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ME TEL U NOW PHROPHECY UNCONFIRMED 2 SUPERNOVA EXPLOSIONS JAN 9TH
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In accordance with industry accepted best practices we ask that users limit their copy / paste of copyrighted material to the relevant portions of the article you wish to discuss and no more than 50% of the source material, provide a link back to the original article and provide your original comments / criticism in your post with the article.
[quote:aliensbro:MV8yMTA3NTY3XzM1NTI0Mzc0XzU4MDhGMzIy] [quote:Anonymous Coward 31686426:MV8yMTA3NTY3XzM1NTI0MzQzX0VENDEzNTQy] [quote:Dr. Astro:MV8yMTA2ODIxXzM1NTI0MTY0X0JDNjlDREEz] Do you know how many new supernovas are seen and discovered on an average day? SN 2009ip isn't new either. http://www.rochesterastronomy.org/sn2009/sn2009ip.html Image Credit Date Mag Filter Comments CHASE 2009/08/26.11 17.9 C Discovery Nor is SN SCP-0401 http://www.eurekalert.org/multimedia/pub/51521.php?from=229691 "Supernova SCP-0401, nicknamed “Mingus,” was collected by the Hubble Space Telescope in 2004" No supernovas have been reported for January 9th yet, but they probably will be considering that's usually one found nearly every day and often multiple per day. http://www.cbat.eps.harvard.edu/lists/Supernovae.html It takes a few days for each discovery to be verified. As of yet though there are no reports of supernovae discovered on January 9th awaiting confirmation. http://www.cbat.eps.harvard.edu/unconf/tocp.html Latest potential discovery was on January 8th. [/quote] Yay my favorite debunker is here. :hf: Few things to note: SN 2009ip was only known as a Supernova imposter until very recently. Also you should have pasted the full quote about SN SCP-0401: Supernova SCP-0401, nicknamed “Mingus,” was collected by the Hubble Space Telescope in 2004 but could not be positively identified until after the installation of a new camera that serendipitously acquired more data. So basically, both supernovae are new, as in not verified as supernova before. And the entity (i know it's bs to you but just for the sake of argument) could be talking about news reports from this day. I'd like to know about dangers connected to a supernova, that field seems badly researched with lots of contradicting info (NASA says within 10 light years is dangerous, some other respected astronomer says ~3,000 lightyears etc.). Also i once read that exploding stars could send directed streams of energy, much like a CME from our sun. [/quote] Astro's world is black & white, he has good intentions though. [/quote]
Original Message
Thread: May 15th ME TEL U NOW SHIN THIS PHIT OMGWTFBBQ
This is no longer just some random guy's predictions.
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