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architecture, Charles Eames designer, culture, design, education, faith, film, Furniture design, globalist agendas, history, Hollywood, home schooling, IBM, Industrial Design, inspiration, mainstream media, manufacturing and the photographic arts, Office of Charles and Ray Eames, Philip Morrison and Phylis Morrison scientists, politicians, Powers of Ten book title, Powers of Ten film, Ray Eames designer, Scientific American Library, teacher resource, time and space, universe
Powers of Ten was published in 1982 by the Scientific American Library Series. It was the first in the series. The book photographically takes us through our universe from the dimension of one billion light years away and brings us back to earth to the atom’s interior. How awesome is that!
This photo brings us inside the atom found in the hand of the sleeping man measured in fermi (a unit of length equal to 10−15 meter (one femtometer), used in nuclear physics. It is similar to the diameter of a proton).
Now lets take a look going the other way from the sleeping man on earth outward into the universe.
The blue square represents where the sleeping man is in relation to outerspace. We travel through the galaxies where the estimation of time and space is a fluid one.
Powers of Ten is the book version of the film Powers of Ten: A Film Dealing with the Relative Size of Things in the Universe and the Effect of Adding Another Zero made in 1977 by the Office of Charles and Ray Eames for IBM. Below is the film with a running time of 9 minutes.
For all those politicians, mainstream media, Hollywood and radical everything types pushing your failing globalist agendas, STOP and REMEMBER from outer space you really are ALL just one of the “little people” anyway.