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RainbowBeautyRocks...

Started by Mikey, March 23, 2010, 11:01:46 AM

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Mikey

You are my new E-Girlfriend!

(if you agree to it)

RainbowBeautyRocks

#1
Yep, again i saw the future. 4 topics bout me now......gggggrrrrreeeeeeaaaaaattttttt

Post Merge: March 23, 2010, 07:53:25 PM

Oh wat the heck sure!

Dracoslythe




Gleech

*Murders Levi*

:DDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDD


jk.

Quote from: SonicFan47 on December 16, 2008, 08:00:41 PM
I don't care in the Ryan/Jason debate. I can't tell the difference
but I favor JALEEL WHITE!

Tyler Rennie





Mikey


Elija2

An E-Girlfriend is like an E-Penis; no matter how much you flaunt it, it still doesn't give you any credibility like a real one would.

RainbowBeautyRocks


Taz

Quote from: RainbowBeautyRocks on March 23, 2010, 02:44:47 PM
*shrugs*
The scale upon which magnitude is now measured has its origin in the Hellenistic practice of dividing those stars visible to the naked eye into six magnitudes. The brightest stars were said to be of first magnitude (m = 1), while the faintest were of sixth magnitude (m  = 6), the limit of human visual perception (without the aid of a telescope). Each grade of magnitude was considered to be twice the brightness of the following grade (a logarithmic scale). This somewhat crude method of indicating the brightness of stars was popularized by Ptolemy in his Almagest, and is generally believed to have originated with Hipparchus. This original system did not measure the magnitude of the Sun.

In 1856, Norman Robert Pogson formalized the system by defining a typical first magnitude star as a star that is 100 times as bright as a typical sixth magnitude star; thus, a first magnitude star is about 2.512 times as bright as a second magnitude star. The fifth root of 100 is known as Pogson's Ratio.[1] Pogson's scale was originally fixed by assigning Polaris a magnitude of 2. Astronomers later discovered that Polaris is slightly variable, so they first switched to Vega as the standard reference star, and then switched to using tabulated zero points[clarification needed] for the measured fluxes.[2] The magnitude depends on the wavelength band (see below).

The modern system is no longer limited to 6 magnitudes or only to visible light. Very bright objects have negative magnitudes. For example, Sirius, the brightest star of the celestial sphere, has an apparent magnitude of –1.4. The modern scale includes the Moon and the Sun; the full Moon has an apparent magnitude of –12.6 and the Sun has an apparent magnitude of –26.73. The Hubble Space Telescope has located stars with magnitudes of 30 at visible wavelengths and the Keck telescopes have located similarly faint stars in the infrared.

RainbowBeautyRocks


Shadow26

Quote from: Leviathan on March 23, 2010, 11:01:46 AM
You are my new E-Girlfriend!

(if you agree to it)
*facepalm*
Tisk tisk tisk,you have much to learn my young one........... :P

ENDragoon

#11
Quote from: Shadow26 on March 23, 2010, 09:25:24 PM
*facepalm*
Tisk tisk tisk,you have much to learn my young one........... :P
"And that is why you fail" (yoda, star wars: empire strikes back)XD(jk)
Given enough time, any man may master the physical. With enough knowledge, any man may become wise. It is the true warrior who can master both, and surpass the result. -Tien T'ai-

ChaosDazer

#12

Congrats?
Soon I'm gonna hear you had your first cybersex
witty sig caption

Light the Hedgehog

Quote from: Leviathan on March 23, 2010, 11:01:46 AM
You are my new E-Girlfriend!

(if you agree to it)
what happend to Maddie8D, eh? *sees some popcorn* POPCORN!!!

RainbowBeautyRocks

Damn it and i just bought that popcorn ur like me and candy. when i see it its mine!!!