There are lots of anomalies in the solar system but Iapetus is the most challenging to describe as natural. Our moon is an even bigger deal, but it's harder to convince people who have no background and interest in the study and research of non terrestrial phenomenas.
Showing posts with label iapetus. Show all posts
Showing posts with label iapetus. Show all posts
Saturday, 16 December 2023
Wednesday, 3 August 2011
Cassini & The Sun King
The Cassini spacecraft takes one of its last good looks at Iapetus, a Saturnian moon that I've been researching here along with Saturnalian worship by elites for a while.
This view looks toward the south pole of Iapetus (1,471 kilometers, or 914 miles across), and lit terrain seen here is in the southern latitudes of the trailing hemisphere. There is only one other planned viewing opportunity of Iapetus left in Cassini's Solstice Mission, in March 2015.
See PIA11690 to learn more about the color anomaly on Iapetus. See PIA08404 to learn more about that moon's equatorial ridge that is hard to accept as natural.
The image below the painting was taken in visible light with the Cassini spacecraft narrow-angle camera on June 7, 2011. The view was obtained at a distance of approximately 863,000 kilometers (536,000 miles) from Iapetus and at a Sun-Iapetus-spacecraft, or phase, angle of 98 degrees. Image scale is 5 kilometers (3 miles) per pixel.
I'm over Saturnalia now but it was a trip finding out it's more than just a pretty face. It's worthwhile digging into the JPL (Jack Parsons/Jet Propulsion) Laboratories' founder and his Aleister Crowley connections.
It's unfortunate that the bad boys get all the attention. I'd like to have had the time to give Venus and Jupiter more attention.
In 1669 Giovanni Cassini moved to France and through a grant from Louis XIV of France helped to set up the Paris Observatory, which opened in 1671; Cassini would remain the director of the observatory for the rest of his career until his death in 1712. In 1673 he became a French citizen. For the remaining forty-one years of his life Cassini served as astronomer/astrologer to Louis XIV ("The Sun King"); serving the expected dual role yet focusing the overwhelming majority of his time on astronomy rather than the astrology he had studied so much in his youth.
During this time, Cassini's method of determining longitude was used to measure the size of France accurately for the first time. The country turned out to be considerably smaller than expected, and the king quipped that Cassini had taken more of his kingdom from him than he had won in all his wars. Cassini went blind in 1711.
The Cassini-Huygens mission is a cooperative project of NASA, the European Space Agency and the Italian Space Agency. The Jet Propulsion Laboratory, a division of the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena, manages the mission for NASA's Science Mission Directorate, Washington, D.C. The Cassini orbiter and its two onboard cameras were designed, developed and assembled at JPL. The imaging operations center is based at the Space Science Institute in Boulder, Colo.
For more information about the Cassini-Huygens mission visit http://saturn.jpl.nasa.gov. The Cassini imaging team homepage is at http://ciclops.org.
Labels:
aleister crowley,
iapetus,
jpl,
mimas,
nasa,
saturn,
saturnalia
Wednesday, 18 May 2011
Solar System Hard Drive
Even if it's just a coincidence it's worth knowing that Saturn's moon Mimas bears a strange resemblance to George Lucas's Death Star in Star Wars.
Saturn's moons are an entire encyclopaedia in their own right even if exploring questions such as why there are so many, why their orbits are all over the show in respect to the razor thin rings of a perfect plane around Saturn. It's the perfect metaphor for order and chaos or order ab chao for the latin speaking cabal watchers.
Then of course we shouldn't forget Iapetus with it's startling welded ridge running around it's equator.
I've blogged a bunch of stuff about Saturnalia worship here over the last couple of months but the undisputed champ of picking out how that drama plays out in the media and communications matrix has to be this gentleman below. Even if a person throws in a factor of 30% as odd coincidence there comes a point where the question emerges, is it possible for content with a message agenda (news, commercials etc) to be completely innocent of Saturnalia worship? It's ubiquitous.
Think of Saturn like it's a big hard drive. That's one of the best quotes I've heard yet.
Think of Saturn like it's a big hard drive. That's one of the best quotes I've heard yet.
Labels:
iapetus,
mimas,
saturnalia
Friday, 6 May 2011
Lord of the Rings
Originally Stanley Kubrick wanted 2001 Space Odyssey to connect with Saturn but the studios said that was unacceptable so he had to change the story to a Jupiter landing. I have no idea how Kubrick and Arthur C. Clarke knew about Saturn's secrets, but I do know they tried to tip us off, and for that reason it's worth digging around on Saturnalia worship, chronos as control mechanism and Saturn's moon Iapetus because it's artificial.
Labels:
iapetus,
saturn,
saturnalia
Thursday, 17 March 2011
2001 Space Odyssey
We were watching 2001: A Space Odyssey last night. I vaguely recall watching it when I was younger but this time round it was such a treat. A lot more fell into place on this viewing as I'm getting a sense for Kubrick as a director and as a person. I'm trying to think who else is as good as him and apart from Lynch there is nobody is there? Funny thing was we both turned to look at each other half way and said 'those look like iPads'.
Now you might think that's a coincidence but Steve Job's amazing streak of success over the last few years has definitely had me wondering if he has had access to those allegations of back engineered gizmos that the UFO crowd swear are largely withheld from us by a self serving elite who accumulate wealth by enslaving our time to a mortgage/debt treadmill before egging us on to ripping each others throats out over oil and destruction through soul draining organised religion and misery. Like that feeling of being disconnected from who you really are. Precariously attached to a marginally differentiated lifeline of drudgery and artifice.
Well of course I'm riffing a bit here because Stanley Kubrick was a very secretive man. Then there are those allegations of filming the moon landings in case they went wrong and thus potentially losing the U.S. a crucially psychological information war. Allegedly Stanley demanded a deal that in return for shooting the moon landings he could later do the films he wanted without Hollywood interference. Has anybody got any recommendations for which Kubrick film I should watch next as I'm obsessed with his work now. Also does anybody know the rumour about why he changed the destination planet in 2001 Space Odyssey? It was meant to be Saturn but that was too close to the mark so he changed it to Jupiter. Saturn has that distinctly odd looking moon Iapetus which I've mentioned before was the spark for my synchronicity post and which looks like the death star in Star Wars. Just saying folks. Draw your own conclusions folks. I'm only on the lookout for better questions.
It's the circular parts of Iapetus that merit comment and then on closer look the ridge around the equator is distinctly uniform.
But rather than get bogged down with the differences between man made and artificial. You can leave that to Benoit Mandelbrot. The question I have is why call the moon landing missions Saturn V. What is it about Saturn? Why not call them Neptune 5?
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