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Old February 22nd 15, 07:39 PM posted to alt.astronomy
G=EMC^2TreBert
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Default Kepler discovered a system of 11-billion-year-old planets

On Wednesday, February 11, 2015 at 7:59:04 AM UTC-8, HVAC wrote:
On 2/11/2015 10:39 AM, Sam Wormley wrote:


There are NOT 11 billion year old planets orbiting 7 billion year old
stars.



There could be tho. Nothing precludes a star from capturing an ancient
planet. Ofc this is not what Bert was talking about but who cares?





--
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Sam Massive stars live only a few million years begs this question. How long did gravity using its compression force to give them this great mass density? Where did all the stuff to make gravity's force come from and how long did it take to decide where a good spot would be to build a great dense massive star.It had to do it very fast for 13.7 billion years to be reality. My 22 billion goes with good reasoning. I know the universe was smaller more condensed. That is true,but still my Time lapse will be excepted in thefuture TreBert