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"Paul Lawler" wrote in message hlink.net...
"M.A" wrote in message om... Hi.As it is accepted with most people the origin of earth ,atleast, is ,said to be ,the sun.but the main part of earth is made of Iron and sun is still in the era of burning its hydrogen. And I am woundered how it is possible that the origin of stars and planets be the same? Do you know more? You probably misunderstood. The original building blocks of Earth came from "a" sun, not "the" Sun. O.K so it seems the origin of earth, and other planets of solar system , is other point of our galaxy. other point is related to the origin of the universe. It seems the big bang can not explain the vary of elements which we can see in the world. regards, M.A |
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Dear M.A:
"M.A" wrote in message om... "Paul Lawler" wrote in message hlink.net... .... You probably misunderstood. The original building blocks of Earth came from "a" sun, not "the" Sun. O.K so it seems the origin of earth, and other planets of solar system , is other point of our galaxy. other point is related to the origin of the universe. It seems the big bang can not explain the vary of elements which we can see in the world. Would this be the Big Bang which was 13.7 Gy ago, and from which time we have seen many galaxies formed? Galaxies which contain supernovae, supernovae which produce or at least expell heavy constituents? Keep in mind that a very small proportion of Earth's constituents are produced in our own Sun every year, and we are constantly finding new methods the Sun uses to jet materials into space. What is in your imagination about the Earth, that the Big Bang theory does not support? Conversely, if the Universe is eternal, why are not the only elements we encounter, iron? Entropy seems to drive all reactions to the most stable condition... So where on Earth do you find reactions that proceed to less-than-stable configurations? David A. Smith |
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