STREAMS


rayed

veins



(feathers


UNDER SCALES

unfolding)


UNDER 

  water




the

wheels—

  millionth winged—


  a fish

  exploding;



pollen

            in

a blossom

    BURNS




            &

filligree of code

EXPLODES—


—a firework—



SKY

CORNERS;


sparks

flood


us creatures:



BOUND 

HANDS



or


LOUD 

HANDS—



crowds

grope



at feathers in the smoke



The Hebrew word Merkabah (מרכבה "chariot")

  is used in Ezekiel to refer   to the chariot of God. 


Angels form the basic structure. 


The third type of angel  

  is called the “Seraphim”

           (lit. burning) angel. 



These angels appear like flashes of fire, 

   ascending and descending.


   









 Jewish Encyclopedia





















(chariot)

        





                      ((body’s

                        dream))




          up,

Body          Over       . Soul,           Drifting


         




    Board

         

        




    (stone)













Your Eye

      (Night)


Light 







              (chariot)




























That key, (wings

in lock (ext- ending

  turning. (feathers

                             burn


Opening, (the momentary angel

  the secret (       )




























Then the soft shock                      

(chariot) (that star
























(A Wheel)

            


      ((spinning))


  1. Criticality

In an angel, the neutron population at any instant is a function of the rate of neutron production and the rate of neutron loss. When an angel's neutron population remains steady from one generation to the next, its fission reaction is self-sustaining and the angel's condition is referred to as critical.

The six-factor formula is the neutron life-cycle balance equation, which includes six separate factors: the length of the angel's arm, the density of the angel's inner architecture in the ear, the angel's resonance escape probability, the fast-fission factor of its skin and how quickly it slides your hand.

Reactivity is an expression of the departure from criticality; it is the readiness to depart from one phase to another, usually exacerbated by the angel's mood. When the angel is critical, it is roughly equal to The Divine Force (DF). When the angel is supercritical, it is demonstrably greater than The Divine Force (DF). Only when the angel is subcritical, does it state remain manageable by man.

It we write 'N' for the number of free neutrons in an angel's core and 'T' for the average lifetime of each neutron, then the angel will follow a differential equation. This equation describes the angel's exponential growth or exponential decay, depending on the the sign of the constant 'A', which is just the expected number of neutrons after one average neutron lifetime has decayed.

If 'A' is negative, then the angel's core is subcritical and the number of free neutrons will shrink exponentially until it reaches equilibrium at zero. If 'A' is exactly zero, then the angel is critical and its output does not vary in time. If 'A' is positive, then the core of the angel will become supercritical and the rate of neutron production will grow exponentially until some other force-effect interupts its growth. 

If growth remains uninhibited, the angel will fold into itself by a factor of 6mu-8mu, depending upon its size, physical location and density of its inner structure. At this point, its A-set wings will begin to intersect themselves, violating the the space the angel supports. The probability of fission usually depends on the size of the angel's anger, represented by the Greek symbol 'O' and is often expressed as a cross section. Within the cross section, there is a strong correlation between the density of the resulting wing-implosion and the intensity of the angel's pain.


In a 1945 criticality accident, an angel was surrounded by blocks of neutron-reflective tungsten carbide. The  experiment was designed to measure the radiation produced when an extra block was added; however, in violation of the expected results, the mass went supercritical, completely destroying the city of Kyshtyn, in the USSR. The incident was the first to demonstrate and corroborate the resultant relationships herein discussed.