Geometry.Net - the online learning center
Home  - Basic_B - Big Bang Astro-physics

e99.com Bookstore
  
Images 
Newsgroups
Page 3     41-60 of 81    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | Next 20
A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

         Big Bang Astro-physics:     more detail

41. Astro Physics -- Index
Astro physics. Reference, CLWISK02O00022. Gödel solution. Astrophysics ofthe bigbang. Black holes Degenerated metrics. Rotating black holes.
http://aivwww.rug.ac.be/Studentenadministratie/Studiegids/2002/EN/FACULTY/C_WE/C
Astro physics Reference Lectured in Optional Course List Second Cycle Mathematics
Theory (A) Exercises (B) Training and projects (C) Studytime (D) Studypoints (E) Language of instruction Dutch Lecturer Herwig Dejonghe Semester second Department Co-lecturers Key Words Objectives In the second candidature, an introductory course in astronomy gives an overview of the various disciplines which have been or are currently practiced in astronomy. This course is an extension of the general course offered in the second candidature, with the objective, on the one hand, to fill in voids, which due to lack of time cannot be handled satisfactorily during the second candidature, while providing some essential material on the other. Contents Astrophysical applications to general relativity :
Interference problem : Theory of passive observation. Integral equations and major analytical and numerical solution methods. Astronomical applications.
Gravitational N-body problem : from a practical perspective. Regularising pair interactions. Transformation of Levi-Civita and Kunstaanheimo-Stiefel. Formulation of the problem using quaternions. Course Material a syllabus is available References Teaching Methods theory : lectures
exercises : tutorials Evaluation Methods periodical evaluation on-going evaluation Examination Methods theory : mixed
exercises : written Prerequisites

42. Astro Physics -- Index
Astro physics. Reference, CLWISK02K00086. Gödel solution. Astrophysics ofthe bigbang. Black holes Degenerated metrics. Rotating black holes.
http://aivwww.rug.ac.be/Studentenadministratie/Studiegids/2000/EN/FACULTY/C_WE/C
Astro physics Reference Lectured in Elective Courses Second Year Second Cycle Mathematics
Theory (A) Exercises (B) Training and projects (C) Studytime (D) Studypoints (E) Lecturer Herwig Dejonghe Semester second Department Co-lecturers Key Words Objectives In the second candidature, an introductory course in astronomy gives an overview of the various disciplines which have been or are currently practiced in astronomy. This course is an extension of the general course offered in the second candidature, with the objective, on the one hand, to fill in voids, which due to lack of time cannot be handled satisfactorily during the second candidature, while providing some essential material on the other. Contents Astrophysical applications to general relativity :
Interference problem : Theory of passive observation. Integral equations and major analytical and numerical solution methods. Astronomical applications.
Gravitational N-body problem : from a practical perspective. Regularising pair interactions. Transformation of Levi-Civita and Kunstaanheimo-Stiefel. Formulation of the problem using quaternions. Course Material a syllabus is available References Teaching Methods theory : lectures
exercises : tutorials Evaluation Methods periodical evaluation on-going evaluation Examination Methods theory : mixed
exercises : written Prerequisites

43. The LOTA Philosophy Of Science, Keyword References
and disorder, Great Scaling Pattern, unfolding universe, astro physics, DNA double builtreality, David Bohm, unbroken wholeness, the big bang alternative, CERN
http://www.slenters.ch/lota/refer/
contents
  • The LOTA philosophy
    Keyword references to other science and philosophy ideas
    The unifying capability of the LOTA philosophy of science is demonstrated in Breakthrough by integrating 80 important science and philosophy concepts, many were previously not linked because they seemed in contradiction. Here is a partial listing of associated keywords:
    Back to the book on LOTA
    Go to: LOTA philosophy Book Praise Author ...
    Educators world

    Last modified: December 2001
  • 44. Time.9904: [time 176] Re: [time 173] Alternatives To The Big Ba
    http//wwwastro.physics.uiowa.edu/~jsm/synop8.htm http//www.bowdoin.edu/dept paperForbidden Symmetry, I explored the idea that The big bang's radiation and
    http://kims.ms.u-tokyo.ac.jp/time/199904/0097.html
    [time 176] Re: [time 173] Alternatives to the Big Bang
    Stephen P. King stephenk1@home.com
    Mon, 05 Apr 1999 12:27:10 -0400 Ben et al,
    I do appreciate your thinking here. Cosmogony (the philosophy of
    origins of the Universe e.g.
    http://www.kheper.auz.com/topics/Meher_Baba/MeherBaba-cosmogony.htm
    ) has
    been a long time subject of study for me. The key assumption of the Big
    Bang is the assumption of unique initiality; without this assumption, it
    is just GR. Eventually we will bring Peter Wegner in on the discussion
    and we will deal with initiality. I am scheduled to speak with him this
    evening, barring Camile's birth... :)
    Ben Goertzel wrote: > >explains. It postulates a unique "beginning" and "end" to spacetime.

    45. Stuart L. Shapiro, UIUC Physics
    704 217333-5427 (office) 217-333-9783 (lab) shapiro@astro.physics.uiuc.edu, of gravitationalwaves, the formation of black holes, big-bang nucleosynthesis and
    http://www.physics.uiuc.edu/People/Faculty/profiles/Shapiro/
    Stuart L. Shapiro
    Professor of Physics and Astronomy and
    NCSA Senior Research Scientist
    Office: 237A Loomis
    Campus Mail:
    Dept of Physics, MC-704
    217-333-5427 (office)
    217-333-9783 (lab)
    shapiro@astro.physics.uiuc.edu
    Department of Physics
    University of Illinois
    at Urbana-Champaign 1110 West Green Street Urbana, IL 61801-3080 USA Professor Shapiro received his A.B in Astronomy from Harvard in 1969 and his M.A. and Ph.D. degrees in Astrophysical Sciences from Princeton University in 1971 and 1973, respectively. He went from research associate to full professor of astronomy and physics at Cornell University (1973-1995) before relocating to the University of Illinois in 1996. cluster to a black hole, the demonstration that toroidal black holes can arise as transients during gravitational collapse, and the possibility that naked singularities might form during the collapse of collisionless matter from reasonable initial conditions, thereby violating cosmic censorship. Long interested in the future detection of gravitational waves by laser interferometers like LIGO and LISA, Shapiro and his group are working on the theory of gravitational wave generation and the identification of promising astrophysical sources. Honors and Awards Personal Home Page Vitae (Postscript)

    46. [astro-ph/9411038] The Particle- And Astro-Physics Of Dark Matter
    The Particle and astro-physics of Dark Matter. We discuss the interpretation ofbig bang nucleosynthesis for dark matter, and then review the motivation for
    http://arxiv.org/abs/astro-ph/9411038
    Astrophysics, abstract
    astro-ph/9411038
    From: griest@astrophys.UCSD.EDU (Kim Griest) Date: Wed, 9 Nov 94 11:27:33 PST (25kb)
    The Particle- and Astro-Physics of Dark Matter
    Author: Kim Griest
    Comments: Plenary review talk at Snowmass 94 (Particle and Nuclear Astrophysics and Cosmology in the Next Millennium, June 1994.), 13 pages (tex, phyzzx macro package included)
    Report-no: UCSD/PTH 94-20
    We review some recent determinations of the amount of dark matter on galactic, cluster, and large scales, noting some puzzles and their possible resolutions. We discuss the interpretation of big bang nucleosynthesis for dark matter, and then review the motivation for and basic physics of several dark matter candidates, including Machos, Wimps, axions, and neutrinos. Finally, we discuss how the uncertainty in the models of the Milky Way dark halo will affect the dark matter detection experiments.
    Full-text: PostScript PDF , or Other formats
    References and citations for this submission:
    SLAC-SPIRES HEP
    (refers to , cited by , arXiv reformatted);

    47. University Of Oxford Annual Review - Oxford And Astrophysics
    of the Subdepartment of Astrophysics can be found at wwwastro.physics.ox.ac.uk. Particlesand forces are believed to have originated in the big bang about 15
    http://www.ox.ac.uk/publicrelations/pubs/annualreview/ar00/02.shtml
    PDF version of this page Home
    Go to.... Contents Foreword English at Oxford Oxford and Astrophysics Oxford and China Oxford and Wildlife Oxford and its Collections Oxford and Access Students at Oxford Oxford and Development Oxford around the World Oxford and the Community Planning and Finance New Appointments New Heads of House Honours and Distinctions Honorary Degrees Conferred APPENDICES: 1. Applications and Acceptances 2. Student Numbers in Residence 2iii. Student Numbers/Country of Origin 2iv. Student Numbers/Final Honour School 3. Benefactions 4. Externally Funded Research Grants
    Oxford and Astrophysics
    Research at the Edge of Knowledge
    Understanding how the universe began and evolved is a Holy Grail that is pushing theoretical and experimental techniques to the edge
    Dr Gavin Dalton examines one of the 90 sky suvey plates that form the target catalogue for the 2dF Galaxy Redshift Survey. The information has been digitised to form an electronic database of more than 4 million faint galaxies (picture: Phil Sayer) The website of the Subdepartment of Astrophysics can be found at www-astro.physics.ox.ac.uk

    48. Listings Of The World Science Physics Astrophysics
    calculations, such as nucleosynthesis, stellar evolution, the big bang, and super http//wwwastro.physics.uiowa.edu/~lam/research/rings/- Added Nov-27-02;
    http://listingsworld.com/Science/Physics/Astrophysics/

    49. Physikalisches Kolloquium
    big bang relic neutrinos to
    http://www.physi.uni-heidelberg.de/dates/HEPKolloq/HEPKolloq.html

    50. Online NewsHour: Nobel Prize -- October 8, 2002
    I think that much of modern Astro Physics particularly xray astronomy hasgiven up an For instance, in our body, the hydrogen comes from the big bang.
    http://www.pbs.org/newshour/bb/science/july-dec02/nobel_10-8.html
    NOBEL PRIZE
    October 8, 2002
    Ray Suarez speaks with Riccardo Giacconi, one of today's winners of the Nobel Prize for Physics.
    RAY SUAREZ: This year's Nobel Prize in Physics went to three astrophysicists. One of them, Riccardo Giacconi, is known as the father of x-ray astronomy. He is President of the Associated Universities Incorporated, a nonprofit company that operates astronomical observatories for the academic research community. He joins us now. First of all congratulations. It must be quite a thrill to get that call. RICCARDO GIACCONI: Yes, even though it was very early in the morning. RAY SUAREZ: Now as the father of x-ray astronomy, you were guessing that if we looked for x-rays coming from space instead of just the light of the stars, we'd learn something? RICCARDO GIACCONI: Well, let me put it this way. We were hoping to find x-ray star. We didn't know for sure what they would be. We were lucky enough to see them, and what was really surprising was how bright they were in the x-rays. And that implied that they were different kind of stars than our own sun. In our own sun only a very small amount of light comes out in x-rays. In these objects that we found, most of the light comes out in x-rays. RAY SUAREZ: So they're really shining in effect but shining in a part of the light spectrum that we can't see.

    51. Puplications
    10) Heavy sterile neutrinos Bounds from bigbang nucleosynthesis andSN 1987A AD Dolgov, SH Hansen, G. Raffelt, DV Semikoz, Nucl. Phys.
    http://www-astro.physics.ox.ac.uk/~hansen/papers/papers.html
    Publications
    Papers
    "The origin of cores and density profiles of baryonic structures"
    S. H. Hansen, J. Stadel
    Subm. to ApJ [astro-ph/0303416] "Extraction of cluster parameters with future Sunyaev-Zel'dovich observations"
    N. Aghanim, S. H. Hansen, S. Pastor, D. Semikoz
    Subm. to JCAP [astro-ph/0212392] "Observational constraint on the fourth derivative of the inflaton potential"
    C. Caprini,S. H. Hansen, M. Kunz
    MNRAS (2003) 212 [hep-ph/0210095]. "The impack of relativistic corrections and component separation in the measurement of the SZ effect
    and on the small angular scale non-Gaussianity of the CMB"

    J. M. Diego, S. H. Hansen, J. Silk
    MNRAS (2003) 796 [astro-ph/0207178] "First measurement of cluster temperature using the thermal Sunyaev-Zeldovich effect"
    S.H. Hansen, S. Pastor, D.V. Semikoz Astrophys. J. (2002) L69 [astro-ph/0205295] "Cosmological bounds on neutrino degeneracy improved by flavor oscillations" A.D. Dolgov, S.H. Hansen, S. Pastor, S.T. Petcov, G.G. Raffelt, D.V. Semikoz Nucl. Phys. (2002) 363 [hep-ph/0201287] "Interacting Dark Matter disguised as Warm Dark Matter" C. Boehm, A. Riazuelo, S. H. Hansen, R.Schaeffer

    52. Synoptic Physics Tutorial Content
    5. Nuclear and Astro Physics. Alpha, beta and gamma radiation. The concept ofexponential decay. Nuclear abundances. The bigbang and astro phenomena.
    http://hepwww.ph.qmw.ac.uk/~gt/syn/syncont.htm
    Synoptic Physics : PHY - 300
    QMW Synoptic Physics Tutorial Content
    Tutorial Content: The topics for the six tutorial sessions will be:
  • 1. Classical Mechanics: Gravitation and Rotational Forces. Gravity and centripetal forces producing stable orbits and tidal forces. Conservation of energy, momentum, angular momentum.
  • 2. Electromagnetism and Lorentz Forces. Trajectories of charged particles. Electrostatic and Magnetic fields. Resistance, Capacity and Inductance, The Hall effect, how semi-conductors work.
  • 3. Optics and Interference. Refractive index and rainbows. Lenses and ray-optics. Young's double-slit experiment. Interference and diffraction.
  • 4. Thermodynamics. Thermodynamics as a result of molecular dynamics. Energies and the First Law. Ideal gas and state changes. Carnot cycle. The second law and entropy.
  • 5. Nuclear and Astro Physics. Alpha, beta and gamma radiation. The concept of exponential decay. Nuclear abundances. The big-bang and astro phenomena.
  • 6. Problem Solving. Some useful general techniques in solving problems. Drawing a relevant diagram. Choosing the right "unknowns". Writing down something which is correct! Inverting and solving equations. This page was last updated on 25/07/2000 by the course organiser
  • 53. Browsing Science Physics Astrophysics Category
    calculations, such as nucleosynthesis, stellar evolution, the big bang, and super http//wwwastro.physics.uiowa.edu/~lam/research/rings/Preview This Site.
    http://www.uksprite.com/search/search/Science/Physics/Astrophysics/
    /* CSS Menu highlight- By Marc Boussard (marc.boussard@syntegra.fr) Modified by DD for NS4 compatibility Visit http://www.dynamicdrive.com for this script */ var ns4class=''
    WebSearch Low-cost advertising at UKSprite Join Login @UK.Sprite Home Latest Headlines UK Weather World Weather ... UK Travel Guide Fun TV Guide Lotto e-Greetings Mobile Fun Communicate Email Login Get Free Email Free Text Messages Lifestyle Horoscopes Dating Recipes Health Shop DVD's Books Videos More... Deals Auctions Classified Ads Site Map
    Browsing: Science Physics Astrophysics Top Science Physics Astrophysics
    Categories: Black Holes
    Computational Software

    Cosmology

    Gamma-ray Observatories
    ...
    X-ray Observatories

    Related Categories:
    Science: Astronomy

    Science: Physics: Nuclear
    Science: Physics: Particle: Astro Particle Science: Physics: Plasma: Space Plasmas ... Above the Skies, An Exploration into Our Universe Through Animated Spectroscopy A description at the layman level about the applications of spectroscopy in the investigation of the Solar System, with interactive diagrams http://hea-www.harvard.edu/~efortin/thesis/html/index.shtml

    54. Imagine The Universe! Dictionary
    big bang A theory of cosmology in which the expansion of the universe is presumedto have begun with a primeval explosion (referred to as the big bang ).
    http://imagine.gsfc.nasa.gov/docs/dictionary.html
    Imagine the Universe! Dictionary
    Please allow the whole page to load before you start searching for an entry. Otherwise, errors will occur. A B C D ... Z (Note - Greek letters are written out by name - alpha, beta etc.)
    A
    accretion
    Accumulation of dust and gas onto larger bodies such as stars, planets and moons. accretion disk
    A relatively flat sheet of gas and dust surrounding a newborn star, a black hole, or any massive object growing in size by attracting material. active galactic nuclei (AGN)
    A class of galaxies which spew massive amounts of energy from their centers, far more than ordinary galaxies. Many astronomers believe supermassive black holes may lie at the center of these galaxies and power their explosive energy output.
    angstrom
    A unit of length equal to 0.00000001 centimeters. This may also be written as 1 x 10 cm (see scientific notation angular momentum
    A quantity obtained by multiplying the mass of an orbiting body by its velocity and the radius of its orbit. According to the conservation laws of physics, the angular momentum of any orbiting body must remain constant at all points in the orbit, i.e., it cannot be created or destroyed. If the orbit is elliptical the radius will vary. Since the mass is constant, the velocity changes. Thus planets in elliptical orbits travel faster at periastron and more slowly at apastron . A spinning body also possesses spin angular momentum. apastron
    The point of greatest separation between two stars which are in orbit around each other. See

    55. Constellation X Scientific Audiences
    wwwastro.physics.ox.ac.uk/~warner/, Koji Mukai. The Space Telescope Science Institute1999 May Symposium The Largest Explosions Since the big bang Supernovae
    http://constellation.gsfc.nasa.gov/docs/resources/meetings.html
    Skip navigation and go to page content Constellation-X Meetings List Meeting Support Person 199th Meeting of the American Astronomical Society
    6/10 January 2002
    Washington, DC
    http://www.aas.org/meetings/aas199/prelim/prelim.html
    Pat Tyler, tyler@lheapop.gsfc.nasa.gov Completed 198th Meeting of the American Astronomical Society
    3-7 June 2001
    Pasadena, CA
    http://www.aas.org/meetings/aas198/prelim/prelim.html
    Pat Tyler, tyler@lheapop.gsfc.nasa.gov Facility Science Team (FST) Meeting
    3-4 May 2001
    SAO 197th Meeting of the American Astronomical Society
    January 2001
    San Diego, CA http://www.aas.org/publications/baas/v32n4/aas197/SL.htm Pat Tyler, tyler@lheapop.gsfc.nasa.gov Facility Science Team (FST) Meeting 19-20 June 2000 Building 26, Room 205 NASA Goddard Space Flight Center http://conxproject.gsfc.nasa.gov/fstjuneinfo.htm Sandy Barnes, sbarnes@lheapop.gsfc.nasa.gov 196th Meeting of the American Astronomical Society June 2000 Rochester, NY http://www.aas.org/publications/baas/v32n2/aas196/SL.htm Pat Tyler 195th Meeting of the American Astronomical Society January 2000 Atlanta, GA

    56. Science & Nature / Physics / Cosmology
    inevitable effect why not? Is Sitchkin's theory any more or less viable thanthe big bang, than evolutionary anthropology, than astro physics, than any
    http://hallphysic.com/physics/4.shtml
    Home Physics Cosmology
    The Elegant Universe: Superstrings, Hidden Dimensions, and the Quest for the Ultimate Theory
    by Brian Greene
    Hardcover - 448 pages
    1 Ed edition (February 1999)
    Amazon.com
    There is an ill-concealed skeleton in the closet of physics: "As they are currently formulated, general relativity and quantum mechanics cannot both be right ." Each is exceedingly accurate in its field: general relativity explains the behavior of the universe at large scales, while quantum mechanics... Read more
    A Brief History of Time

    by Stephen Hawking Bantam Doubleday Dell Pub (Trd Pap)
    Paperback - 212 pages
    10th anniv edition (October 1998)
    (September 1, 1998) Amazon.com Stephen Hawking, one of the most brilliant theoretical physicists in history, wrote the modern classic A Brief History of Time to help nonscientists understand the questions being asked by scientists today: Where did the universe come from? How and why did it begin? Will it come to an end, and if... Read more The Cosmic Code (The Earth Chronicles, No 6) by Zecharia Sitchin Avon Mass Market Paperback - 298 pages (December 1998) Synopsis Many thousands of years ago, a race of extraordinary beings guided the evolution of life on earth, determining the existence and nature of mankind as we know it today. From deep inside ancient Sumerian texts that predate even the Bible, Zecharia Sitchin dares to reveal the nature of prophecy and...

    57. Cosmology And Astro Physics
    Translate this page Cosmology and Astro Physics. *. (*) t = 0s Die Schöpfung des Universumsaus dem Ylem (Uratom, kosmischen Ei), der Urknall oder big bang.
    http://www.algebra.at/macroobjects.htm
    Cosmology and Astro Physics
    Structures of Macro Objects Cataclysmic Events Final States of Stars Trans Fermium Elements Cosmological Standard Model and Evolution of Stars (2002/11/14) Die Kosmologie Evolution (zeitliche Entwicklung) und
    die des Kosmos (Universums, der Welt).
    [griech. "ho kósmos" ... Welt(ordnung), (gestirnter) Himmel;
    lat. "univérsum" ... Weltall.]
    Die Astrophysik erforscht die Entwicklung und Zusammensetzung
    der Sterne und Galaxien
    [griech. "to ástron" ... Stern(bild), Gestirn;
    Dan (96/01/12):
    Das kosmologische Standardmodell:

    Im Folgenden bedeutet t die absolute Zeit
    in Sekunden s bzw. Jahren a nach der T die mittlere Temperatur des Weltalls in Kelvin K und E die mittlere thermische Energie in Elektron-Volt eV. t = 0s ... Die des Universums aus dem Ylem (Uratom, kosmischen Ei), der Urknall oder Big Bang. Die 4 Wechselwirkungen sind in einer fundamentalen vereinigt t = 10 s Abkopplung der Gravitation aber weitere Vereinigung von starker, elektromagnetischer und schwacher Wechselwirkung, Grand Unified Theories T = 10 K, E = 10

    58. Astronomy Quiz 2 :
    of problems arising while submitting answers online , answers can be mailed directlyto astro@physics.iisc.ernet Question 5. Connect bigbang and Pigeon Shit !
    http://www.iisc.ernet.in/~astro/quiz2.html
    BACK TO MAIN PAGE Astronomy Quiz 2 : The Last date for this quiz is up. Here are the Answers to Quiz-2 and following are the winners .Also have a Look at Quiz 1 and Quiz 3 Rules: *One Entry per person. * Last Date for submission of answers is 10th Nov ,2000. * 5 entries with maximum number of correct answers will get an Astronomy related educational CD-ROM courtesy Laboratory for High Energy Astrophysics at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center * In the event of a Tie , the entry that was submitted earlier will be considered. *In the case of problems arising while submitting answers online , answers can be mailed directly to astro@physics.iisc.ernet.in Question 1.
    What does Calvin ( in the cartoon strip Calvin and Hobbes) call as "The Horrendous Space Kablooie" ? Question 2.
    The Direction of Rotation of the planet Venus and revolution around the sun are the same as that of Earth. Yet, on Venus , the Sun would rise in the West and set in the East. How is this possible ? Question 3.

    59. The Royal Society - Grants & Funding - Current Holders Of Royal Society Research
    The formation and evolution of galaxies from the big bang to the present day. kmb@astro.ox.ac.ukfax 01865 273390 web site http//wwwastro.physics.ox.ac.uk
    http://www.royalsoc.ac.uk/funding/dir_urf_b.htm
    Current holders of Royal Society Research Appointments
    University Research Fellows: B BAKER, Dr Joanne C. Department of Physics, Keble Road, Oxford, OX1 3RH.
    Tel:
    email: jcb@astro.ox.ac.uk
    fax:
    Formation of massive structures at high redshift. BANFIELD, Dr Mark J. Department of Biochemistry, University of Bristol, School of Medical Sciences, University Walk, BRISTOL, BS8 1TD.
    Tel:
    email: m.banfield@bristol.ac.uk
    Sturcture/function studies of pathogenic E.coli (EPEC/EHEC) effector molecules. BARRACLOUGH, Dr Timothy G. Department of Biology, Imperial College at Silwood Park, ASCOT, Berkshire, SL5 7PY.
    Tel:
    email:
    t.barraclough@ic.ac.uk
    fax: web site: http://www.bio.ic.ac.uk/ Evolution of species diversity. BARRETT, Dr Kathy. Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, University College London, Gower Street, LONDON, WC1E 6BT. Tel: email: kathy@ludwig.ucl.ac.uk fax: web site: http://www.ludwig.ucl.ac.uk/kathy.html

    60. Encyclopædia Britannica
    Covers accelerators, detectors, big bang science, and dark matter. departments,journals, and specific fields such as astronomy, astrophysics, and particle
    http://search.britannica.com/search?query=particle physics&fuzzy=N&ct=igv&start=

    A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

    Page 3     41-60 of 81    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | Next 20

    free hit counter