Scientific Case for the Origin of Life - Mike Riddle

Scientific Case for the Origin of Life - Mike Riddle
Mike puts the evolution theory to shame, clearly showing the "impossibility of the odds."


Visit Mike's Equipping and Training Christians Ministry - http://train2equip.com


There are over 2,000 types of amino acids and only 20 are used in life.


Every experiment we have ever done has always ended up with an equal number of left handed and right handed amino acids.


A mixture of left handed and right handed amino acids is a poison to life.


Each body is full of only left handed amino acids. The tendency is always to bond the two and continue away from life; not toward life.


Evolution has ruled out the truth of a Creator God, so evolutionists will accept anything in the place of the truth of God.


In essence, evolutionists are saying that 3 plus 1 equals 7 because the real answer, in this case 4, is "too religious for them."


One cell in our body is more complex than any computer we have ever built.


Is it logical to conclude that a cell could evolve from natural ... more

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Garver Delivers Keynote at International Symposium on This Week at NASA
Top Stories on This Week At NASA. Three new flight directors at Mission Control in Houston. The latest on micro-gravity experiments aboard the ISS, Lifetime achievement awards for the Mars Rovers and Two Governors tour NASA facilities. more




Defending Noah and the Worldwide Flood - Mike Riddle

Defending Noah and the Worldwide Flood - Mike Riddle
What are the evidences for a worldwide flood some 5000 years ago? Is it even logical? Mike, a former Marine officer, Microsoft Executive and decathlon champion uses awesome graphics to show you how to boldly defend the most recognized of all the Old Testament miracles.

NPP Science Media Briefing

 NPP Science Media Briefing
NASA news briefing from Vandenberg Air Force Base in California on Wednesday, Oct. 26, to discuss the science objectives of the NPP satellite mission, NASA's first satellite dedicated to advancing both climate research and weather forecasting. more

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With luminaries from political, science and technology fields looking on, NASA's Deputy Administrator Lori Garver joined U.S. Sen. Barbara Mikulski (D-Md.) for a special dedication and ribbon cutting ceremony of a permanent exhibit of NASA's James Webb Space Telescope at the Maryland Science Center in Baltimore. more


Noahs Ark: Fact or Fiction? - Mike Riddle

Noahs Ark: Fact or Fiction? - Mike Riddle
Excellent! Everything you need to know when defending the Biblical account of the worldwide flood in Genesis. Great graphics, great info!

Post-Flood Animals, the Size of the Ark, and Creation Evangelism


Creation Today 10/27/2011 | Eric Hovind and Paul Taylor discuss inbreeding in post-flood animals; whether or not the Ark was big enough; what Genesis has to say about the virgin birth; and the role of creation science in evangelism.


Visit http://CreationScienceEvangelism.com for more Creation Today episodes and many more creation science resources. more

Origins - The Worldwide Flood - Geologic Evidences - Pt 1 with Dr. Andrew Snelling

Origins - The Worldwide Flood - Geologic Evidences - Pt 2 with Dr. Andrew Snelling

Origins - The Worldwide Flood - Geologic Evidences - Pt 2 with Dr. Andrew Snelling
Geologist Andrew Snelling, Ph.D. gives compelling geologic evidence for the worldwide flood that the Bible historically records.


Andrew A. Snelling, B.Sc. (Hons), Ph.D.
Director of Research, AiG-US


Biography
Andrew A. Snelling is a geologist, research scientist and technical editor. He completed a Bachelor of Science degree in Applied Geology at the University of New South Wales in Sydney, Australia, graduating with First Class Honors in 1975. His Doctor of Philosophy (in geology) was awarded by The University of Sydney, Australia in 1982 for his research thesis entitled "A geochemical study of the Koongarra uranium deposit, Northern Territory, Australia". Between studies and since Andrew worked for six years in the exploration and mining industries in Tasmania, New South Wales, Victoria, Western Australia and the Northern Territory variously as a field, mine and research geologist.


Andrew commenced in full-time creation ministry at the end of 1983, first working with the... more

Hubble Burning Questions

Hubble Burning Questions
From HubbleCast and the incomparable Dr. J. The episode features answers to questions submitted by the public. What is the most empty spot of space you have ever seen? What's the longest single-shot exposure ever recorded of any object or area of space by Hubble? What are the farthest objects discovered by Hubble?


Three questions, just one answer. In 2003, Hubble was pointed at a part of sky which is, by normal standards at least, pretty empty. In particular, there are no bright stars in this area.


Now Hubble observed this field, which is only about a tenth the size of the full moon, for almost a million seconds. That's around 11.3 days' worth of total exposure time. The result is an image we call the Hubble Ultra Deep Field, and it is in fact the deepest optical image of the Universe that humanity has ever produced.


This is galaxy UDFj-39546284. Boring name, I know, but the point is that this is probably the most distant object ever discovered. Now its distance isn'... more

Coming this month: Closest Known Approach by a Large Asteroid

Coming this month: Closest Known Approach by a Large Asteroid 
2005 YU-55 is going to make a very close approach to the Earth on the night of November 8, 2011. At that time, its distance from Earth will be just under nine-tenths of the moon's distance away from us. 2005 YU-55 cannot hit Earth at least over the interval that we can compute the motion reliably which extends for several hundred years.


It's going to be moving very rapidly as it traverses the sky near the Earth on November 7, 8, 9 and 10th. In affect it'll be moving straight at us from one direction and then it will go whizzing by and straight away from us in the other direction. So its motion across the sky will be close to degrees over the course of less than two days. It made a close approach to Earth about eighteen months ago in April of 2010. Colleagues of ours at Arecibo Observatory where able to observe this asteroid using the radar facility at Arecibo and they were able to obtain radar images that showed that this object is about 400 meters across. On November 8, 9, 10 we... more

Pulsar Enigma Discovered

Pulsar Enigma Discovered
From NASA Astrophysics. Hidden deep within a group of ancient stars, there lurks a young and powerful enigma. This is NGC 6624, a globular cluster near our galaxy's center thought to be about 10 billion years old. NASA's Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope detects high-energy radiation from many globular clusters.


Usually what Fermi is seeing is the cumulative gamma rays from all of the old pulsars in these clusters. A pulsar is a rapidly spinning neutron star, which is the small, incredibly dense remnant of a much more massive star.


A teaspoon of matter from a neutron star weighs as much Mount Everest, and a neutron star is so compact that a ball about 15 miles across contains more matter than our sun. Neutron stars spin between 7 and 40,000 times a minute and form with incredibly strong magnetic fields. Rapid spin and intense magnetic fields drive powerful beams of electromagnetic radiation, including gamma rays. As the pulsar rotates, these beams sweep the sky like a lighthouse. ... more

Dwarf Planet Crossing at the Edge of the Solar System




From ESOCast. Astronomers have accurately measured the size of the remote dwarf planet Eris for the first time. They caught it as it passed in front of a faint star. Eris also seems to be extremely reflective, probably because it is covered in a thin layer of frozen atmosphere.


Occultations are rather like eclipses —the background star disappears behind the object and reappears on its other side. As viewed from Earth, the brightness of the background star suddenly drops and then returns equally suddenly to its previous level. By looking at these two events, astronomers can measure the size and shape of the occulting foreground object. If they also know the mass of this object they can then determine its density.


The occultation technique has now enabled astronomers to learn a lot more about the dwarf planet Eris. Eris was identified as a large object in the outer Solar System in 2005. Its discovery was one of the factors that led to the creation of a new class of objects cal... more


ElaNa CubeSat Media Briefing

NASA's Fermi Telescope Finds Youngest Millisecond Pulsar

Bolden Addresses NASA Small Business Symposium

Mars Science Laboratory Moves to Launch Complex

ScienceCast: Stellar Extremophiles

Partial Solar Eclipse 25 Nov 2011

Fossum Chats with Houston Chronicle


Fossum Chats with Houston Chronicle
Expedition 29 commander Mike Fossum downlinks from the International Space Station with a reporter from the Houston Chronicle to update his mission aboard the orbiting laboratory. more         

Origins - The Fossil Record with Dr. Jerry Bergman



Origins - The Fossil Record with Dr. Jerry Bergman
Dr. Jerry Bergman shows how the fossil record is an embarrassment to evolutionists.


Bio
Jerry Bergman has taught biology, genetics, chemistry, biochemistry, anthropology, geology, and microbiology at Northwest State College in Archbold OH for over 25 years. He has 9 degrees, including 7 graduate (= 'post-graduate' in some non-US systems) degrees. Dr Bergman is a graduate of Medical College of Ohio, Wayne State University in Detroit, The University of Toledo, and Bowling Green State University. He has over 800 publications in 12 languages and 20 books and monographs. He has also taught at the Medical College of Ohio where he was a research associate in the department of experimental pathology, and he also taught 6 years at the University of Toledo, and 7 years at Bowing Green State University.


Dr Bergman has presented over one hundred scientific papers at professional and community meetings in the United States, Canada, and Europe. To discuss his research, he has been a featur... more

Hurricane Rina Caught on ISS Cameras

External cameras on the International Space Station captured views of Hurricane Rina at 2:39 p.m. EDT on Oct. 25, 2011, as the complex flew 248 miles over the Caribbean Sea east of Belize. The late season hurricane, which continues to intensify, was located 300 miles east-southeast of Chetumal, Mexico, barely moving west-northwest at a glacial three miles an hour. Rina is packing winds of 105 miles an hour, and is forecast to intensify to a major hurricane as it approaches the Yucatan Peninsula. Hurricane warnings have been issued for the Yucatan from north of Punta Gruesa, Mexico, to Cancun. more

Mysteries of a Dark Universe

Mysteries of a Dark Universe
Enjoy in Full HD 1080p. Cosmology, the study of the universe as a whole, has been turned on its head by a stunning discovery that the universe is flying apart in all directions at an ever-increasing rate.


Is the universe bursting at the seams? Or is nature somehow fooling us?


The astronomers whose data revealed this accelerating universe have been awarded the Nobel Prize for Physics.


And yet, since 1998, when the discovery was first announced, scientists have struggled to come to grips with a mysterious presence that now appears to control the future of the cosmos: dark energy.


On remote mountaintops around the world, major astronomical centers hum along, with state of the art digital sensors, computers, air conditioning, infrastructure, and motors to turn the giant telescopes.


Deep in Chile's Atacama desert, the Paranal Observatory is an astronomical Mecca.


This facility draws two megawatts of power, enough for around two thousand homes.


What astronomers ge... more

ScienceCasts: A Star with Spiral Arms


Using a Japanese telescope, NASA-supported researchers have found the first clear case of a star with spiral arms. more

New Weather Satellite in Orbit


The National Polar-orbiting Operational Environmental Satellite System Preparatory Project, or NPP, was launched from Vandenberg Air Force Base in California on Oct. 28, heralding a new era of climate change science and weather forecasting for the United States. more

SPACE STATION CAMERAS CAPTURE NEW VIEWS OF HURRICANE RINA


From an altitude of 248 miles, external cameras on the International Space Station captured new views of Hurricane Rina at 3:18 p.m. EDT on Oct. 26, 2011, as the storm churned 180 miles south-southeast of Cozumel, Mexico. At the time the ISS passed overhead, Rina had been downgraded to a Category 1 hurricane, packing winds of 85 miles an hour. The National Hurricane Center is forecasting Rina to turn to the northeast toward the northwest coast of Cuba over the weekend after it passes north of the Yucatan Peninsula. more

NPP Science Media Briefing


NASA news briefing from Vandenberg Air Force Base in California on Wednesday, Oct. 26, to discuss the science objectives of the NPP satellite mission, NASA's first satellite dedicated to advancing both climate research and weather forecasting. more

Sentator Mikulski Opens Web Telescope Exhibit-desktop.m4v


With luminaries from political, science and technology fields looking on, NASA's Deputy Administrator Lori Garver joined U.S. Sen. Barbara Mikulski (D-Md.) for a special dedication and ribbon cutting ceremony of a permanent exhibit of NASA's James Webb Space Telescope at the Maryland Science Center in Baltimore. more

Garver Delivers Keynote at International Symposium on This Week at NASA

Top Stories on This Week At NASA. Three new flight directors at Mission Control in Houston. The latest on micro-gravity experiments aboard the ISS, Lifetime achievement awards for the Mars Rovers and Two Governors tour NASA facilities. more

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