Download as pdf or txt
Download as pdf or txt
You are on page 1of 27

The Wayback Machine - https://web.archive.org/web/20060509183659/http://wingmakers.co.nz:80/Terms%20and%20Definitions.

html

Interstellar & Wingmaker


Terms and Definitions

Index:
Welcome To The
Wingmakers Site A, B, C, D, E, F, G, H, I, J, K, L, M,
N, O, P, Q, R, S, T, U, V, W, X, Y, Z.
Home Page

Wingmakers Code A
Wingmakers Terms Accretion
& Definitions
Accumulation of dust and gas into larger bodies.
Wingmakers Albedo
Abilities Reflectivity of an object; ratio of reflected light to incident light.
Albedo feature
Techniques Added A dark or light marking on the surface of an object that might not be a geological or topographical feature.
By Members Allocthonous
(1) Material that is formed or introduced from somewhere other than the place it is presently found. (2) Fragmented
The Human Belief rock thrown out of the crater during its formation that either falls back to partly fill the crater or blankets its outer
System
flanks after the impact event.
How ETs Affect Alpha Centauri
Our Lives The closest bright star to our solar system.
Angstrom
Sanskrit Dictionary A unit of length = 1.0E-08cm.
Antipodal Point
News The point that is directly on the opposite side of the planet; e.g., the Earth's north pole is antipodal to its south pole.
Antimatter Particles
Wingmakers
Society Newsletter
Antimatter is any substance that, when combined with an equal amount of matter, results in the complete and direct
conversion of all substance to energy. Antimatter is composed of antiparticles. Each particle of matter has a
Wingmakers corresponding antiparticle of antimatter.
Archives The antiparticle of an electron is known as a positron. It has the same mass as an electron, but opposite electric charge
(positive rather than negative). The antiparticle of the proton is called an antiproton. It has the same mass as a proton,
Planetary News but opposite charge (negative rather than positive). The antiparticle of the neutron is an antineutron. It has the same
New Projects
mass as a neutron, and, like the neutron, has no electric charge. However, the relationship between two properties
Coming called spin and magnetic moment is different in the antineutron than in the neutron.

Poetry Antiparticles have been found in cosmic rays, and are also produced in particle accelerators (also known as atom
smashers). An antiparticle never lasts for very long, because shortly after it forms, it encounters one of its equivalent
Chamber One matter particles, and both are annihilated, yielding pure energy.
Poetry
Artificially produced antimatter has practical applications, especially in medical science, where it is involved in the
Chamber Two operation of positron emission tomography (PET) scanning equipment. Antimatter has been suggested as a possible
Poetry propellant for spacecraft, a source of energy for public consumption, and as material for a doomsday bomb that would
vaporize the earth. However, all these potential applications require the isolation of large amounts of antimatter, and
Chamber Three the technology for this does not yet exist.
Poetry
Antipattern
Chamber Four An antipattern is a frequently used, but largely ineffective solution to a problem. The term was originally used to refer
Poetry: New to a pattern gone wrong. Just as a viable pattern describes the way from a problem to a valid solution, an antipattern
describes the way from a problem to a poor solution. Furthermore, by adding more difficulties to the ones that
Poetry: New originally existed, an antipattern may leave you in a worse position than before you started. Several writers have
published books or papers on how to recognize and avoid adopting an antipattern, especially in developing computer
Seven programming.
Inspirational The term amelioration pattern (to ameliorate means to improve, and especially to improve a bad situation) was coined
Writings for a pattern that describes how to go from a bad solution to a better one.
Aphelion
Writers Portfolio The point in its orbit where a planet is farthest from the Sun.
Apoapsis
About our Products The point in orbit farthest from the planet.
Apogee
Business The point in orbit farthest from the Earth.
Opportunity Ash
Greeting Cards The fine-grained material produced by a pyroclastic eruption. An ash particle is defined to have a diameter of less than
2 millimetres.
Goodwill Cards Asteroid Number
Asteroids are assigned a serial number when they are discovered; it has no particular meaning except that asteroid N+1
A Touch Of Love was discovered after asteroid N.
Astronomical Unit (AU)
Anniversary The average distance from the Earth to the Sun; 1 AU is 149,597,870 kilometres (92,960,116 miles).
Valentines Day Atom
An atom is a particle of matter that uniquely defines a chemical element. An atom consists of a central nucleus that is
Thinking Of You usually surrounded by one or more electrons. Each electron is negatively charged. The nucleus is positively charged,
and contains one or more relatively heavy particles known as protons and neutrons.
Sympathy
A proton is positively charged. The number of protons in the nucleus of an atom is the atomic number for the
Friendship Hugs chemical element. A proton has a rest mass, denoted mp, of approximately 1.673 x 10-27 kilogram (kg). A neutron is
electrically neutral and has a rest mass, denoted mn, of approximately 1.675 x 10-27 kg. The mass of a proton or
Easter neutron increases when the particle attains extreme speed, for example in a cyclotron or linear accelerator.
An early model of the atom was developed by the physicist Ernest Rutherford in 1912. He was the first to suggest that
Mothers Day atoms are like miniature solar systems, except that the attractive force is not caused by gravity, but by opposing
Fathers Day
electrical charges. In the so-called Rutherford atom, electrons orbit the nucleus in circular paths. Niels Bohr revised
Rutherford's theory in 1913. In the Bohr atom, the negatively charged electrons orbit the nucleus at specific median
Christmas distances. These distances are represented by spheres, called shells, surrounding the nucleus. Electrons can move from
shell to shell. When an electron absorbs enough energy, it moves to a larger, or higher, shell. When it loses a certain
Letters From Santa amount of energy, it falls to a smaller, or lower, shell.
: New The total mass of an atom, including the protons, neutrons and electrons, is the atomic mass or atomic weight.
Electrons contribute only a tiny part of this mass. For most practical purposes, the atomic weight can be thought of as
Birthday Greetings
the number of protons plus the number of neutrons. Because the number of neutrons in an atom can vary, there can be
Inspirational several different atomic weights for most elements.
Poetry Atoms having the same number of protons, but different numbers of neutrons, represent the same element, but are
known as different isotopes of that element. The isotope for an element is specified by the sum of the number of
Childrens Poetry protons and neutrons. Examples of different isotopes of an element are carbon 12 (the most common, non-radioactive
isotope of carbon) and carbon 14 (a less common, radioactive isotope of carbon).
Framed Poetry : Protons and electrons have equal and opposite charge, and normally an atom has equal numbers of both. Thus, atoms
New are usually neutral. An ion is an atom with extra electrons or with a deficiency of electrons, resulting in its being
Novelity Cards electrically charged. An ion with extra electrons is negatively charged and is called an anion; an ion deficient in electrons
is positively charged and is called a cation.
Novelity Atmosphere
Bookmarks One atmosphere is 14.7 pounds per square inch (105 Newtons per square meter); the average atmospheric pressure at
sea level on Earth.
E-books Atmospheric Bubble
Used in interstellar travel for protection against hostile atmospheres.
Specials
Aurora
Chakras A glow in a planet's ionosphere caused by the interaction between the planet's magnetic field and charged particles
from the Sun.
The Major Chakras Aurora Borealis
The Northern Lights caused by the interaction between the solar wind, the Earth's magnetic field and the upper
Chakra History & atmosphere; a similar effect happens in the southern hemisphere where it is known as the aurora australis.
Information
Opening The B Return To Top
Chakras
Bar
Chakra Exercises A unit of pressure, equal to the sea level pressure of Earth's atmosphere; 1 bar = 0.987 atmosphere = 101,300 pascals
= 14.5 lbs/square inch = 100,000 Newtons per square meter.
Balancing The
Basalt
Chakras
A general term for dark coloured, igneous rocks composed of minerals that are relatively rich in iron and magnesium.
Chakra Mantras Blackbody Temperature
and Sounds The temperature of an object if it is reradiating all the thermal energy that has been added to it; if an object is not a
blackbody radiator, it will not reradiate all the excess heat and the leftover will go toward increasing its temperature.
Powerful Mantras Black Hole
An object whose gravity is so strong that the escape velocity exceeds the speed of light.
Chakra Meditation BST - Blank Slate Technology - Telepathy
Chakra Tones A technique used to remove a thought pattern from ones mind and imprint a new thought using telepathy.
BST - Blank Slate Technology - Verical Time Travel
Chakra Radiance BST is the term used to remove along the vertical time line or hara laser line as it is known that runs vertical along the
Techniques human body down through the base chakra into the earth it is this line that grounds us to the physical plain and our
place in time and space the other end of the laser line passes through the crown chakra and out into infinite time and
Inter Dimensional space and is our inherent link to the prime creator and the grand porthole network.
Travel Bolide
The Aura An exploding meteorite.
Bow Shock
How To See And The outermost part of a planetary magnetosphere; the place where the supersonic flow of the solar wind is slowed to
Read The Aura subsonic speed by the planetary magnetic field.
Breccia
The Twelve Layers A course grained rock, composed of angular, broken rock fragments held together by a mineral cement or a fine-
of the auric Field grained matrix.
Butte
The Human Aura
A conspicuous, isolated, flattop hill with steep slopes.
Part 2

The Human Aura


Part 3
C Return To Top
Calcium K
Healing Tools
A narrow wavelength of blue light which is emitted and absorbed by ions of the element calcium.
Laying of hands : Caldera
The healers touch A large, basin shaped volcanic depression that is more or less circular in form. Most volcanic calderas are produced by
collapse of the roof of a magma chamber due to removal of magma by voluminous eruptions or subterranean
Aromatherapy withdrawal of the magma, although some calderas may be formed by explosive removal of the upper part of a volcano.
Carbonate
Gems & Crystals A compound containing carbon and oxygen; an example is calcium carbonate (limestone).
Cataclastic
Different Uses For
Crystals
A texture found in metamorphic rocks in which brittle minerals have been broken, crushed and flattened during
shearing.
Clearing And Catena
Charging Crystals A chain of craters.
Cavus
Yoga For Life Hollows, irregular depressions.
Central Peak
Level One The exposed core of uplifted rocks in complex meteorite impact craters; the central peak material typically shows
Meditations evidence of intense fracturing, faulting and shock metamorphism.
Chaos
The Five Senses A distinctive area of broken terrain.
Chasm
Sensory A canyon.
Development Chromosphere
The lower level of the solar atmosphere between the photosphere and the corona.
Living Earth
Cinders
Controlling Your Loose, vesicular volcanic ejecta 4 to 32 millimetres (.16 to 1.28 inches) in diameter.
Energy Flow Cinder Cone
A conical hill formed by the accumulation of pyroclastic fragments that fall to the ground in an essentially solid
Energy condition.
Channelling Clast
A fragment of rock that has been transported, either by volcanic or sedimentary processes.
Channeling the
Cloaking
Higher Self
A technique used for concealing both energy and physical matter.
Blending Energy Colles
A small hill or knob.
Energy Rapids Coma
The dust and gas surrounding an active comet's nucleus.
Protection Shields Composite Volcano
Wingmakers
A volcano composed of inter bedded lava and pyroclastic material commonly with steep slopes.
Defence Convection
Techniques Fluid circulation driven by temperature gradients; the transfer of heat by this automatic circulation (see also Educator's
Guide to Convection).
White Dove Core Star
Energy Orb A term used to describe the human soul.
Corona
1) The upper level of the solar atmosphere, characterized by low densities and high temperatures (> 1.0E+06 K); it is
Level Two not visible from the Earth except during a total eclipse of the sun or by use of special telescopes called coronagraphs. 2)
An ovoid shaped feature.
Meridian Energies
Coronagraph
Introduction
A special telescope which blocks light from the disk of the Sun in order to study the faint solar atmosphere.
Forest Of Meridia Cosmic Ray
Electromagnetic rays of extremely high frequency and energy; cosmic rays usually interact with the atoms of the
Meridian Earth atmosphere before reaching the surface of the Earth. Some cosmic rays come from outside the solar system while
others are emitted from the Sun and pass through holes in the corona.
Cause And Affect Crater
Balancing The
1) A depression formed by the impact of a meteorite. 2) A depression around the orifice of a volcano.
Human Energy Cratons
System The relatively stable portions of continents composed of shield areas and platform sediments; typically, cratons are
bounded by tectonically active regions characterized by uplift, faulting and volcanic activity.
Meridian Energies Cretaceous Period
Healing Bubble A geological term denoting the interval of Earth history beginning around 144 million years ago and ending 66 million
years ago.
Meridian Organs Cretaceous-Tertiary Boundary
And Meridian A major stratigraphic boundary on Earth marking the end of the Mesozoic Era, best known as the age of the dinosaurs.
Foods
The boundary is defined by a global extinction event that caused the abrupt demise of the majority of all life on Earth.
Organs Of The Crystalline
Earth Meridian Rock types made up of crystals or crystal fragments, such as metamorphic rocks that recrystallized in high temperature
or pressure environments, or igneous rocks that formed from cooling of a melt.
Organs Of The Fire
Meridian
D Return To Top
Organs Of The
Water Meridian Density
Measured in grams per cubic centimetre (or kilograms per litre); the density of water is 1.0, iron is 7.9, and lead is 11.3.
Organs Of The Diaplectic Glass
Nature Meridian A natural glass formed by shock pressure from any of several minerals without melting; it is found only in association
with meteorite impact craters.
Organs Of The
Dielectric Constant
Metal Meridian
The ratio of electric flux density to electric field.
The Lightening Disk
Meridian The visible surface of the Sun (or any heavenly body) projected against the sky.
Doppler Effect
Cosmic Meridians The apparent change in wavelength of sound or light caused by the motion of the source, observer or both.
Dorsum
Level Three
A ridge.
The Great
Invocation
E Return To Top
Ceremonial
Invocation E=mc2
Einstein's famous theory of relativity formula known as the energy mass relation. The energy e is equal to the mass m
Temple Of Meridia multiplied by the speed of light squared c2. A small mass produces an enormous amount of energy.
Code Of Conduct
Eccentric
Non circular; elliptical (applied to an orbit).
Wingmakers Eccentricity
Prayers A value that defines the shape of an ellipse or planetary orbit; the ratio of the distance between the foci and the major
axis.
Wingmakers Eclipse
Invocation The cutting off of light from one celestial body by another.
Ecliptic
Charging
Techniques
The plane of Earth's orbit about the Sun
Effusive Eruption
Cleansing A relative quiet volcanic eruption which puts out basaltic lava that moves at about the speed one walks. The lava is fluid
Techniques in nature. The eruptions at the Kilauea volcano on the island of Hawaii are effusive
Ejecta
Healing Material such as glass and fragmented rock thrown out of an impact crater during its formation.
Techniques Ellipse
A closed curve that is formed from two foci or points in which the sum of the distances from any point on the curve
Ceremonial Ring
to the two foci is a constant. Johannes Kepler first discovered that the orbits of the planets are ellipses, not circles; he
Level Four based his discovery on the careful observations of Tycho Brahe.
Elliptical Time
Energy A time span with no beginning or ending.
Channelling En Echelon Fissures
Fissures that are parallel in trend to each other, but offset to either the left or right.
Prana Energy Energy System
Kundalini Energy
A term used to describe the auric field.
Entity
Cosmic Rays The entity model of consciousness encompasses the individuated spirit sometimes referred to as the Higher Self or
Soul.
Merkaba Energy Eolian
Related to wind deposits and associated effects.
Tachyon Energy Eruption
Zero-Point Energy The ejection of volcanic materials (lavas, pyroclasts and volcanic gases) onto the surface, either from a central vent, a
fissure or a group of fissures.
Illusional Energy Explosive Eruption
A dramatic volcanic eruption which throws debris high into the air for hundreds of miles. The lava is low in silicate and
Fifth Force Energy
can be very dangerous for people near by. An example is Mount St. Helens in 1980.
Level Five
Electron
Hara Laser Line & An electron is a negatively charged subatomic particle. It can be either free (not attached to any atom), or bound to the
Core Star nucleus of an atom. Electrons in atoms exist in spherical shells of various radii, representing energy levels. The larger
Meditations the spherical shell, the higher the energy contained in the electron.

Source Intelligence In electrical conductors, current flow results from the movement of electrons from atom to atom individually, and from
& The Soul negative to positive electric poles in general. In semiconductor materials, current also occurs as a movement of
electrons. But in some cases, it is more illustrative to envision the current as a movement of electron deficiencies from
The Seven Cosmic atom to atom. An electron-deficient atom in a semiconductor is called a hole. Holes "move" from positive to negative
Planes electric poles in general.
The Seven
The charge on a single electron is considered as the unit electrical charge. It is assigned negative polarity. The charge on
Hierarchies
an electron is equal, but opposite, to the positive charge on a proton or hole. Electrical charge quantity is not usually
The Art Of measured in terms of the charge on a single electron, because this is an extremely small charge. Instead, the standard
Stillness unit of electrical charge quantity is the coulomb, symbolized by C, representing about 6.24 x 1018 electrons. The
electron charge, symbolized by e, is about 1.60 x 10-19 C. The mass of an electron at rest, symbolized me, is
Level Six approximately 9.11 x 10-31 kilogram (kg). Electrons moving at an appreciable fraction of the speed of light, for
example in a particle accelerator, have greater mass because of relativistic effects.
The Nature of 'Psi'

Psi-Balls F Return To Top


Psionic Shielding Faculae
A bright region of the photosphere seen in white light, seldom visible except near the solar limb.
PSI Technology
Fault
Level Seven A crack or break in the crust of a planet along which slippage or movement can take place.
Fields of Vibration
Astral Projection The Universe of Wholeness is a vast field of energy that is composed of innumerable dimensions of perception and
(Bi-Location) existence.
Fifth force energy
Psychometry A form of physical matter in the universe.
E.S.P
Filament
A strand of cool gas suspended over the photosphere by magnetic fields, which appears dark as seen against the disk of
Empathy the Sun; a filament on the limb of the Sun seen in emission against the dark sky is called a prominence.
First Source
First Source is the primal source from which all existence is ultimately linked. It is sometimes referred to as the Body of
Telepathy the Collective God.
Fissure
Secrets Of
Telepathy
A narrow opening or crack of considerable length and depth.
Flare
Tele-Visualization A sudden eruption of energy on the solar disk lasting minutes to hours, from which radiation and particles are emitted.
Flexus
Kinesis Abilities A cuspate linear feature
Fluctus
Telekinesis A flow terrain
Cryokinesis Fossa
A long, narrow, shallow depression.
Biokinesis

Chronokinesis
G Return To Top
Levitation Gaia Hypothesis
Named for the Greek Earth goddess Gaea, this hypothesis holds that the Earth should be regarded as a living
Invisibility organism. British biologist James Lovelock first advanced this idea in 1969.
Galilean Moons
Clairsentience Jupiter's four largest moons: Io, Europa, Ganymede and Callisto; discovered independently by Galileo and Marius.
Teleportation Graben
An elongated, relatively depressed crustal unit or block that is bounded by faults on its sides.
Blank Slate Geosynchronous Orbit
Technology A direct, circular, low inclination orbit in which the satellite's orbital velocity is matched to the rotational velocity of the
planet; a spacecraft appears to hang motionless above one position of the planet's surface.
Advanced Granulation
Techniques A pattern of small cells seen on the surface of the Sun caused by the convective motions of the hot solar gas.
Advanced
Greenhouse Effect
Techniques: Two An increase in temperature caused when the atmosphere absorbs incoming solar radiation but blocks outgoing thermal
radiation; carbon dioxide is the major factor.
Portholes Gravity
A mutual physical force attracting two bodies.
Portholes Genetic Mind
Introduction The genetic mind is the equivalent of a universal belief system that penetrates, to varying degrees, the human
instrument of all entities.
Light Energy
Portholes
H Return To Top
Psi Portholes
H-Alpha
Interstellar Galaxy A narrow wavelength of red light which is emitted and absorbed by the element hydrogen; this wavelength is often used
Cards to study the Sun.
Chakra Portholes
Hara Laser Line
A technique used to help align you with the prime creator and the universal energies.
Level Eight Heliocentric
Sun centered; see Copernicus, Kepler, Galileo.
Meditation Of Heliopause
Light The point at which the solar wind meets the interstellar medium or solar wind from other stars.
Heliosphere
Transformation The space within the boundary of the heliopause containing the Sun and solar system.
Meditations
Hemisphere
Light Body A half of the celestial sphere that is divided into two halves by either the horizon, the celestial equator, or the ecliptic.
Development Hierarchy
The Hierarchy extends throughout the cosmos to the very borders of discovery.
Light Energy High-Pressure Mineral Phase
In this phase, mineral forms that are stable only at the extremely high pressures typical of Earth's deep interior but not
Controlling Light its surface. Such pressures are generated instantaneously during meteorite impact. Stishovite is the high-pressure
Energy polymorph of quartz, a common crustal mineral.
Temple Of Light Hot Spot
Centre of persistent volcanism, thought to be the surface expression of a rising hot plume in Earth's mantle.
Higher Energies Hummocky
Uneven, lumpy terrain.
Aligning your hara Human Instrument
line The human instrument consists of three principal components: The biological (physical body), the emotional, and the
mental
Hara Line
Development
I Return To Top
Upper Dan Tien -
Source Reality Ice
Planetary scientists use this word to refer to water, methane, and ammonia, which usually occur as solids in the outer
Middle Dan Tien -
The Soul Seat
solar system.
Igneous
Lower Dan Tien - Rock or mineral that solidified from molten or partly molten material.
The Core Star Illusional Energy
Source of energy in the universe.
Opening Of Wings Impact Melt
Rocks melted during impact, including small particles dispersed in various impact deposits and ejecta, and larger pools
The God's Head
and sheets of melt that coalesce in low areas within the crater. Impact melts are extremely uniform in their composition
Level Nine but highly variable in texture. They are composed predominantly of the target rocks, but can contain a small but
measurable amount of the impactor.
Source Codes &
Inclination
Source Encoding
The inclination of a planet's orbit is the angle between the plane of its orbit and the ecliptic. The inclination of a
Source Encoding & moon's orbit is the angle between the plane of its orbit and the plane of its primary's equator.
Chakra Imprinting Inferior Planets
The Physical Body The planets Mercury and Venus are inferior planets because their orbits are closer to the Sun than is Earth's orbit.
Interplanetary magnetic field (IMF)
Chakra Abilities & The magnetic field carried with the solar wind.
Skills Invisibility
The ability to make ones self invisible to others.
Travelling
Ion
Tools for An atom or molecular fragment that has a positive electrical charge due to the loss of one or more electrons; the
Dimensional simplest ion is the hydrogen nucleus, a single proton.
Doorways Ionosphere
A region of charged particles in a planet's upper atmosphere; the part of the earth's atmosphere beginning at an altitude
Esoteric System Of of about 400 kilometres (25 miles) and extending outward 400 kilometres (250 miles) or more.
Dimensions

Multiple J Return To Top


Dimensions
Jovian Planet
Dimensional Any of the four outer, gaseous planets: Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune.
Travel

LERM-Light K Return To Top


Encoded Reality
Matrix Kelvin (K)
Zero K is absolute zero; ice melts at 273 K (0° C, 32° F); water boils at 373 K ( 100° C, 212° F).
Time Travel Kilogram (kg)
Chakra
One kilogram is equivalent to 1,000 grams or 2.2 pounds; the mass of a litre of water.
Teleportation Kilometre (km)
One kilometre is equivalent to 1,000 meters or 0.62 miles.
Interstellar Travel

The Universe
L Return To Top
Labes
A landslide.
Labyrinthus
An intersecting valley complex.
Lacus
A lake.
Lagrangian Point
One of the solutions to the three body problem discovered by the eighteenth century French mathematician Lagrange;
the two stable Lagrangian points, L-4 and L-5, lie in the orbit of the primary body, leading and trailing it by a 60 degree
arc.
Lava
A general term for molten rock that is extruded onto the surface.
Lava Tube
A tunnel formed underneath the surface of a solidifying lava flow.
Leading Hemisphere
The hemisphere that faces forward, into the direction of motion of a satellite that keeps the same face toward the
planet.
Lee
The side of an object that is sheltered from the wind.
Lerm - Light encoded reality Matrix
Lerm is the ability of manifesting physical forms of matter through the light encoded reality matrix of the universe and
is the foundation of all universal live in the universe today.
Levee
An embankment, continuous dike or ridge.
Levitation
Rise or cause to rise and float into the air.
Light
Electromagnetic radiation that is visible to the eye.
Light Energy
A source of energy from a star, sun or living manifestation.
Light Energy Porthole
A dimensional doorway used in travel using a source light energy.
Light Energy Rapid
A technique used to charge the body with light energy.
Light Year
The distance light travels in a year, at the rate of 300,000 kilometres per second (671 million miles per hour); 1 light year
is equivalent to 9.46053e12 km, 5,880,000,000,000 miles or 63,240 AU.
Limb
The outer edge of the apparent disk of a celestial body.
Linea
An elongate marking.
Lineal Time
A term used in a time line for time travel that has a barrier of 24 hours.
Lineament
Linear topographic feature that may depict crustal structure.
Lobate
Having lobes or resembling a lobe.

M Return To Top
Macula
A dark spot.
Magma
Molten rock within the crust of a planet that is capable of intrusion into adjacent crustal rocks or extrusion onto the
surface. Igneous rocks are derived from magma through solidification and related processes or through eruption of the
magma at the surface.
Magnetic field
A region of space near a magnetized body where magnetic forces can be detected.
Magnetograph
A special telescope which analyses the colour and polarization of sunlight in order to measure the magnetic field of the
Sun.
Magnetopause
The boundary of the magnetosphere, lying inside the bow shock.
Magnetosphere
The region of space in which a planet's magnetic field dominates that of the solar wind.
Magnetotail
The portion of a planetary magnetosphere which is pushed in the direction of the solar wind.
Magnitude
The degree of brightness of a celestial body designated on a numerical scale, on which the brightest star has magnitude
-1.4 and the faintest visible star has magnitude 6, with the scale rule such that a decrease of one unit represents an
increase in apparent brightness by a factor of 2.512; also called apparent magnitude.
Mare
Latin word for "sea." Galileo thought the dark featureless areas on the Moon were bodies of water, even though the
Moon is essentially devoid of liquid water. The term is still applied to the basalt filled impact basins common on the
face of the Moon visible from Earth.
Mensa
A mesa, flat topped elevation.
Meridian
The energy source which is one of the elements of the planet.

Mer-Ka-Ba Energy
In ancient Egyptian "Mer" means Light, "Ka" means Spirit, and "Ba" means Body. Mer-Ka-Ba means the Spirit/Body
surrounded by counter-rotating fields of Light and is a vehicle to transport one's Spirit/Body from one dimension into
another using the Basic 25 Breath Merkaba Activation Meditation, or into the next universe when combined with the
Advanced Techniques such as BST- Blank Slate Technology.
Mesa
A broad, flattop, erosional hill or mountain, commonly bounded by steep slopes.
Meteor
The luminous phenomenon seen when a meteoroid enters the atmosphere, commonly known as a shooting star.
Meteorite
A part of a meteoroid that survives through the Earth's atmosphere.
Meteoroid
A small rock in space.
Millibar
This is 1/1000 of a bar; the standard sea level pressure is about 1,013 millibars.
Minor Planets
Another term used for asteroids.
Mons
A mountain.

N Return To Top
Nebula
A diffuse mass of interstellar dust and gas.
Neutrino
A fundamental particle supposedly produced in massive numbers by the nuclear reactions in stars; they are very hard to
detect because the vast majority of them pass completely through the Earth without interacting.
Nuclear Fusion
A nuclear process whereby several small nuclei are combined to make a larger one whose mass is slightly smaller than
the sum of the small ones. The difference in mass is converted to energy by Einstein's famous equivalence E=mc2.
This is the source of the Sun's energy and, ultimately, of (almost) all energy on Earth.
Neutron
A neutron is a subatomic particle found in the nucleus of every atom except that of simple hydrogen. The particle
derives its name from the fact that it has no electrical charge; it is neutral. Neutrons are extremely dense. If isolated, a
single neutron would have a mass of only 1.675 ? 10-27 kilogram, but if a teaspoonful of tightly packed neutrons could
be scooped up, the resulting chunk of matter would weigh millions of tons at the earth's surface.

The number of proton in an element's nucleus is called the atomic number. This number gives each element its unique
identity. In the atoms of any particular element, for example carbon, the number of protons in the nuclei is always the
same, but the number of neutrons can vary. An atom of a given element having a specific number of neutrons in the
nucleus is called an isotope. The isotope of an atom is denoted by writing the element's name followed by the sum of
the number of protons and neutrons. The nucleus of a carbon atom always has six protons and usually has six
neutrons, but some carbon nuclei contain eight neutrons. Thus, carbon-12 is the most common isotope of carbon;
carbon-14 is also found, but is less common.

Neutrons need not be confined to the nuclei of atoms. They can exist all by themselves. When neutrons are found
outside atomic nuclei, they acquire fascinating, bizarre, and potentially dangerous properties. When they travel at high
speed, they produce deadly radiation. The so-called neutron bomb, known for its ability to kill people and animals
while having a minimal effect on inanimate physical structures, works by producing a barrage of high-speed neutrons.
The high density of these particles, combined with their speed, gives them extreme energy. As a result, they have the
power to alter, or even break apart, the nuclei of atoms that they strike.

When a large star explodes, blowing off its outer layers in a brilliant fireball called a supernova, the remaining matter is
incredibly dense, and it collapses under its own gravitation. When this stellar remnant acquires a certain critical density,
virtually all of the subatomic particles become neutrons. The resulting object is a neutron star that might have a
diameter smaller than that of the earth, yet have a mass hundreds of times that of the sun. Neutron stars can rotate at
high speed, producing bursts of electromagnetic radiation that can be heard as periodic pulses in radio telescopes.
These celestial objects are known as pulsars. If a neutron star is dense enough, it collapses into a black hole whose
gravitation is so intense that nothing can escape, not even photon.

O Return To Top
Oceanus
An ocean.
Obliquity
The angle between a body's equatorial plane and orbital plane.
Occultation
The blockage of light by the intervention of another object; a planet can occult (block) the light from a distant star.
Old
A planetary surface that has been modified little since its formation typically featuring large numbers of impact craters;
(compare to young).
Orbit
The path of an object that is moving around a second object or point.
Ovoid
Shaped like an egg.

P Return To Top
Paleozoic
A geological term denoting the time in Earth history between 570 and 245 million years ago.
Pahoehoe
A type of basalt lava flow characterized by a smooth glassy skin, and constructed of innumerable "flow units" called
"toes"; pahoehoe flows advance at rates of 1 to 10 meters (3 to 33 feet) hour and are associated with low-effusion-rate
eruptions with little to no fountaining.
Palimpsest
A circular feature on the surface of dark icy moons such as Ganymede and Callisto lacking the relief associated with
craters; Pamlimpsests are thought to be impact craters where the topographic relief of the crater has been eliminated by
slow adjustment of the icy surface.
Palus
A swamp.
Patera
Shallow crater; scalloped, complex edge.
Peak Ring
A central uplift characterized by a ring of peaks rather than a single peak; peak rings are typical of larger terrestrial
craters above about 50 kilometres (30 miles) in diameter.
Penumbra
The outer filamentary region of a sunspot.
Periapsis
The point in the orbit closest to the planet.
Perigee
The point in the orbit closest to the Earth.
Perihelion
The point in its orbit where a planet is closest to the Sun.
Proton
A proton is a subatomic particle found in the nucleus of every atom. The particle has a positive electrical charge, equal
and opposite to that of the electron. If isolated, a single proton would have a mass of only 1.673 ? 10-27 kilogram, just
slightly less than the mass of a neutron.
The number of protons in an element's nucleus is called the atomic number. This number gives each element its
unique identity. In the atoms of any particular element, the number of protons in the nuclei is always the same. An
atom of simple hydrogen has a nucleus consisting of a single proton all by itself. The nuclei of all other elements nearly
always contain neutrons in addition to protons.
Protons need not be confined to the nuclei of atoms. When protons are found outside atomic nuclei, they acquire
fascinating, bizarre, and potentially dangerous properties, similar to those of neutrons in similar circumstances. But
protons have an additional property. Because they carry an electric charge, they can be accelerated by electric and/or
magnetic fields. High-speed protons, and atomic nuclei containing them, are emitted in large numbers during solar
flares. The particles are accelerated by the earth's magnetic field, causing ionospheric disturbances known as
geomagnetic storms.
Perturb
To cause a planet or satellite to deviate from a theoretically regular orbital motion.
Photosphere
The visible surface of the Sun; the upper surface of a convecting layer of gases in the outer portion of the sun whose
temperature causes it to radiate light at visible wavelengths; sunspots and faculae are observed in the photosphere.
Phreatic Eruption
A volcanic eruption or explosion of steam, mud or other material that is not incandescent; this form of eruption is
caused by the heating and consequent expansion of ground water due to an adjacent igneous heat source.
Plage
Bright regions seen in the solar chromosphere.
Planar Features
Microscopic features in grains of quartz or feldspar consisting of very narrow planes of glassy material arranged in
parallel sets that have distinct orientations with respect to the grain's crystal structure.
Planitia
Broad plains that occupy lowlands on planetary surfaces.
Planum
A plateau or high plain.
Plasma
A low density gas in which the individual atoms are charged, even though the total number of positive and negative
charges is equal, maintaining an overall electrical neutrality.
Polarization
A special property of light; light has three properties, brightness, colour and polarization.
Porthole
A dimensional doorway between time and space.
Prana Energy
A source of liquid gold energy in the physical body at the centre of a major charka.
Precambrian
A geological term denoting the time in Earth history prior to 570 million years ago.
Pressure Ridge
A ridge formed by the uplift of a lava flow crust due to pressure of the flowing lava.
Prominence
An eruption of hot gases above the photosphere of the Sun. Prominences are most easily visible close to the limb of
the Sun, but some are also visible as bright streamers on the photosphere.
Promontorium
A cape.
Protection Shield
A technique used to protect both the visual and physical body from harm.
Pseudo Crater
A generally circular crater produced by a phreatic eruption resulting from emplacement of a lava flow over wet ground.
Pyroclastic
Pertaining to clastic (broken and fragmented) rock material formed by volcanic explosion or aerial expulsion from a
volcanic vent.
Pumice
A light vesicular form of volcanic glass with a high silica content; it is usually light in colour and will float on water.

Q Return To Top
Quantum physics
The ability to build quantum objects in the dimension of non time non space.

R Return To Top
Radiation
Energy radiated in the form of waves or particles; photons.
Radiation Belt
Regions of charged particles in a magnetosphere.
Rapids
Used to gather energy into the visual and physical body.
Red Giant
A star that has low surface temperature and a diameter that is large relative to the Sun.
Regio
Region.
Regolith
The layer of rocky debris and dust made by meteoritic impact that forms the uppermost surface of planets, satellites
and asteroids.
relativity, Theory of
More accurately describes the motions of bodies in strong gravitational fields or at near the speed of light than
newtonian mechanics. All experiments done to date agree with relativity's predictions to a high degree of accuracy.
(Curiously, Einstein received the Nobel prize in 1921 not for Relativity but rather for his 1905 work on the
photoelectric effect.)
Resolution
The amount of small detail visible in an image; low resolution shows only large features, high resolution shows many
small details.
Resonance
A relationship in which the orbital period of one body is related to that of another by a simple integer fraction, such as
1/2, 2/3, 3/5.
Retrograde
The rotation or orbital motion of an object in a clockwise direction when viewed from the north pole of the ecliptic;
moving in the opposite sense from the great majority of solar system bodies.
Rhyolite
Fine-grained extrusive igneous rock, commonly with phenocrysts of quartz and feldspar in a glassy ground mass.
Rift
A fracture or crack in a planet's surface caused by extension. On some volcanoes, subsurface intrusions are
concentrated in certain directions; this causes tension at the surface and also means that there will be more eruptions in
these "rift zones."
Rift Valley
An elongated valley formed by the depression of a block of the planet's crust between two faults or groups of faults of
approximately parallel strike.
Rima
A fissure.
Roche Limit
The closest a fluid body can orbit to its parent planet without being pulled apart by tidal forces.
Rupes
The term applied to scarps on planetary surfaces; many scarps are thought to be the surface expression of faults within
the crust of the planetary object.

S Return To Top
Sapping
A process of erosion where water leaks to the surface through the pores of rocks; as the water flows away, it slowly
removes material to form valleys and channel networks.
Satellite
A body that revolves around a larger body.
Scarp
A line of cliffs produced by faulting or erosion; a relatively straight, cliff like face or slope of considerable linear extent,
breaking the general continuity of the land by separating surfaces lying at different levels.
Scopulus
A lobate or irregular scarp.
Semimajor Axis
One half of the longest dimension of an ellipse.
Shatter Cone
Striated conical fracture surfaces produced by meteorite impact into fine grained, brittle rocks such as limestone.
Shepherd Satellite
A satellite that constrains the extent of a planetary ring through gravitational forces.
Shield
Any of several extensive regions where ancient Precambrian crystalline rocks are exposed at the Earth's surface.
Shield Volcano
A volcano in the shape of a flattened dome, broad and low, built by flows of very fluid lava.
Shock Metamorphism
The production of irreversible chemical or physical changes in rocks by a shock wave generated by impact, or
detonation of high explosive or nuclear devices.
Siderial
Of, relating to, or expressed in relation to stars or constellations.
Siderial Rotation
Rotation time measured with respect to the fixed stars rather than the Sun or body orbited.
Siderophile Elements
This phrase literally means iron loving elements. It includes Iridium, Osmium, Platinum and Plladium, which are found
in the metal rich interiors of chemically segregated asteroids and planets; consequently, these elements are extremely
rare on Earth's surface.
Silicate
A rock or mineral whose structure is dominated by bonds of silicon and oxygen atoms (ie. olivine).
Sinus
A bay.
Sliding
To ability to move through time and space using a porthole.
Solar Cycle
The approximately 11 year, quasi periodic variation in the frequency or number of solar active events.
Solar Nebula
The large cloud of gas and dust from which the Sun and planets condensed 4.6 billion years ago.
Solar System
term used to describe a A sun with planets and moons orbiting around it in a Planetary Nebula or galaxy.
Solar Wind
A tenuous flow of gas and energetic charged particles, mostly protons and electrons -- plasma -- which stream from the
Sun; typical solar wind velocities are almost 350 kilometres (217 miles) per second.
Sovereign Integral
The Sovereign Integral is a state of consciousness whereby the entity and all of its various forms of expression and
perception are integrated as a conscious wholeness.
Sovereign Integral Network
The Sovereign Integral Network has always existed. However, there has not been a way for it to connect with Terra-
earth. The sovereign Integral network is largely mechanistic and electrical in nature, and it is just beginning to
understand electromagnetic energy fields.
Source Codes
Source Codes are imbedded "activators" present within the entity consciousness. They serve a specific purpose of
awakening the human instrument to the multidimensionality of the entity and the liberating information that is stored
within the entity consciousness
Source Intelligence
Source Intelligence is the energy-consciousness of First Source that is cast into all worlds, all dimensions, all realities, all
life forms, all times and places.
Source Reality
Source Reality is the dimension of consciousness that is always pushing the egde of expansion & is the leading edge of
development and evolution for the whole of consciousness.
Sovereignty
Sovereignty is a state of completeness and inter-connectedness.
Spatter Cone
A low, steep sided cone built up from fluid pyroclasts coating the surface around a vent.
Spectroradiometer [SPEC-tro-RAY-dee-om-it-er]
A device that measures the amount of reflected or radiated energy from a surface in two or more wavelengths.
Spectrum
The distribution of wavelengths and frequencies.
Speed Of Light
Light speed equals 299,792,458 meters/second (186,000 miles/second). Einstein's Theory of Relativity implies that
nothing can go faster than the speed of light.
Spicules
The grass like patterns of gas seen in the solar atmosphere.
Stratosphere
The cold region of a planetary atmosphere above the convecting regions (the troposphere), usually without vertical
motions but sometimes exhibiting strong horizontal jet streams.
Stishovite
A dense, high pressure phase of quartz that has so far been identified only in shock metamorphosed, quartz bearing
rocks from meteorite impact craters.
Subduction
The process of one lithospheric plate descending beneath another.
Sublime
Sublimation occurs when a substance changes directly from a solid to a gas without becoming liquid.
Sulcus
Sub parallel furrows and ridges.
Sulphuric Acid
A heavy, corrosive, oily, dibasic strong acid H2SO4 that is colourless when pure; it is a vigorous oxidizing and
dehydrating agent.
Sunspot
An area seen as a dark spot on the photosphere of the Sun. Sunspots are concentrations of magnetic flux, typically
occurring in bipolar clusters or groups. They appear dark because they are cooler than the surrounding photosphere.
Superior Planets
The planets Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune and Pluto are superior planets because their orbits are farther from
the Sun than Earth's orbit.
Synchronous Orbit Radius
The orbital radius at which the satellite's orbital period is equal to the rotational period of the planet. A synchronous
satellite with an orbital inclination of zero (same plane as the planet's equator) stays fixed in the sky from the
perspective of an observer on the planet's surface. These orbits are commonly used for communications satellites.
Synchronous Rotation
A satellite's rotational period is equal to its orbital period; this causes the same side of a satellite to always face the
planet. Synchronous rotation occurs when a planet's gravity produces a tidal bulge in its satellite. The gravitational
attraction and bulge acts like a torque, which slows down the satellite until it reaches a synchronous rotation.
Synthetic Aperture Radar
SAR is a side looking imaging system that uses the Doppler effect to sharpen the effective resolution in the cross track
direction.

T Return To Top
Tachyon Energy
Is used to solidify matter, causing infusion of substance, when bringing a thought into form and is the energy used in
lerm technology. Tachyon energy moves down from the 23 cosmic ray through the 23 chakra located in the 6th
Dimensional plain.

Target Rocks
The surface rocks that an asteroid or comet impactor smashes into in a meteorite impact event.
Tectonic
The deformation forces acting on a planet's crust.
Tektites
Natural, silica rich, homogeneous glasses produced by complete melting, and dispersed as droplets during terrestrial
impact events. Tektites range in colour from black or dark brown to grey or green and most are spherical in shape.
They have been found in four regional deposits or strewn fields on the Earth's surface: North America,
Czechoslovakia, Ivory Coast and Australasia.
telegnosis
Form of telepathy in which a voice is heard.
Telekinesis
Movement of objects without a material cause.
Telepathy
Extrasensory awareness of the thoughts or actions of others.
Teleplasm
Same as ectoplasm.
Teleportation
Instantaneous transmission of matter from one point to another.
Teleradiesthesia
To use a pendulum to answer questions regarding an object not present.
Telergic
Healing using a pendulum.
Telesthesia
1. Sensibility of events at a distance. 2. Extrasensory data perceived as heightened feeling.
Televisualization
A form of visualization using three dimensional sight, sound, and form.
Terminator
The dividing line between the illuminated and the unilluminated part of the moon's or a planet's disk.
Theta Wave
Brain wave associated with meditation, memory and learning enhancement, vivid imagery.
Third Eye
Organ of intuition, located between the eyebrows; sixth chakra. The etheric correspondence of the pineal gland which
sees, creates, communicates, heals, destroys obstacles, unveils mysteries, and controls and directs energies.
Terra
An extensive land mass.
Tessera
A tile; polygonal ground.
Tholus
A small domical mountain or hill.
T'ai Chi
Ancient Chinese form of classical dance for health, self-defense, and spiritual development received in a dream by
Taoist sage Chang San-feng based on subtle yielding, circular movement, control of ch'i, relaxation, 14th c.
Tidal Forces
The gravitational pull on planetary objects from nearby planets and moons. When the tidal forces of a planet and
several moons are focused on certain moons, particularly if the orbits of the various objects bring them into alignment
on a repeated basis, the tidal forces can generate a tremendous amount of energy within the moon. The intense
volcanic activity of Io is the result of the interaction of such tidal forces.
Tidal Heating
The frictional heating of a satellite's interior due to flexure caused by the gravitational pull of its parent planet and
possibly neighbouring satellites.
thoughtform
1. Perfected shape floating in the air roughly spherical. 2. Mental creation that can have causal effects. 3. Etheric
picture, pattern, or form created on the mental plane by the active mind that dissolves easily unless energized by the
emotional nature.
Thoughtography
Ability to project thoughts onto photographic film.
Thought Vibrations
Telepathic or other impressions transported on a radiation of energy set up by act of thinking.
Three
1. Known as the perfect number; blends one and two making the trinity; used frequently in magic; considered a lucky
number. 2. In numerology one whose life cycle number is 3 is affectionate, talented, popular, creative, self-expresive,
and desirous of entertainment and beauty, but not orderly or reliable; planetary link is Jupiter.
Threshold
The point of sensitivity at which a person supports psychic entry.
Throat Chakra
The fifth chakra is located in the throat. It is the center for creativity and self-expression. It influences the thyroid gland
which affects the balance of the entire nervous system, metabolism, muscular control, and body heat production. This
center is called the gateway to liberation because it leads beyond the physical/emotional planes and into the astral
spaces. The symbolic form of this chakra is a chalice and its color is sky blue.
Time Travel
1. To use the astral body to travel forward or back in time for a short time, leaving the physical body on the bed. 2. To
allow the mind to expand and travel forward or backward in time and view scenes.
Trailing Hemisphere
The hemisphere that faces backwards, away from the direction of motion of a satellite that keeps the same face toward
the planet.
Trojan Satellites
Satellites which orbit at the Lagrangian points, 60° ahead of and 60° behind another satellite. For example, Telesto and
Calypso are trojans of Saturn's satellite Tethys.
Troposphere
The lower regions of a planetary atmosphere where convection keeps the gas mixed and maintains a steady increase of
temperature with depth. Most clouds are in the troposphere.
Trance
Mediumistic state of psychological dissociation in which the spirit entity takes over the person's voice or body to speak
to human audiences.
Trance Communication
Transmission of impressions by ESP between etheric entities and a medium in state of trance. Communication may be
in any of several types.
Trance Medium
A psychically sensitive person who can dispossess his body to allow its use by a controlling spirit for psychic
manifestation.
Transactional Analysis (TA)
Therapy based on group interaction developed by Eric Berne and Thomas Harris.
Transcendental
Surpassing the senses; mystical.
Transcendentalism
Literary and philosophical movement of Emerson, Alcotts, Lane, Fuller, Thoreau, stressing nature, Eastern thought,
1830s-50s.
Transfiguration
Emergence from a spirit form into whole or partial, visible and recognizable form by enshrouding the ectoplasm
produced by a physical medium.
Transit
Travels of a planet leading to aspects with other heavenly bodies.
Transition
Death process; to move from one state of consciousness to another.
Translate
Accurate rendering of psychic reception by a receiving sensitive.
.Transmigration Of Souls
(Hinduism) The soul-mind leaves the physical body upon death and enters another body according to past behavior
and spiritual needs; new body can be human, animal, plant, reptile or anything alive.
Transpersonal Psychology (TP)
Movement stressing full sensory, psychic and spiritual development.
Tuff
The general term for consolidated pyroclastic debris

U Return To Top
Ultraviolet
Electromagnetic radiation at wavelengths shorter than the violet end of visible light; the atmosphere of the Earth
effectively blocks the transmission of most ultraviolet light.
Umbra
The dark central region of a sunspot.
Undae
Dunes.
Universe of Wholeness
The Universe of Wholeness is the aggregate of all dimensions and realities. It is unified and inter-connected through
Source Intelligence.

V Return To Top
Vallis
A sinuous valley.
Vastitas
Widespread lowlands.
Vent
The opening in the crust through which volcanic material erupts.
Volatile
Compounds with low melting temperatures, such as hydrogen, helium, water, ammonia, carbon dioxide and methane.
Volcano
(1) A vent in the planetary surface through which magma and associated gases and ash erupt. (2) The form or structure
produced by the erupted materials.

W Return To Top
Weight
The gravitational force exerted on a body.
White Dwarf
A whitish star of high surface temperature and low intrinsic brightness with a mass approximately equal to that of a Sun
but with a density many times larger.
Wholeness Perspective
The human instrument, because it is fragmented and limited to five-senses, truly desires the Wholeness Perspective; a
way to absorb life experience, process it, and move on to the next thing with grace and ease. It means that all
experience is equal and grounded in the transcendent reality of the One That Is All. And most importantly, it means
that the One That Is All is you, me, him, her, it, that, and those. Nothing is excluded or rejected.
Wholeness Navigator
Theories of evolution are layered upon your existing paradigm of a mechanical universe that consists of molecular
machines operating in an objective reality that is knowable with the right instruments.
Wingmaker
A wingmaker is another term for celestial light being and is the next step in human evolution and development. As we
ascend into the realm of light and love through the higher power of the first source.

X Return To Top
X-ray
Electromagnetic radiation of very short wavelength and very high energy; x-rays have shorter wavelengths than
ultraviolet light but longer wavelengths than cosmic rays.

Y Return To Top
Young
When used to describe a planetary surface, "young" means that the visible features are of relatively recent origin, i.e.
that older features have been destroyed by erosion or lava flows. Young surfaces exhibit few impact craters and are
typically varied and complex; in contrast, an "old" surface is one that has changed relatively little over geologic time.
The surfaces of Earth and Io are young; the surfaces of Mercury and Callisto are old.

Z Return To Top

You might also like