News
Release 45 -
9P/Tempel 1 Comet
Wednesday, June
2, 2004
Ernst Wilhelm Liebrecht
Tempel from Marseille,
France discovered the comet on April 3, 1867. Later
calculations revealed that the comet was 106 million kilometers (0.71
AU) from Earth and 246 million kilometers (1.64 AU) from
the sun. The antimatter comet's mass is 140 billion metric tons.
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August 6, 2000 image of 9P/Tempel 1 Comet |
People
are able to see comets from the solar wind
and dust particles blasting antimatter off the comet's surface. The
antimatter form an ambi-plasma of matter and antimatter ions and dust
particles. The matter and
antimatter annihilations on the surface and in the comet's coma and tail
produce the gamma rays, x-rays, and light.
The energy from the 9P/Temple 1
comet could supply the entire World's solar energy coming from the sun for
four million years or the World's Total energy needs for 40 billion years |
On July 4, 2005. NASA, however, plans to collide 370 kilogram spacecraft into the Comet
9P/Tempel 1,
http://deepimpact.jpl.nasa.gov/. The 16,000-megaton explosion will shatter the 140 billion metric ton
comet into trillions of pieces similar to the du Toit-Neujmin-Delporte comet
shown below. Billions of antimatter fragments will be spread over millions of
kilometers.
www.ifa.hawaii.edu/~yan/57p.html
In 2022, the Comet 9P/Tempel 1 fragments will collide with Mars. Please advance NASA’s clock,
http://neo.jpl.nasa.gov/cgi-bin/db?name=9P, to January 2022. The
antimatter fragments will collide with Mars and produce thousands of one hundred
to millions of megaton explosions.
Sean O'Keefe, NASA Administrator, NASA’s Office of Space Science personnel
and their support contractors unfortunately don’t comprehend a 16,000-Megaton
explosion with an antimatter comet and the devastating impact upon Mars. They
plan to launch the spacecraft on December 30, 2004
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