New Neologisms

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Author
Index
A

Bryan Appleyard

Title
Index
The

The First Church of the New Millenium
Year 1994
Publisher Bantam (Doubleday)
ISBN 0553407295
 

 

Synopsis














In the dying moments of the century, as the world prepares to celebrate the impending Millennium, architect Stephen Rix collapses in a field near his country home and is subjected to a terrifying, life-changing vision of a monumental gothic cathedral.

Haunted by his hallucination and increasingly estranged from the real world, Stephen becomes obsessed with his phantom church.  Such imaginings have no place in this unnerving near future of anodyne electronic entertainment, made-to-measure cars and designer drugs.  Dismissed as mad by his wife, mistress, and business partner, Stephen finds an unlikely champion in the larger-than-life property dealer, Dave Hirtenstein, and begins to build this cathedral of his dreams.

 

 

Review
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Ring Nebula

 

 

Credit: NASA

Ring Holds a Delicate Flower
NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope finds a delicate flower in the Ring Nebula, as shown in this image. The outer shell of this planetary nebula looks surprisingly similar to the delicate petals of a camellia blossom. (A planetary nebula is a shell of material ejected from a dying star.) Located about 2,000 light years from Earth in the constellation Lyra, the Ring Nebula is also known as Messier Object 57 and NGC 6720. It is one of the best examples of a planetary nebula and a favorite target of amateur astronomers.

The "ring" is a thick cylinder of glowing gas and dust around the doomed star. As the star begins to run out of fuel, its core becomes smaller and hotter, boiling off its outer layers. Spitzer's infrared array camera detected this material expelled from the withering star. Previous images of the Ring Nebula taken by visible-light telescopes usually showed just the inner glowing loop of gas around the star. The outer regions are especially prominent in this new image because Spitzer sees the infrared light from hydrogen molecules. The molecules emit the infrared light that they have absorbed ultraviolet radiation from the star or have been heated by the wind from the star.

NASA Image of the day archive

 

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