Cool Mama
“I know God is at work in all we ask him to take care of and even in the areas we miss. He takes care of his own in his own time.”
Words of encouragement from my cool Mama. It particularly gives me courage to realize her faith in the “areas we miss.” What a relief to know that God doesn’t respond to us just based on what WE can see, hear, understand or ask! No, He responds and acts on our behalf based on what HE sees and understands.
My vision and understanding is incredibly flawed. I don’t even know what to ask sometimes. Honestly, I can’t even remember my name sometimes, much less possess the wisdom required to assess my own situations and determine my true needs. I can rest because HIS is a vision I can trust
Filed under Day + Day, Soul + Spirit | Comment (0)“Super-Earths”

Cultural Context: The term used by astronomers to describe planets which according to this article, are “more massive than Earth, but less massive than Uranus and Neptune (about 15 Earth masses).” It is being announced at the international conference “Extra-solar Super-Earths” in France that three such planets have been discovered orbiting the star HD 40307. The “triple-system” was discovered using the “HARPS spectograph” attached to the telescope in La Silla, Chile. The discovery has been termed a “remarkable breakthrough in the field of extra-solar planets.”
Hmmm…
It’s a bird! It’s a plane! No, I guess it’s more aptly categorized as ScienceSpeak rather than CultureSpeak since I’m probably a typical example of the world citizen who clearly has no frame of reference for this term. However, call it my “geek-bent,” but I’m intrigued. And being that I’m still pretty much in the dark even after reading the article, a few questions/comments orbited to mind:
- I really had to eeny-meeny-miney-mo to decide on which term to post about because there were so many odd ones like “exoplanets,” “Doradus and Pictor constellations,” and “perturbations” (I’m thinking that one’s a post that would write itself!)
- ScienceDaily.com is a cool site. It usually leaves me asking “who knew?” and inevitably responding “clearly, not me!” I’ve sort of internally labeled it: Weird things you can get government and private grants to think about.
- For the address of a “remarkable breakthrough,” HD 40307 has a pretty uninspiring star name. I would think it deserves a little more Wow! factor. I’m sure there’s some star envy going on with 51 Pegasi, site of a 1995 planetary discovery. Although, the article says HD 40307 experiences only very minor “perturbations” so it’s probably not creating much friction.
- As one of the scientists on the project, Michael Mayor’s job description is “planet hunter.” Cool.
- According to the article, this study implies that 1 in 3 solar-like stars have a Super-Earth planet. With HD 40307’s count of 3 planets, this star is an overachiever. Plus, it’s nice and trim — slightly less massive than our sun. This stellar dude needs an image consultant to appeal to a wider audience. Just look at what he has going for him, but with that name…
- Apparently planets can be classified as Jupiter-like, Saturn-like and Neptune-like, but are almost always measured in Earth-masses. I’m curious as to the qualifications of these particular classifications.
- The HARPS spectograph can apparently only detect planets with greater Earth-masses. “Earth-like” planets are just too small. I can hear the ACLU rushing to file now — wait HARPS is located in Chile, so I guess all those Earth-like planets can go on having their opportunities denied simply based on their size.
- More curious Google Ads with the article:
“2008 Diet of the Year” — for those overly massive Super-Earths, I guess
“Car Prices & Pictures” — for the cheapest way to get “42 light-years away towards the southern Doradus and Pictor constellations”
“Earth Harvest” clicking to Zappos.com — moon shoes, perhaps?
When it’s all said and done, one of the scientists suggests that with this study’s findings, we “may well arrive at the conclusion that planets are ubiquitous.” — not part of my everyday vocabulary, but it means omnipresent.
OK, I may be a little late to the party, but I think I can eventually arrive there with the use of Google and GPS — I mean PPS (planetary positioning system).
Filed under CultureSpeak, Inner Geek | Comment (0)




















