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WINGED WORDS, PHRASEOLOGICAL UNITS
Directory / Winged words, phraseological units / The paper does not turn red. Paper will endure everything

Winged words, phraseological units. Meaning, history of origin, examples of use

Winged words, phraseological units

Directory / Winged words, phraseological units

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The paper does not turn red. Paper will endure everything

Mark Tullius Cicero
Mark Tullius Cicero

Phraseologism: The paper does not turn red. Paper will endure everything.

Meaning: 1. In writing, you can express such thoughts that are embarrassed to express orally. 2. You can write anything, although not everything that is written is true.

Origin: These expressions go back to the Roman writer and orator Cicero (106-43 BC), in his letters "To friends" (5, 12, I) there is an expression: "Epistola non erubescit".

Random phraseology:

One hundred years of solitude.

Meaning:

About a long period of painful loneliness.

Origin:

Title of a novel (published 1967) by Colombian writer Gabriel García Márquez (1928-2014). The writer tells the story of the fictional small provincial town of Macondo through the history of the Buendia family, telling about the human characters, dreams and passions that overwhelm the members of this family.

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See also Sections Aphorisms of famous people и Proverbs and sayings of the peoples of the world.

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The world's largest Cherenkov telescope launched 10.08.2012

The world's largest Cherenkov telescope, HESS II, has been launched in Namibia. It is designed to study the most extreme cosmic phenomena associated with high-energy gamma-ray emissions and is the largest Cherenkov telescope ever built. Together with four smaller 12-meter telescopes already in operation since 2004, the HESS observatory will continue to study known high-energy cosmic sources, as well as search for new classes of gamma-ray sources. The new telescope weighs almost 600 tons, and its 28-meter mirror is comparable in area to two tennis courts. HESS II is designed to detect a cascade of atmospheric particles generated by cosmic gamma rays.

Gamma rays, which are emitted by natural cosmic particle accelerators, such as supermassive black holes, supernovae, pulsars, binary stars, and Big Bang artifacts, have tremendous energy. None of the existing terrestrial particle accelerators is capable of reaching such energies, but astronomers can observe this "cosmic hurricane" using Cherenkov telescopes. When gamma rays interact with the upper atmosphere, they create a whole cascade of secondary particles that can be seen with the Cherenkov effect - faint flashes of blue light. These faint flashes occur very quickly, in billionths of a second, but the high-tech HESS II camera is able to register them.

The HESS II camera, about the size of a garage door and weighing almost 3 tons, is positioned at a height of 36 m in the focal plane of the primary mirror. Despite its enormous size, the new telescope rotates twice as fast as its smaller counterparts, allowing it to quickly point at fast-moving cosmic phenomena. The new scientific tool will allow us to study the most interesting objects, such as active galactic nuclei, with unprecedented accuracy. In addition, scientists hope to find completely new space objects using HESS II.

More than 10 scientists from 170 scientific institutes and 32 different countries took part in the construction of the observatory for almost 12 years: Namibia, South Africa, Germany, France, Great Britain, Ireland, Austria, Poland, the Czech Republic and Sweden.

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