Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

photonic cloning of seas and oceans

View through CrossRef
Abstract When studying the water reality and calculating the increase in the quantities of water per year, we find that there is another way to increase the percentage of water, and that is through optical reproduction. For a detailed explanation of the location of water on Earth, see the map and the data table shown below. Note that the world’s add up to water supply is almost 1.387 million cubic kilometers (332.6 cubic miles) of wate, of which more than 96% is salt water. As for fresh water, more than 96% are trapped by rivers and glaciers, and 30% are on the ground. As for the freshwater resources represented in rivers and lakes, they constitute about 93,100 cubic kilometers (22,300 cubic miles), which is about 1/150 of 1% of the total water. Rivers and lakes still make up most of the water sources that people use daily. The amount of water stored in the oceans for long periods is much more than that which moves through the water cycle. The total water supply worldwide is 1,386,000,000 cubic kilometers (321,000,000 cubic miles), of which 1,338,0, 000 cubic kilometers (332,500,000 cubic miles) are stored in the oceans at a rate of 95%, as the oceans give almost 90% of the water. Dissipated that goes to the water cycle. The photonic cloning resulting by the sun contributes to the consistency of water level. Indeed, the consistency of ocean water depends not only on the natural cycle of evaporation process of those waters to return to the oceans again, but also on the photonic cloning resulting by the sun, as experiment has vividly shown.
Title: photonic cloning of seas and oceans
Description:
Abstract When studying the water reality and calculating the increase in the quantities of water per year, we find that there is another way to increase the percentage of water, and that is through optical reproduction.
For a detailed explanation of the location of water on Earth, see the map and the data table shown below.
Note that the world’s add up to water supply is almost 1.
387 million cubic kilometers (332.
6 cubic miles) of wate, of which more than 96% is salt water.
As for fresh water, more than 96% are trapped by rivers and glaciers, and 30% are on the ground.
As for the freshwater resources represented in rivers and lakes, they constitute about 93,100 cubic kilometers (22,300 cubic miles), which is about 1/150 of 1% of the total water.
Rivers and lakes still make up most of the water sources that people use daily.
The amount of water stored in the oceans for long periods is much more than that which moves through the water cycle.
The total water supply worldwide is 1,386,000,000 cubic kilometers (321,000,000 cubic miles), of which 1,338,0, 000 cubic kilometers (332,500,000 cubic miles) are stored in the oceans at a rate of 95%, as the oceans give almost 90% of the water.
Dissipated that goes to the water cycle.
The photonic cloning resulting by the sun contributes to the consistency of water level.
Indeed, the consistency of ocean water depends not only on the natural cycle of evaporation process of those waters to return to the oceans again, but also on the photonic cloning resulting by the sun, as experiment has vividly shown.

Related Results

Two-dimensional function photonic crystal
Two-dimensional function photonic crystal
Photonic crystal is a kind of periodic optical nanostructure consisting of two or more materials with different dielectric constants, which has attracted great deal of attention be...
Thoughts on the evolution of modern oceans
Thoughts on the evolution of modern oceans
Explanation of the evolution of the Earth's oceans, particularly the processes involved in the generation of the oceans, are important for understanding the general appearance of o...
Analysis of photonic crystal transmission properties by the precise integration time domain
Analysis of photonic crystal transmission properties by the precise integration time domain
Photonic crystals are materials patterned with a periodicity in the dielectric constant, which can create a range of forbidden frequencies called as a photonic band gap. The photon...
Freedom in the High Seas
Freedom in the High Seas
This study is to determine how the implementation of the use of forms of freedom in the high seas according to the 1982 Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS 1982) and how the e...
Epicontinental seas as efficient carbon sinks: proto-Paratethys & West Siberian seas during the PETM
Epicontinental seas as efficient carbon sinks: proto-Paratethys & West Siberian seas during the PETM
<p>Removal of carbon on geological timescales is generally assumed to be governed by the relative strength of silicate weathering and organic carbon burial. For past ...
Reconciling bathymetric anomalies of marginal sea basins through magmatic and cooling processes
Reconciling bathymetric anomalies of marginal sea basins through magmatic and cooling processes
       Bathymetry of marginal sea basins is commonly deeper than the half-space cooling prediction for large oceans, but what controls this patt...
Unidirectional Maxwellian spin waves
Unidirectional Maxwellian spin waves
Abstract In this article, we develop a unified perspective of unidirectional topological edge waves in nonreciprocal media. We focus on the inherent role of photonic...

Back to Top