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Wednesday, July 28, 2010

My Life as an Astronomer and Scientist

Hello loyal friends and readers. My life as a scientific astronomer is very interesting. Usually i like to work from 10pm to 6am. I have a giant observatory that is my HeadQuarters. I get up arount 9pm, take a shower, shave, and off to work i go. The observatory is in back of my house. I own 40 acres of land in the wilderness. I like that i can just walk to work. When i get in, i usually turn on the laser beam refractor that operates my telesope. While that is charging up, I look at my computer to see if anything new has come across the wire concerning the universe. If it has, i will get the co-ordinates and feed them into the computer. That will relay to the Telescope, telling it the co-ordiates to sight in on. If there is more than one set of co-ordinates, the computer will store them, site in on the first set, then when i'm done looking at that sector, i push a button at the base of the 'scope, and it will turn to the next set. Some nites i have 10 or more new phenoma to check out, but some nites i won't have any. When there are no new ones, i usually will "free scan" the universe, especially our solar-system to see what changes are occuring and how they might affect Earth.
On a lonely, cold nite in March, i was free scanning the solar system. I noticed a small asteroid in sector 571, mark 3, at 23 degrees. The gravitational pull from earth was keeping in a syncronized orbit parallel to the earths. I realized that when the earth's magnetic field increased in late september, the asteroid would be attracted to the earth and, at first, slowly pull towards our planet. As time goes on, the pull will become stronger, and the speed of the asteroid will increase proportionately. The middle of November will be Strike Point. I am re-doing my calculations daily, and i hope that something will change, or that i am completely wrong. Stay tuned for more info as i figure it out.
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