Australia scientists find 'spooky' spinning object in Milky Way

We got this from my wife's 10 inch reflector.

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This is an interesting concept about axis because the James Webb telescope....

uses polyimide film on its reflector which has a reinforced mesh to protect it from micrometeorite impacts. The pulsar cap article says 'magnetic....vacuum dipole radiation,' and so the orientation pattern on polyimide subtrates in a vacuum magnetic field:

Vacuum Magnetic Field / Polyimide Nanosubtrates
'....spins oriented perpendicular to the film plane.'
'....spins oriented perpendicular to the film plane....'
So we typed in a clue to this very interesting phenomenon of pulsars that Dalia and White6 have brought up: parallelism.

'Solutions are given for the space-charge-limited flow of electrons above the polar caps of a pulsar whose magnetic moment has a component parallel to its spin angular momentum when the accelerating electric field is shorted out by the formation of electron-positron pairs.'

What was found interesting was that the perpendicular was also a parameter, linking back to the production of nanosubstrates with the polyimide. As will be shown, NASA Astrobiology's director, Baruch S. Blumberg must also be mentioned in parallel with these photon-producing phenomena of pulsars, because of his use of the chemistry evolved from photosynthesis in the mulberry tree to (inhibit maturation [italics]) of the hepatitis B virus, and its links Gaucher's disease and to nyctinasty (plant sleep). The antipode of photons from produced in young pulsars links to the Australian antigen of hepatitis B virus, discovered by Blumberg.

'....The pair momentum is directed along the momentum of the parent photon and at the moment of creation, the particles have non-zero momentum perpendicular to the magnetic field. They radiate this perpendicular momentum almost instantaneously via synchrotron radiation and then move along magnetic field lines.'
 

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