How to Understand Relativity

Spacetime is CONSTANT (always 100%). Both time and space are maileable – they can change within spacetime, but no matter how big or small one part is, THE TOTAL IS ALWAYS 100% – so TIME TRAVEL IS POSSIBLE, in fact, we’re ALL traveling through time right now !!!!!

Understanding Relativity

Related posts:

Apollo Lunar Module Ascent Stage
The Lunar Module Ascent stage also acts as a core component of this vehicle. It contains the Internal Measurement unit, the water tank, AFT Equipment Bay, Electronic Equipment, the Gaseous Oxygen Tank, Helium Tank, RCS Fuel Tank, APS Fuel Tank, RCS Helium Tank, RCS Oxidizer Tank, Ingress or the Egress Hatch and the RCS Quad.
Astrology Star Chart Spring
The positions of planets at the time of your birth are determined first. This forms the birth data. Your birth data is then compared to the positions of planets at various stages in life, to predict your future and major events that could happen in your life.
Apollo CSM and LM Mission Comparison
The Apollo Command Service Module The Command/Service Module (CSM) was one of two spacecraft, along with the Lunar Module, used for the United States Apollo program which landed astronauts on the Moon. It was built for NASA by North American Aviation. The Apollo Lunar Module (LM), also known as the Lunar Excursion Module (LEM), was the lander portion of the Apollo spacecraft built for the US ...
Saturn Explained: Inside and Out
Saturn is the sixth planet from the Sun and the second vastest planet in the Earth's planetary group, following Jupiter. Named following the Roman god Saturn, its galactic image (♄) speaks for the god's sickle. Saturn is a gas goliath with a normal span something like nine times that of Earth.[12][13] While a single-eighth the middle thickness of Earth, with its more substantial volume Saturn ...
Atomic Discovery
Atomic theory is a theory of the nature of matter, which states that matter is composed of discrete units called atoms, as opposed to the obsolete notion that matter could be divided into any arbitrarily small quantity. The Atoms are subdivided into Nucleus. The Nucleus is formed with thousands of Nucleons. The Nucleons are again subdivided into Quarks. No matter how these are discovered, these di...
Radio Astronomy
Radio waves are the same type of waves as light. They have less energy than visible light and so have a longer wavelength, but they travel at the same speed as light. At night our eyes and optical telescopes sees light from stars. But normal stars only produce radio waves very weakly.
Saturn's Rings Explained
The rings of Saturn are the most far reaching planetary ring framework of any planet in the Earth's planetary group. They comprise of endless minor particles, running in size from micrometres to metres,that circle about Saturn. The ring particles are made just about truly of water ice, with a follow segment of rough material. There is still no agreement as to their mechanism of creation; certa...
Phases of Venus
Parallel to the Venus Express Mission, ESA has initiated an observing campaign that incorporates a number of professional and amateur observers. Since the cameras onboard Venus Express have only a small field of view, ground based observations can provide important context information on Venus’s dense atmosphere as a whole.
How the Moon Influences the Earth
Although the moon is much smaller than the Earth, it still has an influence on its bigger companion. Just as the Earth’s gravity pulls on the Moon, the gravity of the Moon pulls on the Earth, stretching it into a slight oval. This distortion barely affects the solid landmasses, but it makes the oceans bulge on either side of the planet, producing the tides on either side of the planet. ...
Measuring the Stars
As we cannot yet travel outside the solar system, we have to learn as much as we can about the stars by studying them at a distance.  Astronomers can tell the brightness, color, and temperature of a star by analyzing the light it gives out. By splitting starlight into its constituent colors, they can find out what the stars are made of and how fast they are moving. Stars are so far awa...
Jupiter Explained: Inside and Out
Jupiter is the fifth planet from the Sun and the most vast planet in the Sun oriented System. It's a gas monster with mass one-thousandth that of the Sun but is more than two times the mass of every last trace of the different planets in our Earth's planetary group joined together. Jupiter is arranged as a gas monster plus Saturn, Uranus and Neptune. As one, these four planets are at times poi...
Black Holes Explained
The most Bizarre objects in the Universe, black holes are aptly named – they emit no visible light at all. And yet, most black holes are the end state of the most brilliant objects in the cosmos; giant stars that go supernova. The super compressed core that remains after the explosion has such strong gravity that even light cannot escape it – so the object is black.
Apollo Lunar Module Descent Stage
The Lunar module Descent stage would be the final module for the vehicle. The Stage consists of the Engine Mount, The Descent engine, the Structural Skin, the Insulation, the thermal and micrometeoroid shield, the forward interstate fitting, the oxidizer tank, the cable cutter, the ambient helium tank, the landing gear and finally the descent engine skirt.
The Amount of Junk in Outer Space
How much damage can a space debris do ? An example of the damage caused, a tiny speck of paint from a satellite once dug, a pit in a space shuttle window nearly a quarter – inch wide. 1mm metal chip could do as much damage as a 0.22-caliber long rifle bullet. A pea-sized ball moving this fast is as dangerous as a 400 lb safe travelling at 60 mph. A metal sphere the size of a tennis ball is as l...
Debris That Hit Space Shuttles
There are many impacts of the Space Shuttle. Atlantis struck by debris from the nose cone of a solid rocket booster 85 seconds after liftoff causing 707 dents, 298 larger than one inch in diameter. Columbia Foam debris from the external tank causes more than 100 dents and spurs NASA to begin a program to resolve foam-shedding.
The Solar System: Explained in One Page
The Solar System comprises of the Sun and it is planetary framework of eight planets, their moons, and different non-stellar protests. It framed more or less 4.6 billion years back from the crumple of a titan atomic fog. The boundless larger part of the framework's mass is in the Sun, with the vast majority of the remaining mass held in the planets. The four more minor inward planets, Mercury...
Astronomy 101 Collection
According to Quantum mechanics, electrons bound to an atom can only have particular values of energy; they are unique to that element. Absorption or emission of a photon of light by the atom occurs when the energy of that photon matches the difference between two of these energy levels. The gravitational pull of any object gets weaker the further you move from the object. Thus, the Moon p...
How Eclipses of the Sun Happen
In its 27 – day Orbit of the Earth, the Moon sometimes passes directly in front of the Sun and we see a solar eclipse. In one of the natural world’s most eerie, beautiful spectacles, the dark circle of the Moon gradually creeps over the Sun. Between two and five solar eclipses are visible from somewhere on the Earth each year. When the Moon is at its farthest from the Earth, it is not ...