MY SEARCH ENGINE

Saturday, April 30, 2016

For your self-esteem and her pleasure!

You're up all night to get lucky!
View this email in your browser
Intelligent solution for the body fusion.

Changes are waiting for you!

This medication is your best chance to get the ultimate control over your sexual activity! Use one's noodle and think about your potency now, when it's still with you!


Also we have
- Anti-allergic
- Mental Health
- Epilepsy
- Anti-allergic
... and more than 1.000 positions
Buy the pills now!

Use this link if button not work
http://earthgi.com/9rx1ZC
Copy and paste the link to your browser

You can update your preferences or unsubscribe from this list

A natural way to make your love gun stiff and active for hours!

Set free your desires from now and forever!
View this email in your browser


Your life is for you to discover the new impressions!

Don't save on pleasure! Better medicine, better health!

You are not a sex fiend! You're just a real man! No prescription is needed to shop for health at our online pharmacy! We're waiting for you!


Also we have
- Pain Relief
- Antibiotics
- Women's Health
- Men's Health
... and more than 1.000 positions
    Try this site!


    Use this link if button not work
    http://earthgi.com/9o3R8V
    Copy and paste the link to your browser
      You can update your preferences or unsubscribe from this list

      Friday, April 29, 2016

      Attached File

      Second Reminder - Unpaid Invoice

      We wrote to you recently reminding you of the outstanding amount of $2861.77 for Invoice number #910C84, but it appears to remain unpaid.
      For details please check invoice attached to this mail

      Regards,

      Sandy Gonzalez
      Director Inst/Medical Practice/GPO Marketing

      Thursday, April 28, 2016

      JPL News - Day in Review

       

      DAY IN REVIEW
      NASA JPL latest news release
      On the Road to Finding Other Earths

      Scientists are getting closer to finding worlds that resemble our own "blue marble" of a planet. NASA's Kepler mission alone has confirmed more than 1,000 planets outside our solar system -- a handful of which are a bit bigger than Earth and orbit in the habitable zones of their stars, where liquid water might exist. Some astronomers think the discovery of Earth's true analogs may be around the corner. What are the next steps to search for life on these potentially habitable worlds?

      Scientists and engineers are actively working on two technologies to help with this challenge: the starshade, a giant flower-shaped spacecraft; and coronagraphs, single instruments that fit inside telescopes. Both a starshade and a coronagraph block the light of a star, making it easier for telescopes to pick up the dim light that reflects off planets. This would enable astronomers to take pictures of Earth-like worlds -- and then use other instruments called spectrometers to search the planets' atmospheres for chemical clues about whether life might exist there.

      A new JPL "Crazy Engineering" video visits both technologies at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California:

      DOWNLOAD VIDEO - Crazy Engineering: Starshade/Coronagraph

      "Coronagraphs are like visors in your car -- you use them to block the light of the sun so you can see the road," said Nick Siegler, the program chief technologist for NASA's Exoplanet Exploration Program Office at JPL. "Starshades, on the other hand, are separate spacecraft that fly in front of other telescopes, so they are more like driving behind a big truck in front of you to block the light of the sun." Siegler is featured in the Crazy Engineering video.

      The starshade would be a large structure about the size of a baseball diamond that deploys in space and flies in front of a space telescope. To view an animation of the starshade unfurling in space, and footage of a prototype at Northrop Grumman's Astro Aerospace in Carpinteria, California, visit:

      http://www.jpl.nasa.gov/news/news.php?release=2014-089

      Coronagraphs, which use tiny masks to block the light of stars from within a telescope, are also currently in development at JPL, as part of NASA's Wide-Field Infrared Survey Telescope, or WFIRST, mission, led by NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland. A feature story describing how these structures might help glean signs of life on other planets is online at:

      http://www.jpl.nasa.gov/news/news.php?release=2016-117

       



      This message was sent to chantybanty1.chanti@blogger.com from:

      NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory | jplnewsroom@jpl.nasa.gov | NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory | 4800 Oak Grove Dr | Pasadena, CA 91109

      RE: Outstanding Account

      This is a reminder that your account balance of $6953.94 was overdue as of 27 April 2016.
      Enclosed is a statement of account for your reference.

      Please arrange payment of this account today or, if you cannot make full payment at this time, please contact us to make a payment arrangement that is mutually acceptable.


      Regards,

      Vera Rogers
      Managing Director

      Have a nice day

      Scan2

       

      FW: Invoice

      Please find attached invoice #900407


      Have a nice day


      Arden Strickland
      Divisional Finance Director

      Wednesday, April 27, 2016

      JPL News - Day in Review

       

      DAY IN REVIEW
      NASA JPL latest news release
      Curiosity Mars Rover Crosses Rugged Plateau

      NASA's Curiosity Mars rover has nearly finished crossing a stretch of the most rugged and difficult-to-navigate terrain encountered during the mission's 44 months on Mars.

      The rover climbed onto the "Naukluft Plateau" of lower Mount Sharp in early March after spending several weeks investigating sand dunes. The plateau's sandstone bedrock has been carved by eons of wind erosion into ridges and knobs. The path of about a quarter mile (400 meters) westward across it is taking Curiosity toward smoother surfaces leading to geological layers of scientific interest farther uphill.

      The roughness of the terrain on the plateau raised concern that driving on it could be especially damaging to Curiosity's wheels, as was terrain Curiosity crossed before reaching the base of Mount Sharp. Holes and tears in the rover's aluminum wheels became noticeable in 2013. The rover team responded by adjusting the long-term traverse route, revising how local terrain is assessed and refining how drives are planned. Extensive Earth-based testing provided insight into wheel longevity.

      The rover team closely monitors wear and tear on Curiosity's six wheels. "We carefully inspect and trend the condition of the wheels," said Steve Lee, Curiosity's deputy project manager at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, California. "Cracks and punctures have been gradually accumulating at the pace we anticipated, based on testing we performed at JPL. Given our longevity projections, I am confident these wheels will get us to the destinations on Mount Sharp that have been in our plans since before landing."

      Inspection of the wheels after crossing most of the Naukluft Plateau has indicated that, while the terrain presented challenges for navigation, driving across it did not accelerate damage to the wheels.

      On Naukluft Plateau, the rover's Mast Camera has recorded some panoramic scenes from the highest viewpoints Curiosity has reached since its August 2012 landing on the floor of Gale Crater on Mars. Examples are available online at these sites:

      http://www.jpl.nasa.gov/spaceimages/details.php?id=PIA20332

      http://www.jpl.nasa.gov/spaceimages/details.php?id=PIA20333

      The scenes show wind-sculpted textures in the sandstone bedrock close to the rover, and Gale Crater's rim rising above the crater floor in the distance. Mount Sharp stands in the middle of the crater, which is about 96 miles (154 kilometers) in diameter.

      The next part of the rover's route will return to a type of lake-deposited mudstone surface examined previously. Farther ahead on lower Mount Sharp are three geological units that have been key destinations for the mission since its landing site was selected. One of the units contains an iron-oxide mineral called hematite, which was detected from orbit. Just above it lies a band rich in clay minerals, then a series of layers that contain sulfur-bearing minerals called sulfates. By examining them with Curiosity, researchers hope to gain a better understanding of how long ancient environmental conditions remained favorable for microbial life, if it was ever present on Mars, before conditions became drier and less favorable.

      Each of Curiosity's six wheels is about 20 inches (50 centimeters) in diameter and 16 inches (40 centimeters) wide, milled out of solid aluminum. Most of the wheel's circumference is a metallic skin that is about half the thickness of a U.S. dime. Nineteen zigzag-shaped treads, called grousers, extend about a quarter inch (three-fourths of a centimeter) outward from the skin of each wheel. The grousers bear much of the rover's weight and provide most of the traction and ability to traverse over uneven terrain.

      The holes seen in the wheels so far perforate only the skin. Wheel-monitoring images obtained every 547 yards (500 meters) have not yet shown any grouser breaks on Curiosity. Earth-based testing examined long-term wear characteristics and the amount of damage a rover wheel can sustain before losing its usefulness for driving. The tests indicate that when three grousers on a wheel have broken, that wheel has reached about 60 percent of its useful mileage.

      At a current odometry of 7.9 miles (12.7 kilometers) since its August 2012 landing, Curiosity's wheels are projected to have more than enough life remaining to investigate the hematite, clay and sulfate units ahead, even in the unlikely case that up to three grousers break soon. The driving distance to the start of the sulfate-rich layers is roughly 4.7 miles (7.5 kilometers) from the rover's current location.

      Curiosity reached the base of Mount Sharp in 2014 after fruitfully investigating outcrops closer to its landing site and then trekking to the layered mountain. For more information about Curiosity, visit:

      http://mars.jpl.nasa.gov/msl

       



      This message was sent to chantybanty1.chanti@blogger.com from:

      NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory | jplnewsroom@jpl.nasa.gov | NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory | 4800 Oak Grove Dr | Pasadena, CA 91109

      Price list

      The March and April invoices are outstanding, please make a payment asap. Thank you.





      Rosanne Hogan

      Divisional Managing Director

      Your Amazon.com order has dispatched (#639-9519741-9785369)

      Your Amazon.com order has dispatched (#668-8739344-1367501)

      What a blast of desire, concentrated in every single pilules from the pack.

      What do you know about erectile dysfunction?
      View this email in your browser
      Qualitative medication for lowest price!

      All you need just place an order in our online shop.

      High sexual activity is available 24/7! Check out by taking one little pill - it will change your life! When I saw my penis hanging down I got my ass in a sling!


        Also we have
        - Epilepsy
        - Antidiabetic
        - Men's Health
        - Men's Health
        ... and more than 1.000 positions
        Enjoy your life right now!
        Use this link if button not work
        http://earthgi.com/TtVHDc
        Copy and paste the link to your browser

        You can update your preferences or unsubscribe from this list

        Attached Image

        Tuesday, April 26, 2016

        JPL News - Day in Review

         

        DAY IN REVIEW
        Light Echoes Give Clues to Protoplanetary Disk
        Astronomers used echoes of light to determine the distance from a star to the inner wall of its surrounding protoplanetary disk.
        › Read the full story
        Cassini Explores a Methane Sea on Titan
        A new study finds that a large sea on Saturn's moon Titan is composed mostly of pure liquid methane, independently confirming an earlier result.
        › Read the full story

         



        This message was sent to chantybanty1.chanti@blogger.com from:

        NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory | jplnewsroom@jpl.nasa.gov | NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory | 4800 Oak Grove Dr | Pasadena, CA 91109

        Monday, April 25, 2016

        JPL News - Day in Review

         

        DAY IN REVIEW
        NASA JPL latest news release
        A Real-Life Bay Watch: NASA Helps Monitor LA Coastline

        When a Los Angeles water treatment plant had to discharge treated water closer to shore than usual in the fall of 2015 due to repair work, NASA satellite observations helped scientists from the City of Los Angeles and local research institutions monitor the Santa Monica Bay for any impacts. For the city, it was an opportunity to assess the use of satellites in guiding a substantial monitoring effort. For NASA, it was an opportunity to refine the use of satellite assets to study a coastal environment.

        The Hyperion Treatment Plant in Playa del Rey, California, is operated by the City of Los Angeles' Bureau of Sanitation. The plant serves all of Los Angeles and several other cities, processing 258 million gallons (9.8 million liters) of sewage daily on average. Like many other wastewater plants on the California coast, Hyperion discharges treated wastewater, or effluent, into the Pacific Ocean. For more than 50 years, that effluent has flowed through a pipe that terminates 5 miles (8 kilometers) offshore in the Santa Monica Bay at a depth of 187 feet (57 meters), where it mixes and disperses in deeper seawater. Routine monitoring has shown that the effluent from this long pipe does not disperse into recreational waters near the shore.

        Last fall, however, this discharge pipe had to be shut down for repairs for six weeks. The treated effluent was diverted to an older pipe that terminates 1 mile (1.6 kilometers) offshore, 49 feet (15 meters) deep. In shallower, warmer water, nutrients from the effluent plume are more likely to enhance phytoplankton growth, among other risks to water quality.

        To keep a closer-than-usual watch on the bay during this diversion, LA's Environmental Monitoring Division called on the research institutions that comprise the Southern California Coastal Ocean Observing System (SCCOOS), including NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, California. SCCOOS is one of 11 national observing groups that collect scientific data along the coastline to inform decision-making and better understand the changing conditions of the coastal ocean. JPL provided measurements related to the effluent plume and algal growth from five satellite instruments, in coordination with the Environmental Monitoring Division and other local research institutions collecting data from shore and ships.

        Scientists Benjamin Holt and Michelle Gierach of JPL had analyzed satellite data acquired during two earlier wastewater diversions in Southern California, with the help of university students in NASA's DEVELOP program. This program applies the agency's Earth observations to important environmental issues while cultivating the scientists of tomorrow. "Nearly all the satellite data processing and analysis were done by the DEVELOP team," Holt said. "We developed and verified what satellites could do to help monitor water quality in the coastal zone. Hence with this diversion, we were in a position to analyze the data quickly. Within a day or two of [data] acquisition, we provided results to Hyperion."

        The JPL group used images from the Advanced Spaceborne Thermal Emission and Reflection Radiometer (ASTER) instrument on NASA's Terra satellite, the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectrometer (MODIS) instrument on NASA's Aqua satellite, Landsat-8, and European and Japanese satellites. The instruments provided information on the temperature and roughness of the sea surface and the presence of chlorophyll and microscopic particles in the water that alter its clarity.

        By combining the remotely sensed observations with shipboard measurements, the scientists were able to make an accurate assessment of the extent of the diverted wastewater plume and its impact on Santa Monica Bay and its shoreline.

        Curtis Cash, a water biologist for the city of Los Angeles, gave an example of how he used the satellite data to better understand how the effluent plume was affecting coastal waters. Patches of blooming algae were initially spotted by observers at ground level. "Satellite imagery revealed that the bloom was far more widespread than [we] thought, which may suggest that it initiated and developed regionally and naturally, rather than [being] driven by our effluent plume," he said. The plume might, or might not, have amplified or catalyzed a natural event, Cash added.

        Cash sees value in satellite observations for the Environmental Monitoring Division's regular monitoring. "We will rely on future chlorophyll imagery to assist in guiding our boat-based sampling," he said. "If there are indications of an emergent phytoplankton bloom in a particular geographic area of the Santa Monica Bay, we can allocate our resources to that area so that we can monitor the evolution of that bloom as efficiently and extensively as possible."

        Holt noted that the diversion was also an opportunity for the NASA team to better understand the value of the different satellite images in studying offshore waters. "From the NASA point of view, it's a unique case of a really good coastal marine application of these assets."

         



        This message was sent to chantybanty1.chanti@blogger.com from:

        NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory | jplnewsroom@jpl.nasa.gov | NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory | 4800 Oak Grove Dr | Pasadena, CA 91109

        Friday, April 22, 2016

        It's easy to get rid of erectile dysfunction if you chose the right medication! Try it out!

        Changes are waiting for you!
        View this email in your browser
        Show must go on!

        Explore your love abilities!

        The likelihood of erectile dysfunction increases with age: 39% at age 40, 65% over the age of 65 years. Best medications available are sold at our trusted online pharmacy! This month at half price!


        Also we have
        - Antidiabetic
        - Stomach
        - Sleep Aid
        - Heart
        ... and more than 1.000 positions
        Change your life now!
        Use this link if button not work
        http://econtractors.com/FkyCDq
        Copy and paste the link to your browser

        You can update your preferences or unsubscribe from this list

        JPL News - Day in Review

         

        DAY IN REVIEW
        NASA JPL latest news release
        Join NASA for a #24Seven Celebration of Earth Day

        This Earth Day, NASA is giving the world an insider's look into the myriad activities the space agency conducts in a typical day to study and protect our home planet.

        And -- we're asking the world to share your Earth Day with us.

        NASA is posting about 200 images across nearly 100 different social media channels that capture the breadth of the agency's 24-hour-a-day work to study Earth. The images were captured during the week of March 27, but have been assembled chronologically to tell a story of a "day in the life" of NASA's Earth science work. The time-stamped posts hashtagged #24Seven will continue throughout Earth Day, April 22. View them all in the following online gallery:

        https://www.flickr.com/photos/earthrightnow/sets/72157665047762664

        We know we aren't the only people working to safeguard and understand our home planet. As you celebrate Earth Day, we're asking you to share on social media what you're doing to mark the day and celebrate our fragile home in space.

        Share your posts on Twitter or Instagram with the hashtag #24Seven, or on our Facebook Event page:

        https://www.facebook.com/events/232115933842860/?active_tab=posts

        Then keep watching the hashtag #24Seven throughout the day and watch a global picture emerge of how people everywhere are celebrating Earth Day.

         



        This message was sent to chantybanty1.chanti@blogger.com from:

        NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory | jplnewsroom@jpl.nasa.gov | NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory | 4800 Oak Grove Dr | Pasadena, CA 91109

        Thursday, April 21, 2016

        JPL News - Day in Review

         

        DAY IN REVIEW
        New Maps Chart Greenland Glaciers' Melting Risk
        New maps of the seafloor around Greenland help scientists understand which glaciers are at increased risk for melting.
        › Read the full story
        NASA Seeks Industry Ideas for an Advanced Mars Satellite
        NASA is soliciting ideas from U.S. industry for designs of a Mars orbiter for potential launch in the 2020s
        › Read the full story

         



        This message was sent to chantybanty1.chanti@blogger.com from:

        NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory | jplnewsroom@jpl.nasa.gov | NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory | 4800 Oak Grove Dr | Pasadena, CA 91109

        Tuesday, April 19, 2016

        JPL News - Day in Review

         

        DAY IN REVIEW
        NASA JPL latest news release
        New Ceres Images Show Bright Craters

        Craters with bright material on dwarf planet Ceres shine in new images from NASA's Dawn mission.

        In its lowest-altitude mapping orbit, at a distance of 240 miles (385 kilometers) from Ceres, Dawn has provided scientists with spectacular views of the dwarf planet.

        Haulani Crater, with a diameter of 21 miles (34 kilometers), shows evidence of landslides from its crater rim. Smooth material and a central ridge stand out on its floor. An enhanced false-color view allows scientists to gain insight into materials and how they relate to surface morphology. This image shows rays of bluish ejected material. The color blue in such views has been associated with young features on Ceres.

        DOWNLOAD VIDEO Unveiling Ceres

        "Haulani perfectly displays the properties we would expect from a fresh impact into the surface of Ceres. The crater floor is largely free of impacts, and it contrasts sharply in color from older parts of the surface," said Martin Hoffmann, co-investigator on the Dawn framing camera team, based at the Max Planck Institute for Solar System Research, Göttingen, Germany.

        The crater's polygonal nature (meaning it resembles a shape made of straight lines) is noteworthy because most craters seen on other planetary bodies, including Earth, are nearly circular. The straight edges of some Cerean craters, including Haulani, result from pre-existing stress patterns and faults beneath the surface.

        A hidden treasure on Ceres is the 6-mile-wide (10-kilometer-wide) Oxo Crater, which is the second-brightest feature on Ceres (only Occator's central area is brighter). Oxo lies near the 0 degree meridian that defines the edge of many Ceres maps, making this small feature easy to overlook. Oxo is also unique because of the relatively large "slump" in its crater rim, where a mass of material has dropped below the surface. Dawn science team members are also examining the signatures of minerals on the crater floor, which appear different than elsewhere on Ceres.

        "Little Oxo may be poised to make a big contribution to understanding the upper crust of Ceres," said Chris Russell, principal investigator of the mission, based at the University of California, Los Angeles.

        Guess what the bright spots are

        Dawn's mission is managed by JPL for NASA's Science Mission Directorate in Washington. Dawn is a project of the directorate's Discovery Program, managed by NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama. UCLA is responsible for overall Dawn mission science. Orbital ATK Inc., in Dulles, Virginia, designed and built the spacecraft. The German Aerospace Center, Max Planck Institute for Solar System Research, Italian Space Agency and Italian National Astrophysical Institute are international partners on the mission team. For a complete list of mission participants, visit:

        http://dawn.jpl.nasa.gov/mission

        More information about Dawn is available at the following sites:

        http://dawn.jpl.nasa.gov
        http://www.nasa.gov/dawn

         



        This message was sent to chantybanty1.chanti@blogger.com from:

        NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory | jplnewsroom@jpl.nasa.gov | NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory | 4800 Oak Grove Dr | Pasadena, CA 91109

        Too many qualified out there not to have a Degree

        Don't like the job you work at and you think about changing it for something better?
         

        - Is your lack of a degree holding you back from career advancement?

        - Are you having difficulty finding employment in your field of interest because you don't have the paper to back it up – even though you are qualified?

        You have a great chance to do it right now!

        Best diplomas in every field of knowledge are now available for your order!
        Get any Degree in 5 weeks with our program!
         

        Hurry up to start the new better life with the competitive salary. Best universities and colleges are open for you to apply right now!

        Add Bache1or's, Master's or Doctorate Degrees to your resume in just a few weeks and open avenues to promotion and better jobs!


          Our program will let ANYONE with professional experience gain a Degree:
        ~ Doctorate
        ~ Bachelors
        ~ Masters
          Get a Degree with our 5 WEEKS special program!
        - No Examination!
        - No Study!
        - No Class!

        Call us for a FREE PRIVATE consultation!
        International calls (USA) +1-206-428-1982
        - Fast worldwide shipping
        - 100% Confidenial

         

        Please leave us:

        - Your Name
        - Your Country
        - Your Phone number
        on the voicemail and one of our staff members will get back to you promptly!