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Degeaba te zburlesti la mine, ca nu ma sperii, vorba lui Dodo :ack::harhar: Zilnic, in Romania se produc cel putin 10 microseisme (intre 0,5-2,0 pe scara Richter). O spun oameni avizati, de specialitate. Da, si unde le vezi pe maretele seismograme heli-nu stiu cum pe care le tot invoci ???:harhar::harhar::36: Acolo apar doar cutremure mai mari de 2,5-3,0. Microseismele nu, din pacate, aste e situatia :35::green:
 
Am ramas singur pe aici?!?:ack:
 
Da:harhar:
E randul tau sa stai de paza:harhar:
 
Probabil....hei puneti si voi poze din caltoria de la Cernobil.
 
La Cernobal nu a fost dezastru natural si poti astepta noua explozie care pluteste in aer. Poti merge sa faci si poze Syl:harhar:
 
Oricum am nervi acum ca a pierdut Steaua. Huliganii aia radiaza:ack::ack::ack:
Pai vezi? De-aia urasc eu fotbalul... Nici nu stiam ca a fost meci aseara daca nu urla doua ore vecinu\' de jos :harhar:
 
Dodo a spus:
Oricum am nervi acum ca a pierdut Steaua. Huliganii aia radiaza:ack::36::ack:
Pai vezi? De-aia urasc eu fotbalul... Nici nu stiam ca a fost meci aseara daca nu urla doua ore vecinu\' de jos :35:
Dodo, Emil, sunteti off-topic...:ack::harhar::harhar:
 
Ia de cititi aici...:ack::harhar::harhar: :36::32::35::51::36::10::10:

To curtail the doomsday posts (I realize this is a bit OT, but to
cover it):

NASA Says Comet Fragments Won\'t Hit Earth

Chunks of a comet currently splitting into pieces in the night sky
will not strike the Earth next month, nor will it spawn killer
tsunamis and mass extinctions, NASA officials said Thursday.

The announcement, NASA hopes, will squash rumors that a fragment of
the crumbling Comet 73P/Schwassmann-Wachmann 3 (SW 3) will slam into
Earth just before Memorial Day.

\"There are some Internet stories going around that there\'s going to be
an impact on May 25,\" NASA spokesperson Grey Hautaluoma, told
SPACE.com. \"We just want to get the facts out.\"

Astronomers have been observing 73P/Schwassmann-Wachmann 3, a comet
that circles the Sun every 5.4 years, for more than 75 years and are
confident that any of the icy object\'s fragments will remain at least
a distant 5.5 million miles (8.8 million kilometers) from Earth - more
than 20 times the distance to the Moon - at closest approach between
May 12 and May 28.

\"We are very well acquainted with the trajectory of Comet 73P
Schwassmann-Wachmann 3,\" said Donald Yeomans, manager of NASA\'s
Near-Earth Object Program Office, in a written statement. \"There is
absolutely no danger to people on the ground or the inhabitants of the
International Space Station, as the main body of the object and any
pieces from the breakup will pass many millions of miles beyond the
Earth.\"

The main SW 3 fragment, dubbed Fragment C, will make its closest pass
by Earth on May 12 at a safe distance of 7.3 million miles (11.7
million kilometers), NASA said, adding that skywatchers will be able
to use small telescopes to spot the comet chunks by scanning the
constellation Vulpelca during the early-morning hours. [Click here for
a map of SW 3\'s path across the sky.]

NASA\'s
Hubble Space Telescope and other instruments have been watching SW 3\'s
disintegration. The comet\'s numerous fragments stretch across several
degrees of the night sky. For comparison, the Moon\'s diameter covers
about one-half a degree in the sky.

\"Catastrophic breakups may be the ultimate fate of most comets,\"
explained Hal Weaver, a planetary astronomer of the Johns Hopkins
University Applied Physics Laboratory, in a statement.

Weaver led a team of researchers during the Hubble observations of SW
3, and used the space telescope to study the break up of comets
Shoemaker-Levy 9 - which was ripped apart by Jupiter\'s gravity and
hit the giant planet between 1993 and 1994 - Hyakutake in 1996, and
1999 S4 (LINEAR) in 2000, NASA said.

Hubble\'s new SW 3 observations suggest that chunks of the comet are
pushed behind its tail by the outgassing of Sun-facing pieces. Smaller
pieces appear to be ejected from their nucleus faster than their
larger brethren, while other fragments seem to simply fade away.

When set alongside studies by other observatories, Hubble\'s images may
help astronomers determine what is causing the comet\'s disintegration
as it nears the Earth and Sun, the space agency added.

German astronomers Arnold Schwassmann and Arno Arthur Wachmann first
discovered the SW 3 comet in 1930 while hunting for asteroids. Despite
its relatively short orbital period, the icy object was not seen again
until 1979, and then was missed during a 1985 pass.

Since then, however, astronomers have kept a close eye on SW 3 and in
1995 observed its initial break up.

Aside from a great sky show, the comet poses no danger to Earth and
its inhabitants, NASA officials said.
 
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