Wednesday 28 November 2012

To another "world" if I can


What is your dream? Will you achieve your dream in your lifetime? I'm certain that you desire to. I'm sure you hope you will. But will you actually do it? What odds would you give yourself? One in five? One in a hundred? One in a million? How can you tell whether your chances are good or whether your dream will always remain exactly that—a dream? And how will you going to success it?

                       

Most people I know have a dream. Some willingly describe it with great detail and enthusiasm. Others are reluctant to talk about it. They seem embarrassed to say it out loud. These people have never tested their dream. They don’t know if others will laugh at them. They’re not sure if they’re aiming too high or too low. They don’t know if their dream is something they can really achieve or if they’re destined to fail.
Most people have no idea how to achieve their dreams. What they possess is a vague notion that there is something they would like to do someday or someone they would like to become. But they don’t know how to get from here to there. If that describes you, then you’ll be glad to know that there really is hope.

 

When you were a kid in school, do you remember a teacher doing a review before a test and saying something like, “Pay attention now, because this is going to be on the test”? I do. The encouraging teachers who wanted to see their students succeed said things like that all the time. They wanted us to be prepared so we could do well. They put us to the test, but they just set us up for success, they are not really to give us a test.

Dream can actually seperate into many types:
 •Daydreams—Distractions from current work
 •Pie-in-the-Sky Dreams—Wild ideas with no strategy or basis in reality
 •Bad Dreams—Worries that breed fear and paralysis
 •Idealistic Dreams—The way the world would be if you were in charge
 •Vicarious Dreams—Dreams lived through others
 •Romantic Dreams—Belief that some person will make you happy
 •Career Dreams—Belief that career success will make you happy
 •Destination Dreams—Belief that a position, title or award will make you happy
 •Material Dreams—Belief that wealth or possessions will make you
happy


Everyone have their own dream and I have my own dream also. My dream is to live happily with my family as well as I can and we can live in a beautiful and wonderful place that is without pollution, Vandalism, and any things are dangerous and going to spoil our pity earth that donate itself to let us stay and stand on it.

                   


I do many research for this kinds of sources and i believe human are not just living in this world lonely there is still many living things that we cannot see through from our eyes.


                          
One of my research is:
Human can live in another planet before earth die......
NASA specialists discovered water on Enceladus, a natural satellite of planet Saturn, in March last year. After studying the images of the satellite relayed to Earth by Cassini probe, scientists say there is evidence of geysers on Saturn’s satellite, which gush right into open space. “By all appearances, Enceladus is yet another planet-ocean crusted with ice. The water in that space ‘fish tank’ is pretty warm,” says Oleg Korablev, deputy director of the Institute of Space Studies under the Russian Academy of Sciences.
“Not unlike the tide of the ocean produced by the attraction of the moon, the strong field of Saturn makes the waters of Enceladus’s inland ocean break through the ice and come up to the surface. The water pockets are likely to occur at a depth of several meters. Scientists are getting increasingly enthusiastic about the processes on Enceladus because its inland ocean is currently active, a direct discharge of water is taking place,” says Korablev.
Q: A space race has really picked up recently. The European Space Agency, NASA, the Chinese and Japanese launch their spacecraft one after another in quest of any life forms. Which planets of the solar system do you think have good prospects for the discovery of life?
A: Take Titan, one of the moons of Saturn. Titan is quite interesting because it is an installation of Earth. Every living creature on Earth depends on the exchange of hydrogen in nature while nitrogen is a key component on Titan. Nitrogen rivers flow across the moon of Saturn, nitrogen snow falls down, and nitrogen ice covers the ground. Methane is a key compound on that planet. Looks like everything will go off with an awful sound should you strike a match. On the contrary, explosion is out of the question since Titan’s atmosphere has no oxygen.

If there was a list of the solar system planets regarded fit for humans, I would put Mars on top of it. Now different nations are competing against one another for the red planet. The American spacecraft Mars Exploration Rover has arrived in Mars orbit earlier this March. But the ESA’s Mars Express already works out there…
As the U.S. “eye” is still nearing the required Mars orbit, the European equipment on Mars Express is frantically trying to cream off the best data on the red planet.


Scientists show plenty of interest in the planets of the solar system, and with reason. The point is that all our knowledge about Earth is based on hypotheses. We do not know what exactly lies inside our planet. Still, we can only imagine how Earth looked like during the era of microbes and viruses. Therefore, we simulate the evolution of the planet by looking into the solar system planets with a structure similar to that of Earth. We are trying to understand the principles of the evolution of our planet, find out more about its past, the present and the future.


I'm looking forward to move through another planet and I hope I can do it. However people though that something wrong with me or either this is an impossible things that will really happen but I will not to give up forever and ever that I'm still alive.  

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