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Astora

The X
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Everything posted by Astora

  1. Da li neko ima kartu viska za sutrasnji basket da proda?
  2. bmbk koliko je bilo gledalaca, a bilo ih je podosta. Vise me brine cinjenica da su zicere promasivali kao nikada do sada. Realno, nismo zasluzili sa onakvom igrom prolaz dalje i to je to. Sto se tice torte, bilo je i vise nego ocigledno sta je ono znacilo. Moglo je to i bez zaokruzenog broja 1. Radonjica zaista treba oterati i nije mi jasno kako je izdrzao na klupi ovoliko dugo. Sto se naredne utakmice tice, verujem da mozemo proci dalje jer su igraci u ranijim utakmicama pokazali da mogu da se nose sa jacim ekipama ali se mora Bobi vise drzati u igri, znaci mnogo! OSVAJAMO! Svi na maru u subotu!
  3. Htedoh da predlozim da se space program radi na polo majici al' ne verujem da bi to lepo stajalo a mozda bi i lepo stajalo?
  4. Kakav start. Bra'ooooo Ivke, samo rokaj. Topic od samog starta obecava.
  5. Do qrca, ima da robijam dozivotno zbog klinki =/
  6. Astora

    RUR fudbal!

    Koliko vas je, bolje da ste organizovali fudbal na velike golove :D
  7. Bole, u poslednje vreme sam bio slabije aktivan na forumu. Ovo je sjajno otkrice, zaista. Ali, mene vise zanima kada ce oni poceti sa dubljim istrazivanjem crnih rupa.
  8. 2003 QQ47 No, Asteroid 2003 QQ47 Is NOT Going to Hit the Earth Next Week Well, it took three months, but we have our first notpocalypse of 2014! Twitter, Facebook, and other social media are spreading a story that a large asteroid named 2003 QQ47 might impact the Earth next week, specifically on March 21, 2014. Let me be very clear right away: Nope. It won’t. This story is totally wrong! Well, the asteroid does exist, but it won’t hit us next week, and in fact can’t hit the Earth for at least a century. The truth is the asteroid will safely pass us on March 26 of this year, never getting closer than 19 million kilometers (nearly 12 million miles)—about 50 times farther away than the Moon! Update, March 15 at 17:30 UTC: Gianluca Masi at the European Virtual Telescope tells me they will observe this March 26 pass of QQ47 and webcast the images live, so you can watch as this rock safely glides past Earth for yourself.) I’m pretty sure what’s happening here is that a very old story has been recycled and is getting spread around without anyone doing any fact-checking. It’s all over Twitter and got picked up credulously by some bigger venues like the Daily Mail, which posted it with the typically understated title of “Asteroid hurtles toward Earth.” What follows after that is a breathless and almost entirely incorrect article about 2003 QQ47 that seems to simply rehash information from more than a decade ago. Seriously.* For example, the Mail article says the asteroid is “newly discovered,” but in fact was first detected in 2003, 11 years ago! Hence its name, 2003 QQ47. It was found to be a near-Earth asteroid, or NEA, one that does sometimes get close to us. For a while after it was discovered it was thought to have a small chance of hitting Earth, with an impact probability in August 2014 of about 1 in 250,000. But by September 2003 new observations allowed a better trajectory to be calculated, and an impact in 2014 was ruled out. This happens quite often, where a new asteroid will have only a rough orbit calculated, and an impact has long but non-zero odds of hitting us. As more observations come in the chances of impact can actually increase briefly before dropping to zero. This is what happened with QQ47 back in 2003. Got that? An impact in 2014, this year, was shown to be out of the question more than a decade ago and was even taken off JPL’s Sentry Risk page at that time, when it was found to have no potential Earth impacts for at least 100 years. We’re quite safe from this particular asteroid. The Mail article also has a quote by an astronomer named Alan Fitzsimmons, and I was able to trace this exact quote back to a CNN article and another in the Guardian … again both from 2003. Given this, it makes me think the Mail article was either an old one that got recycled (though there is no indication on the page of this), or they just cut-and-pasted information from an old article or from some, um, less than realistic websites which panic every time an NEA comes ‘round (several New Age-y and anti-science sites have articles about a possible impact this month by QQ47). Oddly, no author is listed on the Mail article. I’ll also note that in a Mail article from March 12, 2014 (just a few days ago) about asteroids and NASA, there is a special section highlighting the “threat” from QQ47, using that same out-of-date information and quote. Wow. Not surprisingly, asteroid impacts terrify a lot of people, and so whenever there’s a rumor like this it spreads like a virus. That’s the downside of instant communication, of course. Hopefully this time we can stop it before it spreads too far. Actually, to give you a little bit of real science, this is a pretty interesting rock. Its size isn’t well known, but it’s something like 800 to 2,000 meters (0.5–1.2 miles) in diameter. Its orbit around the Sun is roughly the same size as Earth’s but tipped by more than 60°, which is fairly unusual. This means it swings past us relatively often but tends to stay a long way away. The closest approach I saw for it is when it gets to within about 9 million km (4.5 million miles) from Earth in—get this—March 2170. As an astronomer, I find asteroids fascinating, and it’s compelling to learn more about their potential threat to Earth. That threat is very real, and it does not help to stir the pot with false information. Besides making it harder to convince people how dangerous they really are (the “cry wolf” syndrome) it needlessly scares people. Oddly enough, I’m not a big fan of that. If you hear about a potentially threatening asteroid and want more info, your first best bet is to go to the JPL risk page and see if it’s there. Another good way is to follow me on Twitter, as well as JPL’s Asteroid Watch, Ron Baalke, and Amy Mainzer. If there’s a rock out there with our name on it, we’ll be talking about it. Tip o’ the Whipple Shield to Scott Peterson. * If you get the impression I’m less than a big fan of the Daily Mail, then give yourself a gold star, or a nickel-iron asteroid, whichever is easier. http://www.slate.com/blogs/bad_astronomy/2014/03/15/asteroid_2003_qq47_rumors_of_an_impact_in_march_2014_are_false.html
  9. Bila mi je zelja da se zakuva neko pivo u parku al' mangupi me preduhitrili. Napio sam se kao bulja a povrh svega toga su mi i baklju uvalili da unesem pa sam vas totalno izgubio iz vida. Izvinjavam se. Sada u subotu dolazim ranije pa mogu da se iskupim za proslu subotu u vidu gajbe piva i litre rakije! :D
  10. Astora

    Bicikl

    Imacu od druge polovine marta vise vremena a u aprilu idem na drugi deo starog godisnjeg pa eto prilike da napravimo neki Tour de Serbia! ;)
  11. Sjajna atmosfera, prvo poluvreme tuga, drugo poluvreme mnogo bolje. Stanko, izvini.. Prevalio sam se i potpuno sam zaboravio da treba da te zovem. Vidimo se u subotu! JOS JEDNA POBEDA I TITULA!!
  12. Astora

    Bicikl

    Ja sam za, samo da bude lepog vremena i ako nije frka nedelja da padne :) 069/137-24-86 (Zoran) :)
  13. Astora

    Bicikl

    Ne znam gde drugo pa evo ovde. Danas kupio ovakav bajk, dao 80 eura. Uz bajk dobio: blatobrane, led svetla, brzinomer, rezervni sic, papire. Ja prezadovoljan bajkom.
  14. Igram Knight Online, MMORPG igru i u toku igranja dobijem ovaj notice i izbaci me iz igre. Da li moze pomoc u vezi ovog problema, molim vas? Hvala na minusima, meni i dalje treba pomoc vezano za ovaj problem.
  15. Molio bih za pomoc vezano za ovu muziku. Treba mi naziv kompozitora i ako neko zna gde se moze naci cela muzika. Hvala unapred puno. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KpBkw81hgdo
  16. Huge Asteroid to Fly Safely By Earth Monday: Watch It Live An asteroid the size of three football fields is set to make a close brush of Earth on Monday (Feb. 17), and you can watch the flyby in a live webcast. Near-Earth asteroid 2000 EM26 poses no threat of actually hitting the planet, but the online Slooh Space Camera will track the asteroid as it passes by Earth on Monday. The live Slooh webcast will start at 9 p.m. EST (0200 Feb. 18 GMT), and you can also watch the webcast directly through the Slooh website. You can also watch the asteroid broadcast live on Space.com. Scientists estimate that 2000 EM26 is about 885 feet (270 meters) in diameter, and it is whizzing through the solar system at a break-neck 27,000 mph (12.37km/s), according to Slooh. During its closest approach, the asteroid will fly about 8.8 lunar distances from Earth. [See photos of potentially dangerous asteroids] "We continue to discover these potentially hazardous asteroids — sometimes only days before they make their close approaches to Earth," Slooh's technical and research director, Paul Cox said in a statement. "Slooh’s asteroid research campaign is gathering momentum with Slooh members using the Slooh robotic telescopes to monitor this huge population of potentially hazardous space rocks. We need to find them before they find us!" 2000 EM26's flyby comes almost exactly a year after two major near-Earth object (NEO) events on Feb. 15, 2013. That day, as scientists were tracking the extremely close pass of the 98-foot (30 m) asteroid 2012 DA14, another, unrelated space rock unexpectedly exploded above Chelyabinsk, Russia, causing substantial damage to buildings that injured more than 1,000 people with falling glass. The shockwave caused by the explosion damaged thousands of buildings and left thousands of people injured, but no one was killed. The approximately 65-foot-meteor (20 m) exploded 18 miles (29 km) above the ground, and it released the energy equivalent of about 20 atomic bombs, Slooh officials said. "On a practical level, a previously-unknown, undiscovered asteroid seems to hit our planet and cause damage or injury once a century or so, as we witnessed on June 20, 1908 and February 15, 2013," Slooh astronomer Bob Berman said in a statement. "Every few centuries, an even more massive asteroid strikes us — fortunately usually impacting in an ocean or wasteland such an Antarctica. But the ongoing threat, and the fact that biosphere-altering events remain a real if small annual possibility, suggests that discovering and tracking all NEOs, as well as setting up contingency plans for deflecting them on short notice should the need arise, would be a wise use of resources." Pieces of the Russian meteorite will be awarded to seven gold medal winners on Saturday at the 2014 Winter Olympics in Sochi, Russia. The Slooh webcast will include commentary from Mark Boslough, an expert on planetary impacts. You can participate in the broadcast by using the hashtag #asteroid to ask questions during the 2000 EM26 show. http://www.space.com/24704-asteroid-2000-em26-earth-flyby-webcast.html?utm_content=buffer66941&utm_medium=social&utm_source=facebook.com&utm_campaign=buffer
  17. Odbojkasice dobile grobare u Staroj Pazovi u finalu kupa. Titula je nasa! Bio sam naravno :) Krece prolecni deo fudbalske sezone... OSVAJAMO! Ide derbi u basketu.... GAZIMO! SAMO HRABRO!
  18. Kakav dan. Sledece nedelje jos toplije. Pravo je vreme da se trazi drugi deo starog godisnjeg o/
  19. Ne planiram da dam vise od 2.400 dinara. Saljem pare kako god prodavac hoce. Mora biti "trusted person" ovde.
  20. Bog ti dao srece i zdravlja!
  21. Ovaj Rasko..... UFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFF!!!!
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