Biggest gamma ray burst ever seen 3/19/08 in the constellation Bootes - meaning "the coming One" or "he cometh" - SIGNS in the heavens!!! (Perhaps a 7 day countdown?)
below is from the RITA Forum!
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Re: March 26th & Chris' vision of last year (2007)!!??Glory Bound and ALL:
EXCUSE ME but I do NOT know what to say!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Your question was:
From:
March 26th & Chris' vision of last year (2007)!!??http://pub48.bravenet.com/forum/4086901292/show/730561
...Can a a GRB burst and be so big, people can see it from the earth and it
...be round and look as if it is under glass? Or as if it has a ring around it??Obviously, the Lord had you ask this question RIGHT NOW!!!!!!!!!!
I have chill bumps!!!!!!!!!!!!
When I read your question, I just googled "visible to the naked eye GRB"!!!!!!!!
THE ARTICLE (below) WAS PUBLISHED TODAY!!! It concerns one of the
GRB's which occurred on 3/19 and mentioned the RARITY of ALL THE GRB's
of that day!!!!!!!!!! The answer to your question is not only, "YES". It is "YES",
a GRB was able to be viewed on 3/19/08!!!!!! GRB 080319B was adjacent to
BOOTES, which means "HE COMETH"!!!!!!!!!!!!BOOTES (The Coming One)
He comethhttp://philologos.org/__eb-tws/chap11.htm#bootes
Picture of Bootes:
http://philologos.org/__eb-tws/images/04bootes.gif
From National Geographic News:
PHOTO IN THE NEWS: Gamma-Ray Burst Visible to Naked Eye
http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2008/03/080321-brightest-object.html
March 21, 2008—Scientists have detected an interstellar explosion so bright that it was briefly visible to the naked eye—from 7.5 billion light-years away.
Viewers looking at the right patch of night sky on Wednesday would have seen several afterglows from the massive gamma-ray burst, slightly brighter than the faintest visible stars.
NASA's Swift satellite captured the unprecedented spectacle using its X-Ray Telescope (left) and Optical/Ultraviolet Telescope (right). The burst was named GRB 080319B, because it was the second of four bursts detected that day—a first for Swift.
GRB 080319B, located more than halfway across the visible universe, crushes the previous record holder for most distant object visible without assistance by three orders of magnitude. That would be the galaxy M33, located just 2.9 million light-years from Earth.
"This burst was a whopper," Swift principal investigator Neil Gehrels, of NASA Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland, said in a statement. "It blows away every gamma-ray burst we've seen so far."
Gamma-ray bursts occur when massive stars run out of fuel and collapse, rapidly pouring out enormous amounts of high-energy radiation and particles. Acting like high-power cosmic blowtorches, the particle jets can also heat interstellar clouds to create bright afterglows, according to scientists.
The bursts are the most brilliant occurrences in the universe after the big bang. GRB 080319B's afterglows, for instance, shone 2.5 million times more intensely than the brightest supernova on record.
Researchers are still unsure why GRB 080319B was so bright. Some theories include an originating star with an unusual mass, spin, or magnetic field or an especially concentrated energy jet.
—Aalok Mehta
There is NO NEED to explain this!!!
THANKS BE TO THE LORD!!!!!!!!!!!!
GOD BLESS!!!!
Calvin