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Message Subject Comet C/2012 S1 ISON is Nibiru the great perturber.
Poster Handle glauco
Post Content
Sorry, but this is a quite lame excuse. This answer was direct directed to you without any answers to other readers in the same post.
 Quoting: Hydra


Bring that again please.

But I asked for hi-res pictures of ice in a comet surface, as we had 5 flybys, not a long-distance spectroscopic image.
 Quoting: glauco

No, you initially asked for proof of ice in a comet and later changed the topic.
 Quoting: Hydra


My claim: no ICE found.
The official model says that comets are made of ice and rock. So, they have such data very easy to anybody to see. Go there and bring to us where is the ice on comets. I mean REAL PICTURES.
 Quoting: glauco


This is what I asked for on page 4. Do you have such pictures? You doing like Dog Astronut.

And btw - a long-distance spectroscopic analysis (you can't take long-distance spectroscopic images) of coma and tail finding water vapor should be a sufficient enough proof of water ice in a comet.
If you think it's not, please provide evidence and reference it.
 Quoting: Hydra


Water in comet's coma and tail have another process in the McCanney's model that don't need ice anywhere in the nucleous or around.

(you can't take long-distance spectroscopic images)
 Quoting: Hydra

Yes you can with a telescope, optic fiber and a computer.


Service:
"... The March 28th issue of SCIENCE describes studies made with the Hubble Space Telescope and the International Ultraviolet Explorer. That work shows that water ice is escaping at a rate different from those of other frozen compounds, so these ices appear to be segregated from one another within the nucleus. ..."
[link to www2.jpl.nasa.gov]

(vi) detection of the H234S isotopic species and independent observations of HDO and DCN
[link to adsabs.harvard.edu]


.
 Quoting: Hydra


This is a long-distance spectroscopic analysis with very good equipment.
 
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