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Planets with no White Sky??



 
 
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  #1  
Old December 6th 06, 06:29 PM posted to alt.astronomy
G=EMC^2 Glazier[_1_]
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Default Planets with no White Sky??

A planet with life,but no star. That is possible. A planet travailing
through the Milky Way looking to be capture by a Sun like star. That is
possible.Just space with its 2.7K to keep it warm,but this planet is 3
times more massive than the Earth. It has very active volcanoes,and a
layer of liquid water under its 20 mile ice cover. Only valcanoes stick
up 38 miles above the ice. Best to keep in mind life in many forms can
survive on this planet. Mars having life does not have these advantages
Sad but true Bert

  #2  
Old December 6th 06, 11:38 PM posted to alt.astronomy
Double-A[_1_]
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Default Planets with no White Sky??


G=EMC^2 Glazier wrote:
A planet with life,but no star. That is possible. A planet travailing
through the Milky Way looking to be capture by a Sun like star. That is
possible.Just space with its 2.7K to keep it warm,but this planet is 3
times more massive than the Earth. It has very active volcanoes,and a
layer of liquid water under its 20 mile ice cover. Only valcanoes stick
up 38 miles above the ice. Best to keep in mind life in many forms can
survive on this planet. Mars having life does not have these advantages
Sad but true Bert



Why not? Olympus Mons on Mars is the tallest known volcano in our
solar system!

Double-A

  #3  
Old December 7th 06, 12:26 AM posted to alt.astronomy
G=EMC^2 Glazier[_1_]
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Posts: 10,860
Default Planets with no White Sky??

Double-A My dark planet has all that mass. My planet had all that
great gravity force My planet was all water. Only thing Mars can relate
to my planet is volcanic action,and that's not enough. NASA has to pour
water on Mars surface,and see what happens to it under these conditions
70 degrees below zero,Only a 1% atmospheric pressure(to Earth's), To
make matters worse its molecule is breaking down into its atom
structure,and hydrogen goes off into the solar system. NASA will tell
you Mars back in time had more mass(been bigger) Had the same dense
atmosphere as Earth.Had its obit much closer to the Sun and had
oceans,rivers,and lakes just like Earth. "Once upon a Time" What
changed all this was Mars was hit by a very large object(Uranus) this
collision broke it in half,and pushed it further from the Sun
Proof of this collision is shown how tilted Uranus is,and also the Mars
rocks(with tiny life) found laying on the ice surface of Antarctica.
It all fits Bert

  #4  
Old December 7th 06, 01:31 PM posted to alt.astronomy,alt.astronomy.nightbat
nightbat[_1_]
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Default Planets with no White Sky??

nightbat wrote

G=EMC^2 Glazier wrote:

A planet with life,but no star. That is possible. A planet travailing
through the Milky Way looking to be capture by a Sun like star. That is
possible.Just space with its 2.7K to keep it warm,but this planet is 3
times more massive than the Earth. It has very active volcanoes,and a
layer of liquid water under its 20 mile ice cover. Only valcanoes stick
up 38 miles above the ice. Best to keep in mind life in many forms can
survive on this planet. Mars having life does not have these advantages
Sad but true Bert


nightbat

Excellent Officer Bert but try getting the rest to agree with
you. My Red Halo could survive under just those conditions quite
impressive of you!

ponder on,
the nightbat

  #5  
Old December 7th 06, 06:29 PM posted to alt.astronomy
G=EMC^2 Glazier[_1_]
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Posts: 10,860
Default Planets with no White Sky??

nightbat People do not have to agree with my posts(thoughts) Its more
fun if they use good science in making their disagreements. That is what
a lively discussion is all about. Those that know little (dim wits) and
are afraid of original thinking(like mine) have to do name calling Have
to use 4n letter words. Try to hurt a persons character(ego). Go figure
Bert

  #6  
Old December 9th 06, 11:26 PM posted to alt.astronomy
G=EMC^2 Glazier[_1_]
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Posts: 10,860
Default Planets wi9th no sky

Not hard to realize. Take away the Sun ,Moon, and planets we see.and
those 8 thousand stars that our human eyes make visible. What you have
is a black velvert sky. There are millions of planets in the universe
that need the eyes of frogs to see one photon of light at a time Bert

  #7  
Old December 10th 06, 12:53 AM posted to alt.astronomy
Double-A[_1_]
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Default Planets wi9th no sky


G=EMC^2 Glazier wrote:
Not hard to realize. Take away the Sun ,Moon, and planets we see.and
those 8 thousand stars that our human eyes make visible. What you have
is a black velvert sky. There are millions of planets in the universe
that need the eyes of frogs to see one photon of light at a time Bert



If the Earth had perpetual cloud cover like Venus, and no one had ever
seen the Sun, Moon or stars and pondered, I wonder how much more
backward we would be?

Double-A

  #8  
Old December 10th 06, 02:04 PM posted to alt.astronomy
G=EMC^2 Glazier[_1_]
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Posts: 10,860
Default Planets wi9th no sky

Double-A Bringing Venus into the scenario is good. Venus is almost like
between a gas,and rock planet. Jupiter has a solid surface 4 times more
massive than Earth its surface must be dark. It need not be cold as one
might imagine however. Its atmosphere could act like a blanket. Its fast
spin could create friction.,as well as its turbulent gases(like the red
eye) Bert

  #9  
Old December 24th 06, 10:40 PM posted to alt.astronomy
Wings
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Default Planets with no White Sky??

@ @
^
"G=EMC^2 Glazier" wrote in message
...
Double-A My dark planet has all that mass. My planet had all that
great gravity force My planet was all water. Only thing Mars can relate
to my planet is volcanic action,and that's not enough. NASA has to pour
water on Mars surface,and see what happens to it under these conditions
70 degrees below zero,Only a 1% atmospheric pressure(to Earth's), To
make matters worse its molecule is breaking down into its atom
structure,and hydrogen goes off into the solar system. NASA will tell
you Mars back in time had more mass(been bigger) Had the same dense
atmosphere as Earth.Had its obit much closer to the Sun and had
oceans,rivers,and lakes just like Earth. "Once upon a Time" What
changed all this was Mars was hit by a very large object(Uranus) this
collision broke it in half,and pushed it further from the Sun
Proof of this collision is shown how tilted Uranus is,and also the Mars
rocks(with tiny life) found laying on the ice surface of Antarctica.
It all fits Bert



  #10  
Old December 24th 06, 11:39 PM posted to alt.astronomy
Double-A[_1_]
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Posts: 3,516
Default Planets with no White Sky??


G=EMC^2 Glazier wrote:
Double-A My dark planet has all that mass. My planet had all that
great gravity force My planet was all water. Only thing Mars can relate
to my planet is volcanic action,and that's not enough. NASA has to pour
water on Mars surface,and see what happens to it under these conditions
70 degrees below zero,Only a 1% atmospheric pressure(to Earth's), To
make matters worse its molecule is breaking down into its atom
structure,and hydrogen goes off into the solar system. NASA will tell
you Mars back in time had more mass(been bigger) Had the same dense
atmosphere as Earth.Had its obit much closer to the Sun and had
oceans,rivers,and lakes just like Earth. "Once upon a Time" What
changed all this was Mars was hit by a very large object(Uranus) this
collision broke it in half,and pushed it further from the Sun
Proof of this collision is shown how tilted Uranus is,and also the Mars
rocks(with tiny life) found laying on the ice surface of Antarctica.
It all fits Bert



Bert, you have to be kidding!

Look at the size of Mars compared to Uranus!

http://www.freemars.org/jeff/planets/planets5.htm

You could stuff Mars into Uranus and never tell the difference!

Mars could never have been hit by Uranus without having been completely
swallowed up!

And Mars wouldn't be big enough to cause any significant shift in
Uranus's tilt.

Even if Mars hit Uranus, it would probably just cause a mark like the
ones we saw on Jupiter after that freight train string of comets hit
it.

Double-A

 




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