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         Relativity:     more books (100)
  1. The Einstein Theory of Relativity: A Trip to the Fourth Dimension by Lillian R. Lieber, 2008-10-01
  2. General Theory of Relativity by P. A.M. Dirac, 1996-01-08
  3. Relativity and Common Sense by Hermann Bondi, 1980-07-01
  4. It's About Time: Understanding Einstein's Relativity by N. David Mermin, 2009-07-06
  5. The Mathematical Theory of Relativity by Arthur Stanley Eddington, 2010-01-14
  6. Ontological Relativity by W. V. Quine, 1977-04-15
  7. The Geometry of Spacetime: An Introduction to Special and General Relativity (Undergraduate Texts in Mathematics) by James J. Callahan, 2010-11-02
  8. Introduction to General Relativity by John Dirk Walecka, 2007-05-16
  9. Gravity: An Introduction to Einstein's General Relativity by James B. Hartle, 2003-01-05
  10. Spacetime and Geometry: An Introduction to General Relativity by Sean Carroll, 2003-09-28
  11. Works of Albert Einstein: On the Electrodynamics of Moving Bodies, Relativity: The Special and General Theory, Sidelights on Relativity, Dialog about Objections ... the Theory of Relativity & more (mobi) by Albert Einstein, 2009-12-15
  12. Advanced Mechanics and General Relativity by Joel Franklin, 2010-08-01
  13. The Special Theory of Relativity (Routledge Classics) by David Bohm, 2006-09-15
  14. What Is Relativity? by L. D. Landau, G. B. Rumer, 2003-01-23

41. The Relativity Song
The relativity Song. words by Walter Fox Smith and Marian McKenzie Tune Fathoms Below , by Alan Menken (From Disney s The Little Mermaid )
http://www.haverford.edu/physics/songs/relsong.htm
The Relativity Song words by Walter Fox Smith and Marian McKenzie
Tune: "Fathoms Below", by Alan Menken
(From Disney's " The Little Mermaid ") NEW! Recording: RealAudio
(mp3 is higher audio quality, but the RealAudio file is smaller, and so better if you're using a modem connection) Background courtesy of Free Backgrounds.com

42. NASA - Relativity
relativity is either of two theories of physics developed by the Germanborn American physicist Albert Einstein. Those theories are (1) the special theory
http://www.nasa.gov/worldbook/relativity_worldbook.html
Follow this link to skip to the main content
NASA - National Aeronautics and Space Administration
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  • NASA Home ... var itemIdAndJSFileURL= 'multimedia_worldbook$/templateimages/redesign/leftnav-htmls/multimedia_.js'; var splitResult = itemIdAndJSFileURL.split("$"); $('menu_item_id').value = splitResult[0]; var url = splitResult[1]; var defPage = '/templateimages/redesign/leftnav-htmls/home_.js'; if(url == '.js') url = defPage; document.write('' + '');
    World Book at NASA
    Text Size Relativity Relativity is either of two theories of physics developed by the German-born American physicist Albert Einstein. Those theories are (1) the special theory of relativity, which was published in 1905; and (2) the general theory of relativity, announced in 1915. Einstein's theories explain the behavior of matter, energy, and even time and space. They are two of the "foundation blocks" upon which modern physics is built. The theories of relativity describe events so strange that people find it difficult to understand how they could possibly occur. For example, one person can observe that two events happen at the same time, while another person observes that they occur at different times. A clock can appear to one observer to be running at a given rate, yet seem to another observer to run at a different rate. Two observers can measure the length of the same rod correctly but obtain different results. Matter can turn into energy, and energy can turn into matter.

43. RELATIVITY | Business Technology Solutions | Web 2.0 Marketing Solutions
relativity, Inc Business Technolgy Solutions and Web 2.0 Marketing Solutions Company Corporate Website.
http://www.relativitycorp.com/
T ranslate our Site: Search our Site:
Web 2.0 Marketing Solutions
The Web 2.0 Division has taken traditional text based internet marketing techniques and combined them with Web 2.0 Technologies like audio, video, social networking and mobile promotion. The goal of the Web 2.0 Division is to get your product and service messages into the everyday lives of the internet public at lower costs than traditional media outlets. The current global marketplace has never been easier to penetrate or more accessible in the history of business. The current global business atmosphere has been transformed from the era when only large corporations and governments could participate to one of greater equity and potential. This has happened in large part due to advancing technology, connectivity via the internet, proliferation of search engine technology and the way data is indexed and analyzed. Relativity can assist your organization to be more effective and fiscally efficient when entering into the advanced technologically enhanced global market arena. Time is money and the longer your organization has to wait to get its products or services to the market place, the longer it takes to generate profits. Traditional media outlets such as television advertising and print media can often be very expensive and their effectiveness hard to measure. The traditional advertising model based on price incentives or reputation capital are becoming less and less appealing to consumers of the 18-34 market place. It has been shown that 70% of all searchers use the internet to perform product or service research. This trend clearly demonstrates that people in this age bracket are not merely looking for a good deal but they are also looking for a way to make better decisions about their purchases.

44. M.C. Escher - Relativity - Art Print - Globalgallery.com
MC Escher, relativity art print. Explore our extensive MC Escher collection of fine art prints. Global Gallery offer thousands of museum quality art prints,
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Maurits Cornelis Escher (1898-1972) is one of the world's most famous graphic artists. His art is enjoyed by millions of people all over the world. He created visual riddles, playing with the pictorially logical and the visually impossible. M.C. Escher, during his lifetime, made 448 lithographs, woodcuts and wood engravings and over 2000 drawings and sketches. Like some of his famous predecessors, - Michelangelo, Leonardo da Vinci, Dürer and... view complete escher biography
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    45. Special Relativity Home
    This exercise is NOT a complete unit, rather it supports teaching and learning about special relativity in a regular physics course.
    http://ed.fnal.gov/data/phy_sci/relativity/index.shtml
    What Happens When Things Go Near the Speed of Light?
    Investigating Special Relativity with Particle Physics Data
    Project Page
    Ed home Data Home Teacher Homepage Student Homepage Abstract: This exercise is NOT a complete unit, rather it supports teaching and learning about special relativity in a regular physics course. We provide experimental data in many forms for student use. Students can download an ASCII file which contains the data or view plots that we have generated. Whether they plot their own graphs or study those provided on the site, careful analysis of the data yields an understanding of special relativity constructed from data analysis. Students can derive a form of the relativistic correction factor often referred to as "gamma." Introduction to Research: The content is framed within a student scenario that contains an authentic student task , a challenging problem and requires multidisciplinary inquiry and investigation. The task will require collaboration with peers and possibly mentors. Fermilab Experiment E687 In this experiment, a high-energy photon is created by a proton from the accelerator. The photon strikes a stationary slab of beryllium. This collision occasionally results in the creation of a

    46. General Relativity And Quantum Cosmology
    EPrint Archive gr-qc in which many articles about general relativity and related topics are published (in advance of publication in conventional
    http://arxiv.org/archive/gr-qc
    arXiv.org gr-qc
    Search or Article-id Help Advanced search All papers Titles Authors Abstracts Full text Help pages
    General Relativity and Quantum Cosmology (since 7/92)
    • Search gr-qc titles/authors or full-text Listings: new (most recent mailing), recent (past week), and current month's gr-qc listings For a specific paper, enter the identifier into the top right search box e-Prints are available for years:
    Links to: arXiv form interface find gr-qc ... Access key information)

    47. Millennium Relativity
    Millennium relativity is a new theory in relativistic physics that replaces Einstein s theories of special relativity and general relativity.
    http://www.mrelativity.net/
    Millennium relativity is a new theory in relativistic physics that replaces Einstein's special and general theories of relativity. More than ten years of research into the accepted body of experimental evidence leads to the discovery of significant flaws in the underlying foundations of both relativistic and classical physics. The new theory systematically resolves these issues beginning with an analysis of the classical principles of motion and progressing through thirteen additional works involving relativistic and classical principles. The research papers are presented below in the order in which they were completed. Click on the history button at the lower left to obtain a detailed accounting of how the principles of the theory were arrived at. News Release - Author profiled in 2006, 60th Diamond Anniversary Edition of Marquis Who's Who in America Read First Theory of Natural Motion Millennium Theory of Relativity ... Millennium Briefs Most Recent Articles The Special Relativity Velocity Composition Paradox Most Direct Derivation of Relativistic Constant Acceleration Distance Formula The Enigma of Einstein's Velocity Composition Einstein's Erroneous Derivation of Velocity Composition ...
    Contact Site
    Visitor Forum - Most Recent Topics Joseph A. Rybczyk

    48. Ask An Astrophysicist: Relativity
    Can you answer my question about energy, space travelers, and relativity? Ask your question about relativity here, if it isn t excluded by the above
    http://imagine.gsfc.nasa.gov/docs/ask_astro/relativity.html
    What's New
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    Resources for this Topic General Relativity Special Relativity Usenet Physics Frequently Asked Questions List Ned Wright's Relativity Tutorial
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    Relativity
    First time visitors: Please be sure to read our main page
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    • Browse through the library of questions below.
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    Library of Past Questions and Answers
      Space-Time
  • Can you recommend web sites that discuss space time?
  • Have General Relativity and Special Relativity been proven?
  • What evidence is there that supports the theory of curved space?
  • Is gravity just warped space-time?
      Traveling at Light Speed
  • Why is it not possible to travel at the speed of light?
  • Can you answer my question about energy, space travelers, and relativity?
  • Does anyone have an analysis of time dilation that I could read?
  • Has time dilation been detected in controlled experiments? ...
  • What is the Twin Paradox in Special Relativity and how is it resolved?
      The Behavior of Light
  • Do photons have mass ?
  • 49. RETHINKING RELATIVITY
    This would contradict the Special Theory of relativity of 1905, which asserts that nothing can go faster than light. This claim about the special status of
    http://www.gravitywarpdrive.com/Rethinking_Relativity.htm
    Physics Letters A (December 21, 1998), the article claims that the speed with which the force of gravity propagates must be at least twenty billion times faster than the speed of light. This would contradict the Special Theory of Relativity of 1905, which asserts that nothing can go faster than light. This claim about the special status of the speed of light has become part of the world view of educated laymen in the twentieth century. NOTE: The Speed of Gravity - What the Experiments Say TAS , August 1993, and Correspondence, TAS , October 1993). The present article introduces new people and arguments. The subject is important because if Special Relativity is supplanted, much of twentieth-century physics, including quantum theory, will have to be reconsidered in that light. The article in Physics Letters A was written by Tom Van Flandern, a research associate in the physics department at the University of Maryland. He also publishes Meta Research Bulletin Science at the Crossroads (1972), contradicting the first. Scientific journals, especially Nature An editor of Physics Letters A So maybe there is something wrong with Special Relativity after all. In

    50. Differential Gometry And General Relativity
    Online introduction to differential geometry and general relativity. This is an upper level undergraduate mathematics course which assumes a knowledge of
    http://people.hofstra.edu/Stefan_Waner/diff_geom/tc.html
    Introduction to Differential Geometry and General Relativity
    Lecture Notes by Stefan Waner,
    Department of Mathematics, Hofstra University
    These notes are dedicated to the memory of Hanno Rund.
    TABLE OF CONTENTS 1. Preliminaries: Distance, Open Sets, Parametric Surfaces and Smooth Functions 2. Smooth Manifolds and Scalar Fields 3. Tangent Vectors and the Tangent Space 4. Contravariant and Covariant Vector Fields ... Download the latest version of the differential geometry/relativity notes in PDF format References and Suggested Further Reading
    (Listed in the rough order reflecting the degree to which they were used) Bernard F. Schutz, A First Course in General Relativity (Cambridge University Press, 1986)
    David Lovelock and Hanno Rund, Tensors, Differential Forms, and Variational Principles (Dover, 1989)
    Charles E. Weatherburn, An Introduction to Riemannian Geometry and the Tensor Calculus (Cambridge University Press, 1963)
    Charles W. Misner, Kip S. Thorne and John A. Wheeler, Gravitation (W.H. Freeman, 1973)
    Keith R. Symon

    51. Australasian Society For General Relativity And Gravitation
    Includes a newsletter, information on events, and links to related research groups.
    http://www.physics.adelaide.edu.au/ASGRG/
    Australasian Society for General Relativity and Gravitation
    Contents Membership information Newsletters Job vacancies Committee / contact information ... Other links worldwide The Australasian Society for General Relativity and Gravitation (ASGRG) was formed at a meeting of mathematicians and physicists in Canberra in September 1994. The Society aims to bring together researchers who work in a wide range of areas within mathematical, theoretical and experimental gravitation: exact solutions of general relativity, mathematical relativity, numerical relativity, quantum gravity, cosmology, estimation of the gravitational wave signals produced by astronomical sources, and development of techniques and technology for detecting these signals with earth- and satellite-based antennae. It was decided to form the society to facilitate discussion of mutual problems of interest and to provide greater cooperation to solve the outstanding problems in the various fields. We see our role as providing a regional forum in Australia and New Zealand similar to the recently formed Topical Interest Group in Gravitation of the American Physical Society, and the international GRG society. The official name and constitution of the Society were adopted at the first General Meeting, which was held during the

    52. On The Electrodynamics Of Moving Bodies
    Albert Einstein s first paper on relativity, translated here from Annalen der Physik vol XVII 1905 p. 891921, is of historical interest.
    http://www.fourmilab.ch/etexts/einstein/specrel/www/
    ON THE ELECTRODYNAMICS
    OF MOVING BODIES
    By A. Einstein
    June 30, 1905
    Examples of this sort, together with the unsuccessful attempts to discover any motion of the earth relatively to the ``light medium,'' suggest that the phenomena of electrodynamics as well as of mechanics possess no properties corresponding to the idea of absolute rest. They suggest rather that, as has already been shown to the first order of small quantities, the same laws of electrodynamics and optics will be valid for all frames of reference for which the equations of mechanics hold good. We will raise this conjecture (the purport of which will hereafter be called the ``Principle of Relativity'') to the status of a postulate, and also introduce another postulate, which is only apparently irreconcilable with the former, namely, that light is always propagated in empty space with a definite velocity c which is independent of the state of motion of the emitting body. These two postulates suffice for the attainment of a simple and consistent theory of the electrodynamics of moving bodies based on Maxwell's theory for stationary bodies. The introduction of a ``luminiferous ether'' will prove to be superfluous inasmuch as the view here to be developed will not require an ``absolutely stationary space'' provided with special properties, nor assign a velocity-vector to a point of the empty space in which electromagnetic processes take place. The theory to be developed is basedlike all electrodynamicson the kinematics of the rigid body, since the assertions of any such theory have to do with the relationships between rigid bodies (systems of co-ordinates), clocks, and electromagnetic processes. Insufficient consideration of this circumstance lies at the root of the difficulties which the electrodynamics of moving bodies at present encounters.

    53. Special Relativity, Physics
    Journal of physics, philosophy, molecular physics, mathematics.
    http://www.wbabin.net/
    List of Authors Abadzic Milos Abramyan G. L. AFifi M. Nabil al-Adeh Fayez Fok Albertini Nicholas J. Al Khawaja Dr. Sameer alMosallami Azzam K.I. Alexandris Nikos Alford Jeff Anderton Roger Antonov V. M. Arife Ahmed S. Asquith P.R. Baranow S. Barron Dr. Bruce Barwacz David Bennun Dr. Alfred Bermanseder T. Bhatnagar C. S. BingXin Gong Boldyreva Dr. Bolstein Arthur Butterworth D. Cantor Jerome O. Chandra Kapil Cheng Sing-Wang Cochetkov Victor N. Coleman Marcus Concern Max Cook Nigel Cresswell Alan Crivelli Franco Crothers Stephen J. Crotti Marcelo Cuong Le Van De Mees Thierry Dimkpa Chidiebere M. Dinu Ionel Dizhechko Boris S. Elbasha Ahmed Gamal Faraj A. A. Fernandez Fabio Fernando Viraj Feygin O. O. Fitzgerald Frank B. Fonte Roberto Forouzbakhsh F. Frid Dr. Randy Fu Guoliang Gallindo Nillo Garcia Alfredo D. M. Geilhaupt-Wilcoxen Georgiev P. Giao D. N. Gibson Paul J. Golovanov Alex Graudis Raymond Guo Chongwu Halprin David Hamdan Dr. N. Hariri A. K. Harms John K. Harrison William J. Hernández-Aguilar C. Hoelzen Chuck Hoghoghi S. Hynecek Jaroslav Ibrahim Abdullah A. Issaeva E. A.

    54. Crank Dot Net | Relativity
    The Classical solution of the experiment eliminates the basis of special relativity. Its compliance with the Fizeau effect proves that it is the correct
    http://www.crank.net/relativity.html

    Anti-Relativity 2005 Dec 06
    relativity
    Einstein was wrong aether
    "Some of you who have just arrived at this site already have a self-satisfied smirk of superiority. Many of you are at least amused and find the topic absurd. I would like to take this opportunity to point that fact out to you. Take a moment to objectively appraise your current pre-conceived notions about the topic and the strength of your convictions in those same notions. What is the foundation of your belief?"
    General Theory of Relative Motions 2005 Dec 06
    relativity
    aether

    Einstein's Relativity and the viability of the inertial speedometer 2005 Dec 06
    relativity
    Einstein was wrong aether

    A Summary of Ronald Pearson's Theory 2005 Oct 07
    Big Bang
    relativity Einstein was wrong quantum mechanics ... grand unification
    "Ron has spent the last 16 years developing a new theory on the creation of the Universe. The old Big Bang theory has so many gaping flaws and inconsistencies that it is now restricting physicists from progressing. The following summary of the interview will give you an idea of these flaws and outline Ron's new theories."
    A Flaw of General Relativity, a New Metric, and Cosmological Implications

    55. Usenet Relativity FAQ
    This is the web version of the Usenet relativity FAQ (Frequently Asked Questions). Its purpose is to provide good answers to questions which have been
    http://www2.corepower.com:8080/~relfaq/relativity.html
    Version Date: 1 Dec 1998
    Usenet Relativity FAQ
    This is the web version of the Usenet Relativity FAQ (Frequently Asked Questions). Its purpose is to provide good answers to questions which have been discussed often in sci.physics.relativity and related Usenet newsgroups. The articles in this FAQ are based on those discussions and on information from good reference sources. That does not mean that they are always perfect and complete. If you have corrections, updates or additional points to make please send E-mail to the editors at relfaq@corepower.com . You can also raise the subject in the newsgroups if you really think you have something new to say. If you want to write up an article following a discussion about a subject not yet covered here then feel free to send it to us, but please do not use this address to ask new questions. Ask them in the appropriate newsgroup instead. If you are new to this newsgroup, please read "Welcome! to sci.physics.relativity" "An Introduction to the Physics Newsgroups" , and "Possible Topics for Discussion on sci.physics.relativity"

    56. Relativity - Definition From The Merriam-Webster Online Dictionary
    Definition of relativity from the MerriamWebster Online Dictionary with audio pronunciations, thesaurus, Word of the Day, and word games.
    http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/relativity
    Home Visit Our Sites Unabridged Dictionary Learner's Dictionary ... Contact Us
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    Search "relativity" in: Browse words next to:
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    relativity
    5 entries found.
    relativity general relativity general theory of relativity special relativity special theory of relativity
    Main Entry: Pronunciation: Function:
    noun
    Inflected Form(s):
    plural
    Date:
    circa 1834
    1 a  the quality or state of being relative b  something that is relative  the state of being dependent for existence on or determined in nature, value, or quality by relation to something else 3 a special relativity, special theory of relativity b  an extension of the theory to include gravitation and related general relativity, general theory of relativity relativism Learn more about "relativity" and related topics at Britannica.com Pronunciation Symbols

    57. General Relativity -- From Eric Weisstein's World Of Physics
    The fundamental principle of general relativity asserts that accelerated reference frames and reference frames in gravitation fields are equivalent.
    http://scienceworld.wolfram.com/physics/GeneralRelativity.html
    Modern Physics Relativity Theory General Relativity Miscellaneous General Relativity
    General Relativity

    A theory invented by Albert Einstein which describes gravitational forces in terms of the curvature in space caused by the presence of mass. The fundamental principle of general relativity asserts that accelerated reference frames and reference frames in gravitation fields are equivalent. General relativity states that clocks run slower in strong gravitational fields (or highly accelerated frames), predicting a gravitational redshift . It also predicts the existence of gravitational lensing gravitational waves gravitomagnetism , the Lense-Thirring effect , and relativistic precession of orbiting bodies. Bardeen-Petterson Effect Bertotti-Robinson Solution Black Hole Black Hole No Hair Theorem ... Schwarzschild Black Hole
    Adler, R.; Bazin, M.; and Schiffer, M. Introduction to General Relativity, 2nd ed. New York: McGraw-Hill, 1975. Anderson, J. L. Principles of Relativity Physics. New York: Academic Press, 1967. Bergmann, P. G.

    58. Special Relativity: Physics
    An explanation YOU can understand of the same of the basic concepts underlying special relativity.
    http://www4.ncsu.edu/unity/lockers/users/f/felder/public/kenny/papers/relativity
    The Day the Universe Went All Funny
    An Introduction to Special Relativity by Kenny Felder
    This paper will cover what I consider to be the fundamental concepts of Einstein's Theory of Special Relativity. Somebody else might totally disagree that these are the "fundamental concepts," of course; for instance, you'll note that I don't touch the fabled E = mc How to Read This Paper Skimming lightly over this paper to get the main ideas will do you about as much good as skimming the Rosetta Stone. If you want to get anything out of this, you really need to set aside a few hours to really read every paragraph, think about (and question) every concept, and work every problem before you read the answer. I can't emphasize this too much: make sure you really understand every paragraph before you go on to the next. These may well be the most difficult (and wonderful) concepts that you have ever seen in your life, and they aren't going to come easily. Math I'm not going to assume any mathematical knowledge here, other than the ability to subtract 2 thousand from 5 thousand (or 1/4 from 1). I am going to assume that you don't melt into slag when you see numbers. If you got through the sentence-before-last as solid matter, you should be all right.

    59. Lecture Notes On General Relativity
    Lecture notes for the course on general relativity held in 1997 at the Physics Institute of NTNU, Trondheim by Petr Hadrava (the lecture notes themselves
    http://www.asu.cas.cz/~had/gr.html

    60. Special And General Relativity Cosmology Calculator
    Learn Einstein Special and General relativity mathematics cosmology physics history and philosophy using Macintosh (Mac) relativity Calculator software.
    http://www.relativitycalculator.com/
    Site Navigation
    Enter your search terms Submit search form Web Relativity Calculator site
    A Voyage of Knowledge "As far as the laws of mathematics refer to reality, they are not certain; and as far as they are certain, they do not refer to reality" - Albert Einstein ( 1879 - 1955 )
    You are about to enter a voyage of knowing and understanding your physical world. It is a voyage built upon the knowledge and understandings handed down to us by ancient Greek philosophers and thinkers, astronomers and mathematicians, right straight down thru to Einstein and other modern men and women of wisdom and insight into nature's ultimate secrets.  How, for instance, was the earth's circumference determined by simply pacing out steps on the earth's surface while at the same time thinking about this problem? Or, how was the distance to the sun and other planets determined with only their light coming into the eyes of those wise enough to understand and interpret its significance? Why, anyways, is it so significant to understand the nature of light and its distant travels? And how, by the way, do we literally count time and distances when simply standing on the earth's surface? Simply standing on either the moon or mars does not alter this basic question because their distances to the galaxies are not significantly different from that of the earth to these far off filaments in the universe.  As each of these questions - simple and not so simple - came into the minds of great thinkers past, an arduously built staircase of knowledge of experimental and mathematical lattices came to be constructed. And what questions were heretofore never even imagined by the Ancients such as whether we exist in a multi-verse system of bubbling, interacting and competing universes, are now being asked by modern cosmologists possessing newer and more powerful tools of theoretical mathematics and applied experimentation. 

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