This superbly planned villa was designed and built to group specifications allowing for special detail and attention, resulting in a lovely holiday home equipped with modern facilities including Air-conditioning that can be used both for cooling and heating. A hallway at the entrance leads to a large combined living and dining/ kitchen area, which is beautifully finished with patterned local tile floors, and overlooks the pool and garden area complete with Sunbeds, dining table and BBQ. The living room is equipped with Cable flat TV, DVD player, Playstation and free Wi-Fi. This floor is served by a family bathroom and, for winter visitors a fireplace gives the living area a warm cosy atmosphere. A twin bedroom is also located on the ground floor. The traditional spiral stone stair case leads to the first floor comprising of the master bedroom, equipped with Cable flat TV and ensuite bathroom, and the third bedroom equipped with twin beds having another bathroom accessed through a hallway.
Create your family tree and invite relatives to share. Search 190 million profiles and discover new ancestors. Share photos, videos and more at Geni.com. Warcraft 3 reign chaos crack razor 1911. Yearly 0.5 0.5 0.5 yearly 0.5.
The highlight of this house is a 6 seater Jacuzzi allowing you to pamper yourself truly during your stay with us. Property also enjoys the use of an adjacent communal Gym and Sauna.
Mizar MIZAR (Zeta Ursae Majoris). One of the most famed stars of the sky, second magnitude (2.06) Mizar, 78 light years away, is the Zeta star of, the Greater Bear, the second star in from the end of the handle of the, and the Dipper's fourth brightest star. In large part its fame comes from the coupling of the star with a nearby visual companion, fourth magnitude, only 11.8 minutes of arc (a fifth of a degree) to the northeast. The two, Mizar and Alcor, termed the 'horse and rider' by the Arabians, are a good test of minimal vision. The star's Arabic name derives from a word meaning 'the groin' of the celestial Bear that plods silently around the north celestial pole (the name mistakenly drawn from, in the Dipper's bowl). However even without Alcor, Mizar takes its place in the celestial hall of fame as the first known, one that consists of a pair of stars that orbit each other. Found to be double in 1650, Mizar is a prime target for someone with a new telescope, as the components are an easy 14 seconds of arc apart (at least 500 astronomical units), the two taking at least 5000 years to make their orbit about each other.
Mizar has the distinction of being the first-known double, the pairing discovered by G. Riccioli in 1650. The two white stars, 14 seconds of arc apart, are striking as seen through a small telescope. The apparent irregularity of the images is caused by turbulence in the Earth's refracting atmosphere (twinkling). The two nicely illustrate the dramatic decrease in luminosity that accompanies a small change in dwarf spectral class, from A2 (Mizar A, the brighter) to A5 or A7 (Mizar B), the result of a small decrease in mass. The two orbit with a period of at least 5000 years. Each is again is a close double, the components too close to separate here.
Image courtesy of John Thomas. More remarkably, each of these two components is AGAIN double. The brighter of the two (magnitude 2.27) contains a very close pair a mere 7 or 8 thousandths of a second of arc apart (an angle made by a penny at a distance of 300 miles) that has an orbital period of 20.5 days; the fainter of them (magnitude 3.95) contains a pair with a period of about half a year. Mizar is thus actually a quartet of stars, a double-double. It is moving through space together with its more-distant companion, Alcor. Mizar and Alcor together therefore probably make a quintuple star, Alcor taking at least 750,000 years to make a single round trip around its quadruple companion. All of the stars are similar, all 'main sequence' hydrogen-fusing dwarf stars like the Sun, but of white class A (the brighter both A2, the fainter probably both A5 or A7) with temperatures ranging between around 7500 and 9000 degrees Kelvin and luminosities from 10 to 30 times solar.
This superbly planned villa was designed and built to group specifications allowing for special detail and attention, resulting in a lovely holiday home equipped with modern facilities including Air-conditioning that can be used both for cooling and heating. A hallway at the entrance leads to a large combined living and dining/ kitchen area, which is beautifully finished with patterned local tile floors, and overlooks the pool and garden area complete with Sunbeds, dining table and BBQ. The living room is equipped with Cable flat TV, DVD player, Playstation and free Wi-Fi. This floor is served by a family bathroom and, for winter visitors a fireplace gives the living area a warm cosy atmosphere. A twin bedroom is also located on the ground floor. The traditional spiral stone stair case leads to the first floor comprising of the master bedroom, equipped with Cable flat TV and ensuite bathroom, and the third bedroom equipped with twin beds having another bathroom accessed through a hallway.
Create your family tree and invite relatives to share. Search 190 million profiles and discover new ancestors. Share photos, videos and more at Geni.com. Warcraft 3 reign chaos crack razor 1911. Yearly 0.5 0.5 0.5 yearly 0.5.
The highlight of this house is a 6 seater Jacuzzi allowing you to pamper yourself truly during your stay with us. Property also enjoys the use of an adjacent communal Gym and Sauna.
Mizar MIZAR (Zeta Ursae Majoris). One of the most famed stars of the sky, second magnitude (2.06) Mizar, 78 light years away, is the Zeta star of, the Greater Bear, the second star in from the end of the handle of the, and the Dipper's fourth brightest star. In large part its fame comes from the coupling of the star with a nearby visual companion, fourth magnitude, only 11.8 minutes of arc (a fifth of a degree) to the northeast. The two, Mizar and Alcor, termed the 'horse and rider' by the Arabians, are a good test of minimal vision. The star's Arabic name derives from a word meaning 'the groin' of the celestial Bear that plods silently around the north celestial pole (the name mistakenly drawn from, in the Dipper's bowl). However even without Alcor, Mizar takes its place in the celestial hall of fame as the first known, one that consists of a pair of stars that orbit each other. Found to be double in 1650, Mizar is a prime target for someone with a new telescope, as the components are an easy 14 seconds of arc apart (at least 500 astronomical units), the two taking at least 5000 years to make their orbit about each other.
Mizar has the distinction of being the first-known double, the pairing discovered by G. Riccioli in 1650. The two white stars, 14 seconds of arc apart, are striking as seen through a small telescope. The apparent irregularity of the images is caused by turbulence in the Earth's refracting atmosphere (twinkling). The two nicely illustrate the dramatic decrease in luminosity that accompanies a small change in dwarf spectral class, from A2 (Mizar A, the brighter) to A5 or A7 (Mizar B), the result of a small decrease in mass. The two orbit with a period of at least 5000 years. Each is again is a close double, the components too close to separate here.
Image courtesy of John Thomas. More remarkably, each of these two components is AGAIN double. The brighter of the two (magnitude 2.27) contains a very close pair a mere 7 or 8 thousandths of a second of arc apart (an angle made by a penny at a distance of 300 miles) that has an orbital period of 20.5 days; the fainter of them (magnitude 3.95) contains a pair with a period of about half a year. Mizar is thus actually a quartet of stars, a double-double. It is moving through space together with its more-distant companion, Alcor. Mizar and Alcor together therefore probably make a quintuple star, Alcor taking at least 750,000 years to make a single round trip around its quadruple companion. All of the stars are similar, all 'main sequence' hydrogen-fusing dwarf stars like the Sun, but of white class A (the brighter both A2, the fainter probably both A5 or A7) with temperatures ranging between around 7500 and 9000 degrees Kelvin and luminosities from 10 to 30 times solar.