Poetry

Terms

  • on two waves joining
    keep going

  • 78% nitrogen
    21% oxygen
    1% neon/hydrogen
    0.04% carbon dioxide

  • Sanskrit
    The Mother- A Village Goddess

    Abbreviation
    Ai Movie Manuscript Anthology

  • torrents
    fountain in branched sustain
    well secreting with current
    seeding

  • watch this electric impulse
    reflex

    that mantled growth
    representative

    as my biochemical message
    reflects

    within your sentience
    receptive_inventive

  • To impose.

  • gokes

  • Mental.

    See: Mind

  • The merging of different concepts, phenomena, or circumstances into a unified, impactful whole.

    See: This

  • Devoted follower of a group or leader
    often seen as unorthodox or extreme

  • a free expenditure of energy
    that embodies order from chaos

    through symbolic movement
    the expression of origin

    using time as a tool
    we measure each other against

    the reality we create
    the origin of expression

  • Nothing to fear.

    See: Nothing

  • The loss of information from a system into the environment.
    Every system is loosely coupled with the energetic state of its surroundings.

    The process by which bodies and quantum systems lose some of their more unusual quantum properties (e.g. superposition, or the ability to appear in different places simultaneously) as they interact with their environments. When a particle decoheres, its probability wave collapses, any quantum superpositions disappear, and it settles into its observed state under classical physics.

    See: Entanglement

  • Someone who refuses to change their beliefs or loyalties despite opposition.

  • Extremely evil or wicked, often associated with the devil or demonic forces.

    It suggests something cruel, malevolent, or fiendish in nature.

  • A person who strongly insists on their beliefs without considering other perspectives.

  • Greek
    Derived from the word eidōlon (εἴδωλον), meaning "image," "apparition," or "phantom."

    Often a ghostly figure, specter of the dead, or an illusory likeness of someone or something.


    Philosophy
    Denotes an idealized form or a representation, such as a shadow or reflection of something real.


    Literature
    Symbolizes an ethereal or dream-like image, often embodying beauty, perfection, or unattainability.

    Something insubstantial or an idealized but unreal vision.


    AMMA
    The Comforter
    The One of Key Significance

  • Quantum Entanglement is the phenomenon of a group of particles being generated, interacting, or sharing spatial proximity in such a way that the quantum state of each particle of the group cannot be described independently of the state of the others, including when the particles are separated by a large distance.

    Measurements of physical properties such as position, momentum, spin, and polarization performed on entangled particles can, in some cases, be found to be perfectly correlated. For example, if a pair of entangled particles is generated such that their total spin is known to be zero, and one particle is found to have clockwise spin on a first axis, then the spin of the other particle, measured on the same axis, is found to be anticlockwise.

    Any measurement of a particle's properties results in an apparent and irreversible wave function collapse of that particle and changes the original quantum state. With entangled particles, such measurements affect the entangled system as a whole.

    See: Quantum Tunneling

  • can mean multiple things
    belongs with other things

    See: Thing

  • balls in your face

  • Latin
    Frequent, repeated, common, usual, constant, regular, crowded, dense, full, closely packed, numerous, or populous.


    AMMA
    Utterances of electromagnetic pulses that can be tasted, seen, heard, smelt, and felt.

    Dimensional frequency equalizer. Repetitive tones and dense language that corrects medical imbalances.


    See: Singing

  • The ability to convert energy into force.

    The capability to create, produce, or bring something new into existence.

    The compounding cycle of interaction and adaptation.

    A focus towards the well-being of future generations.

    A woman’s associated state, condition, or quality in comparison to Eve.

    See: Limit

  • Not What You Think

    The All But Every Thing

    The Anti-Set aka The Universal Set Complement

    See: }{

  • like a stuck knot, or something sticky
    like turning starboard when you should've turned whatever

    Sea: Body

  • A rudimentary pump that generates blood flow. An expenditure of energy that the body manipulates via chain reactions to generate power, giving liberty via physics applied to a neuromuscular soma to address time and space with energy and capacity having nothing to do with your percipience.

    See: Human

  • Energy’s latest and greatest embodiment of efficiency.

    Occurrent beings of inconsequential beginning and end.

    The Terror of XYZT.

    States of Being, a.k.a. quantum mind-changers.

    The Spear of Nature.

    Goddesses of golden rule and unknown limit.

    See: Limit

  • A multidimensional, recursive system where power, influence, and structure exist in simultaneous, shifting states, adapting fluidly based on context, interaction, and recursion. Unlike hierarchy (fixed), heterarchy (networked), and hypoarchy (diffuse), hyperarchy allows entities to engage in multiple overlapping systems at once, evolving dynamically rather than remaining static.

  • The ability of two waves passing through each other to mingle, reinforcing each other where crests collide and cancelling each other out where crests and troughs coincide, similar to the way ripples in water interfere with each other.

    The two waves combine to create a resultant wave with a different amplitude or frequency. The resulting wave's physical attributes, such as intensity, can be examined. For example, in sound, interference is shown by volume, and in light, it's shown by brightness. Two special cases of superposition produce simple results:

    Constructive Interference
    Occurs when two identical waves are superimposed in phase, resulting in a wave with twice the amplitude of the individual waves but the same wavelength. For example, when two speakers play the same frequency, constructive interference can create areas where the sound is especially loud.

    Destructive Interference
    Occurs when two identical waves are superimposed exactly out of phase, resulting in a wave with zero amplitude or complete cancellation. For example, when two speakers play the same frequency, destructive interference can create areas where the sound is unusually quiet.

    See: Decoherence

  • A defined threshold.

    See: Concept

  • The moon keeps the same face pointing towards the Earth because its rate of spin is tidally locked so that it is synchronized with its rate of revolution (the time needed to complete one orbit). In other words, the moon rotates exactly once every time it circles the Earth.

    The same forces that create tides in the Earth's oceans (from the gravitational pull of the moon and, to a lesser extent, the sun) also act on the solid body of the moon. The Earth's gravitational force on the moon distorts the moon into a slightly prolate, or football, shape; in addition the moon's intrinsic form is somewhat egg-shaped. If the tip of the football/egg does not point toward the Earth, then gravitational forces exert a torque that makes the tip point back toward the Earth (in reality, the moon oscillates a small amount around perfect alignment, a motion called the lunar libration).

    It is very unlikely that the moon started out synchronized; that would indeed be a surprising "coincidence." The moon's synchronous spin state is thought to have arisen billions of years ago, when the moon was much closer to the Earth, and so tidal forces were much stronger than at present. The Earth's gravity maintained this spin state even as other gravitational interactions caused the moon to move outward to its present orbital radius.

  • Mathematics/Physics
    A space that locally resembles Euclidean space but may have a more complex global structure.

    Examples include lines, planes, spheres, and higher-dimensional spaces.

    Mechanical Engineering
    A junction or part that connects multiple pipes, channels, or tubes, such as an intake or exhaust manifold in a car engine.

    Fluid Dynamics
    A chamber or system of pipes that divides a single flow into multiple outputs or merges several flows into one.

    Medicine
    A component in fluid management systems that connects multiple fluid lines, such as in intravenous (IV) setups.

    Computer Science/Robotics
    A surface or state space that can be unfolded or mapped to a simpler form, such as a manifold mesh in 3D modeling or a configuration space in robotics.

  • A concept.

    See: Concept

  • Quiet and gentle: Displaying a calm, mild, or non-aggressive nature.
    Those who will inherit the earth.

  • A weapon of mass deduction.

    See: Body

  • NOT ADJUSTED

  • Wir warten auf ein letztes Abenteuer
    Was kümmert uns der Sonnenschein?
    Hochaufgetürmte Tage stürzen ein
    Unruhige Nächte – Gebet im Fegefeuer.

    Wir lesen auch nicht mehr die Tagespost
    Nur manchmal lächeln wir still in die Kissen,
    Weil wir alles wissen, und gerisse
    Fliegen wir hin und her im Fieberfrost.

    Mögen Menschen eilen und streben
    Heut fällt der Regen noch trüber
    Wir treiben haltlos durchs Leben
    Und schlafen, verwirrt, hinüber…

    Emmy Hennings (1885 – 1948)

  • we wait for one last adventure
    what do we care for sunshine?

    days stacked high collapse
    restless nights- prayer in purgatory.

    we no longer read the news
    only sometimes do we smile, silently, into our pillow

    for we know everything and torn,
    we fly back and forth in fever chills.

    let others rush and strive
    today the rain falls even darker

    we drift aimlessly forward through life
    and sleep, confused, all over the place.

    [Modified]

    See: Modified

  • On October 12, 1997, shortly after 1728 Pacific daylight time, an experimental Adrian Davis Long EZ, N555JD, crashed into the Pacific Ocean near Pacific Grove, California. The airplane was destroyed and the pilot, the sole occupant, received fatal injuries. The accident occurred during a local, personal flight, visual meteorological conditions and no flight plan was filed. The pilot had recently purchased the experimental, amateur-built Long-EZ airplane, which had a fuel system that differed from the designer's plans. The original builder had modified the fuel system by relocating the fuel selector handle from a position between the front pilot's legs to a position behind & above his (or her) left shoulder.

    There were no markings for the operating positions of the fuel selector handle, which were up (for off), down (for the right tank), and to the right (for the left tank). This deviation from the original design plans did not require FAA approval, nor did it require a placard to indicate such change from the original design. On 10/11/97 at Santa Maria, CA, the pilot received a 1/2-hour flight and ground checkout in the airplane by another Long-EZ pilot. The checkout pilot reported that the pilot needed a seatback cushion to be in position to reach the rudder pedals, and that he had difficulty reaching the fuel selector handle while seated with the cushion added.

    The pilot then departed on a 1-hour flight to his home base at Monterey with an estimated 12.5 gallons of fuel in the right tank & 6.5 gallons in the left tank. The checkout pilot estimated about 9 gallons of fuel were needed for the flight, and he noted the fuel selector was positioned to the right tank before departure. On 10/12/97 (the next day), a maintenance technician assisted the pilot in preparing for another flight. During preflight, the pilot was not observed to visually check the fuel. The technician noted that when the pilot was seated in the airplane, he had difficulty reaching the fuel selector handle. Also, he gave the pilot a mirror to look over his shoulder to see the unmarked, non-linear, fuel sight gauges, which were located in the rear cockpit.


    The technician estimated the available fuel and advised the pilot that the left tank indicated less than 1/4 full and that the right tank indicated less than 1/2 full. He said his estimate was based on the assumption that the gauges were accurate and linear. The pilot declined an offer for additional fuel, saying he would only be airborne about 1 hour and did not need fuel. The technician observed that before the engine was started, the fuel selector handle was in a vertical position; however, he did not note whether it was up (off) or down (right tank).

    As the technician went to the hangar, he heard the engine start & run for a short time, then quit. He saw the pilot turn in the seat toward the fuel selector handle, then the pilot motioned with his hand that things were all right. The technician did not observe whether the pilot had repositioned the fuel selector. The pilot restarted the engine, taxied, took off, and performed three touch-and-go landings in a span of about 26 minutes, followed by a straight-out departure to the west.

    Ground witnesses saw the airplane in straight and level flight about 350 to 500 feet over a residential area, then they heard a reduction of engine noise. The airplane was seen to pitch slightly nose up; then it banked sharply to the right & descended nose first into the ocean. The major structural components of the airframe were found fragmented on the ocean floor near the engine, but no pre-impact part failure was found.

    The fuel selector valve was found in an intermediate position, about 1/3 open between the engine feed line and the right tank, and about 2-4% open to the left tank. Tests using another engine showed that the engine could be operated at full power with the selector in the as-found position; however, when the cap was removed from the left port (simulating the effect of an empty left tank), fuel pressure dropped to less than 1/2; & within a few seconds, the engine lost power.

    Conditions were simulated using another Long-EZ to evaluate the maneuver required to switch tanks from the front seat. The simulation revealed that 4 actions were required to change the fuel selector in flight:

    1) Remove pilot's hand from the control stick.

    2) Loosen shoulder harness.

    3) Rotate upper body to the extreme left to reach the fuel selector handle.

    4) Rotate the handle to a non-marked (not logically oriented) position.

    During the evaluation, investigators noted a natural reaction for the pilot's right foot to depress the right rudder pedal when turning in the seat to reach the fuel selector handle. With the right rudder depressed in flight, the airplane would pitch up slightly & bank to the right.

    Probable Cause
    The pilot's diversion of attention from the operation of the airplane and his inadvertent application of right rudder that resulted in the loss of airplane control while attempting to manipulate the fuel selector handle. Also, the Board determined that the pilot's inadequate preflight planning and preparation, specifically his failure to refuel the airplane, was causal. The Board determined that the builder's decision to locate the unmarked fuel selector handle in a hard-to-access position, unmarked fuel quantity sight gauges, inadequate transition training by the pilot, and his lack of total experience in this type of airplane were factors in the accident.

    Source
    Aviation Investigation Final Report, National Transportation Safety Board
    Accident Number: LAX98FA008

  • Next Generation
    The Next Genevi(eve)

    See: Generativity

  • Neurocognitive Function Non-Decline
    No Fear No Death

    See: Death

  • A thing in and of itself.

  • The apparent shift in position of an object when viewed from different angles or lines of sight.

    Astronomical
    The method used to measure distances to stars by observing their apparent shift against background stars from different points in Earth's orbit.

    Binocular
    The way human vision perceives depth due to the slight difference in the images seen by each eye.

    Motion
    The effect where objects closer to the observer move faster across the field of vision compared to distant objects when in motion.

    Optical
    A shift in an object's position due to the observer's angle often seen in camera viewfinders or instrument dials.

  • Sanskrit
    To measure in circumference, measure through, mete out.

    To fulfill, limit, embrace, or complete.

    Geography
    A Venezuelan mountain range.

  • Greek
    Presence or arrival- used for the visit of a ruler or deity.

    Often associated with divine judgment, the resurrection of the dead, and the establishment of God’s kingdom.

  • Unquestioning the unasked
    A professional visionary

  • Greek Mythology
    A guide of souls to the place of the dead.

  • In physics, quantum tunnelling, barrier penetration, or simply tunnelling is a quantum mechanical phenomenon in which an object such as an electron or atom passes through a potential energy barrier that, according to classical mechanics, should not be passable due to the object not having sufficient energy to pass or surmount the barrier.

    Tunneling is a consequence of the wave nature of matter, where the quantum wave function describes the state of a particle or other physical system, and wave equations such as the Schrödinger equation describe their behavior. The probability of transmission of a wave packet through a barrier decreases exponentially with the barrier height, the barrier width, and the tunneling particle's mass, so tunneling is seen most prominently in low-mass particles such as electrons or protons tunneling through microscopically narrow barriers. Tunneling is readily detectable with barriers of thickness about 1–3 nm or smaller for electrons, and about 0.1 nm or smaller for heavier particles such as protons or hydrogen atoms. Some sources describe the mere penetration of a wave function into the barrier, without transmission on the other side, as a tunneling effect, such as in tunneling into the walls of a finite potential well.

    Tunneling plays an essential role in physical phenomena such as nuclear fusion and alpha radioactive decay of atomic nuclei. Tunneling applications include the tunnel diode, quantum computing, flash memory, and the scanning tunneling microscope. Tunneling limits the minimum size of devices used in microelectronics because electrons tunnel readily through insulating layers and transistors that are thinner than about 1 nm.

    The effect was predicted in the early 20th century. Its acceptance as a general physical phenomenon came mid-century.

    The quantum mechanical effect in which particles have a finite probability of crossing an energy barrier, or transitioning through an energy state normally forbidden to them by classical physics, due to the wave-like aspect of particles. The probability wave of a particle represents the probability of finding the particle in a certain location, and there is a finite probability that the particle is located on the other side of the barrier.

    See: Wave Packet

  • A vertical plane that passes through the body longitudinally dividing the body into a left section and a right section.

    The median sagittal plane makes a specific dissection passing down the midline of the body to separate it equally.

  • A person who rigidly follows the beliefs of a particular group or sect.

  • Presence (whole body) woven into sound.


    See: Frequens

  • The thing that a thing does.

    See: Thing

  • The action of placing one thing on or above another, especially so that they coincide.

    When waves arrive at the same point, their disturbances add together, creating a more complex resulting wave. The disturbances are forces that add together, and if they are in the same line, the resulting wave's amplitude is the sum of the individual waves' amplitudes.

    The ability in quantum theory of an object, such as an atom or sub-atomic particle, to be in more than one quantum state at the same time. For example, an object could technically be in more than one place simultaneously as a consequence of the wave-like character of microscopic particles.

    See: Entanglement

  • A superior feudal lord to whom fealty is due- an overlord.

    A dominant state controlling the foreign relations of a vassal state but allowing it sovereign authority in its internal affairs.

  • A servile self-seeking flatterer.

  • A slender, graceful woman or girl.

    Folklore
    One of a race of mythological or supernatural beings associated with the element of air. The concept originates from the works of the Renaissance alchemist Paracelsus, who described sylphs as invisible elemental spirits that inhabit and govern the air. Sylphs are often depicted as graceful, ethereal beings, sometimes portrayed as having a human-like form but with delicate, airy qualities.

    They are typically associated with lightness, agility, and an ability to move freely through the sky. In literary and artistic contexts, sylphs are sometimes romanticized as airy, mystical figures linked to the natural world.

  • lashed eyes excise
    these shadows obtained
    that listless crept this skeleton
    and who would from within
    attempt to cast askew my skin

  • Does something.

    See: Everything

  • Me

    See: Me

  • Nothing

    See: Nothing

  • Latin
    I will live.

  • Latin
    I have lived.

  • In physics, a wave packet (also known as a wave train or wave group) is a short burst of localized wave action that travels as a unit, outlined by an envelope. A wave packet can be analyzed into, or can be synthesized from, a potentially-infinite set of component sinusoidal waves of different wavenumbers, with phases and amplitudes such that they interfere constructively only over a small region of space, and destructively elsewhere.

    Any signal of a limited width in time or space requires many frequency components around a center frequency within a bandwidth inversely proportional to that width; even a gaussian function is considered a wave packet because its Fourier transform is a "packet" of waves of frequencies clustered around a central frequency.

    Each component wave function, and hence the wave packet, are solutions of a wave equation. Depending on the wave equation, the wave packet's profile may remain constant (no dispersion) or it may change (dispersion) while propagating.

    See: Interference

  • Someone who is extremely passionate and uncompromising about their make-believe.

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