about what’s there than ever before,
we’ve even got photos. With the Hubble Telescope we
now have access to the most unbelievable pictures
imaginable: galaxies, nebulae and millions of stars
close up. You don’t need to buy a book or DVD to see
this stuff, just sit down at your computer and let the
Internet take you on a galactic journey.
A lot of the images can be accessed for free just by
finding the right sites. At http://wires.news.com.au/special/mm/030811-hubble.htm
you can watch a stream of beautiful visuals that are
literally out of this world. The beauty of the photos,
the fact that they are moving, and the musical
accompaniment makes the whole trip quite ethereal. The
other great aspect is the information the scientists
have uncovered, mind-blowing ideas like the fact that
some stars are 60 times brighter than our own sun, or
the idea that there are thousands of stars in one tiny
spot in the sky. The concept that galaxies are 150
million light years away-do you know how fast light
travels?
For the average human who spends their existence in
one place working hard everyday to make ends meet, life
can become somewhat monotonous and insulated. You forget
that there’s a whole world out there. The Universe
however might be a random thought that only appears once
in a month or even a year. The stars seem so
disconnected to our everyday reality, but the fact is
that we are part of a much bigger picture-the biggest
picture of all, infinite space. Maybe if we did focus a
bit more ‘outside the box’ of our familiar routines
we could grasp onto the magic and perfection that
surrounds us all the time, the real neighborhood that we
belong to.
http://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/Newsroom/NewImages/images.php3?img_id=16616
http://www.spaceweather.com/
http://www.sec.noaa.gov/
http://micro.magnet.fsu.edu/primer/java/scienceopticsu/powersof10/index.html
These are a few more sites I discovered that give us
more insight or ‘outsight’ into what is going on
around us. Again I find the Internet has become a medium
for discovering knowledge about life. Without leaving the
office or my house I can travel to the most beautiful
places-real places, we’re not talking Star Trek here
people! I’ve seen many magical things in my life thus
far: snow –capped mountains, rainbows over waterfalls,
sunsets on tropical beaches. I’ve seen art, heard music,
watched films; I’ve lived a very fortunate life indeed.
But, to see these pictures and to learn about the
incredible worlds outside our own…on a computer at
home…it has taken me to a new level of understanding, a
new level of reverence for what it is we are part of. The
only way to describe these galaxies, stars, and giant gas
clouds close up is to softly and humbly speak the word
‘magic’. You will never see real paintings like this,
beauty that stretches for millions of miles. My computer
screen has become a looking glass portal.
Jesse Somer may be
contacted at http://www.m6.net
danielp@m6.net.
Jesse S. Somer is a human analyst of the postmodern
technical world. He hopes to bridge the gap of
understanding between experts and novices involved in the
computer industry.
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