![]() |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#61
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Jun 28, 7:50*am, BradGuth wrote:
On Jun 20, 6:16*am, BradGuth wrote: We seem to have become closely associated with the Sirius star cluster, even though Sirius has been a relatively newish and extremely vibrant stellar evolution (quite possibly contributed from another galaxy), and especially terrestrial illuminating of the first 200~250 million years worth. It took a cosmic molecular cloud worth perhaps at least 120,000 solar masses in order to produce such a 12+ mass star system, leaving 99.999% of that molecular mass blown away and to fend for itself, at a place and time when our existing solar system wasn't any too far away. Others might go so far as to suggest a molecular cloud mass of 1.2 million, and others yet would prefer that this terrific cloud had emerged from a smaller galaxy that encountered our Milky Way. There's no way that our passive little solar system wasn't somehow directly affected by and otherwise having become somewhat tidal radius interrelated with such a nearby mass, at least associated with the mutual barycenter that's primarily dominated by the Sirius star/solar system. Lo and behold, it seems the mergers of galactic proportions isn’t nearly as uncommon as some naysayers might care to think. The Hipparcos Space Astrometry Mission: (mainstream media ignored) *http://sci.esa.int/science-e/www/are...cfm?fareaid=20 *http://www.spacedaily.com/news/milkyway-04m.html Local galactic motion simulation: *"The Geneva-Copenhagen survey of the Solar neighbourhood", by B. Nordström et al. *http://www.aanda.org/content/view/71/42/lang,en According to several physics and astronomy kinds of *observationology science (deductive interpretation of eye-candy), our Milky Way is made up of at least two galactic units, with more on their blue-shifted way towards encountering us. *Seems hardly fair considering that everything was supposedly created via one singular big bang, not to mention that hundreds to thousands of galaxies seem headed into the Great Attractor (including us) for their final demise and/or rebirth. Our Milky Way Galaxy and its Companions (we are not alone) *http://www.public.asu.edu/~rjansen/l...ocalgroup.html Don’t forget to appreciate those Hubble, KECK and multiple other archives (including those of FAS) depicting “colliding galaxies”, soon to be ESA enhanced and expanded upon via a trio of their impressive orbital observatories, not to mention whatever the renewed and improved Hubble plus our next generation of orbital observatories should further document. *It may even become hard to find galaxies as massive as ours and Andromeda that are entirely original without their having gown via mergers. Where's the all-knowing expertise from FAS, telling us whatever they seem to know best or at least suspect is most likely. *Surely these brown-nosed clowns, faith-based bigots and closed mindsets of our Usenet/newsgroup that are enforcing their mainstream status quo (much like my personal Jewish shadow tries to do), are hopefully not speaking on behalf of FAS. ~ Brad Guth Brad_Guth Brad.Guth BradGuth BG / “Guth Usenet” Earth moving away from the Sun! *On Jun 15, 3:29 am, "Painius" wrote: "Double-A" wrote in message... Thanks, Saul. *I have long wondered and speculated as to whether this was happening. Double-A http://groups.google.com/group/alt.a.../thread/83e4c2... Six inches a year is such a small amount that 4.5 billion years ago (if that rate has not changed) and using the present approximate Earth-Sun distance of 93 million miles, the Earth has moved about 1/2 a million miles outward from the Sun. *Back then it would have been 92.5 million miles away from the Sun. *And this is why the astronomers i've talked to consider the tidal effect between the Sun and planets to be insignificant. It is in fact so insignificant even between the Earth and the Moon that both these PLANETS will be gravitationally bound to each other even 7.5 billion years from now, which is the max time for the Sun to go Red Giant. This might, however, explain some of the Sun's loss of angular momentum and why the Sun, with the most mass has by far the smallest angular momentum of all the orbs in the Solar system. happy days and... * *starry starry nights! -- Indelibly yours, Paine Ellsworth In spite of whatever our resident rabbi and others of his Kosher type spew from between their mainstream infomercial flapping butt-cheeks, you are as per usual mostly correct, in that the earth-sun tidal interaction if causing whatever perceived orbital recession is extremely minor, whereas the ongoing loss of at least 1e12 kg/sec is not so minor. In order for that main sequence red giant phase to begin within 7.5 billion years, our sun of 12 billion years worth would have had to have been consuming plus CME losing a combined average mass of at least 1e12 kg/sec (1000 million tonnes/sec), and otherwise the more than likely requirement for an average loss of 2e12 kg/sec (2000 million tonnes/sec) seems a whole lot closer to the truth, whereas 2e12 kg/sec represents a more respectable 12 billion year accumulated loss of 33.3% from an original solar mass of 2.27e30 kg down to the 1.51 solar red giant mass, which by some estimates may still represent an insufficient rate of losing hydrogen mass in order to bring on that bloated red giant phase. If our red giant phase is coming any sooner than 7.5 billion years from now, simply adjust the rate of average mass loss to suit, such as 3e12 kg/sec or whatever qualifies within that window of time as given for the stellar birth to red giant. Unless my math is wrong (wouldn’t be the first time), or that a given main sequence star simply doesn’t have to burn through nearly as much of its hydrogen as we’ve been told, whereas it seems that perhaps we’ve been systematically misinformed about how much hydrogen mass a given main sequence star has to consume and/or blow off before going into its red giant phase. *Therefore our sun may actually require this depletion rate of 2e12 kg/s in order to have burned and otherwise blown off sufficient hydrogen, helium and a few other elements of mass within its maximum 12 billion year cycle, or perhaps 3e12 kg/sec for a given 9 billion year life cycle before becoming that red giant. Now try to imagine how much mass Sirius B (if originally 9 solar mass) had to have been going through (say 250 million years is worth 1e15 kg/sec?), and Sirius A for the past 300 million years has been using and losing at the rate of perhaps 1e14 kg/sec. Of further interest is the original molecular cloud that gave such births to Sirius ABC (12.5 solar mass) had to be worth at least 1.25e5 solar masses, if not 1.25e6 solar masses as of just 300 million years ago and nearby. *So, where exactly is the remaining 99.999% of this terrific cloud, and why was our solar system supposedly never affected by any of this nearby cosmic activity? How can such a nearby and truly massive molecular cloud as having given us the Sirius star/solar system, not have affected our solar solar system? Just the weak force of gravity alone should have done the trick, especially if that cloud amounted to 1.25e6 solar masses. It seems the natural life cycle of a star begins with a turn-on flash and ends with a serious blast, as well as potentially having a few ups and downs in between, especially when there's more than one star involved. So, how is it that our relatively passive solar system was somehow excluded from all of this nearby cosmic fun? ~ BG |
#62
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Jun 20, 6:16*am, BradGuth wrote:
On Apr 27, 4:47*am, BradGuth wrote: Red giant stars are many, and yet still a little hard to come by, as only a few public images of whatever is within 1000 light years seem to exist that fit within the color saturated eye-candy profiles that we’ve been taught to accept. *However, the visible spectrum is extremely limited as to what is otherwise technically accessible from just above and below our genetically limited and thus inferior visual spectrum. (seems entirely odd that our human evolution was so careless in having discarded so much visual capability, in that other creatures seem to have a far wider visual spectrum capability that includes some UV and IR) “Red GiantStarFound to Have Massive Tail” *http://www.efluxmedia.com/news_Red_G...Have_Massive_T... *Mira A of several hundred solar radii (UV colorized as bluish): “A dyingstarsituated 400 light years away from us exhibits an unusual and massive tail of heated gas that spreads for more than 13 light years.” *http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mira *http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/galex/20070815/a.html Sirius B could have been much like an image of Mira A, except a whole lot larger (1000 solar radii), as viewed in visible and near IR *http://xmm.esac.esa.int/external/xmm...osium/173770_m... Mira A and lots more composite observationology from FAS *http://www.fas.org/irp/imint/docs/rst/Sect20/A6.html There are many possibilities, as for how Sirius B used to function as a truly massive (9 solarmass)star, thereby extremely hot and fast burning prior to becoming a red supergiant, creating an impressive planetary nebula phase before ending as the little white dwarf. *For all we know Sirius B was even a variable kind of red giant and then perhaps a slow nova flashover phase prior to finishing off as the white dwarf. These following examples are probably similar or perhaps representing a slightly smaller version of what the Siriusstar/solar system looked like once Sirius B had started turning itself from an impressive red supergiant into a white dwarf of perhaps 1/8th its originalmass, taking roughly 64~96,000 years for this explosivemassshedding phase to happen. *A few tens of billions of years later is when such a white dwarf eventually becomes a black dwarf, kind of black diamond spentstar, in that our universe may or may not be quite old enough to display such examples. *http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Planetary_nebula *http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Helix_Nebula *http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cat%27s_Eye_Nebula *http://apod.nasa.gov/apod/ap031207.html *http://www.uv.es/jrtorres/index6.html Betelgeuse has been a massive red giant at 20+ fold themassof our sun, and likely worth nearly 3 fold themassof the original Sirius B, and currently expanded to 1000 solar radii, and it'll be truly impressive nova whenever it transforms into a white dwarf nearly the size of Jupiter. The soon to be renewed and improved Hubble should accomplish the improved spectrum and resolution of most everything, along with other existing and soon to be deployed telescopes should give us even better composite examples of what Sirius B used to look like. *This may give some of us a better interpretation as to what transpired right next door to us, as well as having unavoidably contributed to some of what our solar system has to offer. We seem to have become closely associated with the Sirius star cluster, even though Sirius has been a relatively newish and extremely vibrant stellar evolution (quite possibly contributed from another galaxy), and especially terrestrial illuminating of the first 200~250 million years worth. It took a cosmic molecular cloud worth perhaps at least 120,000 solar masses in order to produce such a 12+ mass star system, leaving 99.99% of that molecular mass blown away and to fend for itself, at a place and time when our existing solar system wasn't any too far away. Others might go so far as to suggest a molecular cloud mass of 1.2 million, and others yet would prefer that this terrific cloud had emerged from a smaller galaxy that encountered our Milky Way. There's no way that our passive little solar system wasn't somehow directly affected by and otherwise having become somewhat tidal radius interrelated with such a nearby mass, at least associated with the mutual barycenter that's primarily dominated by the Sirius star/solar system. Lo and behold, it seems the mergers of galactic proportions isn’t nearly as uncommon as some naysayers might care to think. The Hipparcos Space Astrometry Mission: (mainstream media ignored) *http://sci.esa.int/science-e/www/are...cfm?fareaid=20 *http://www.spacedaily.com/news/milkyway-04m.html Local galactic motion simulation: *"The Geneva-Copenhagen survey of the Solar neighbourhood", by B. Nordström et al. *http://www.aanda.org/content/view/71/42/lang,en According to several physics and astronomy kinds of *observationology science (deductive interpretation of eye-candy), our Milky Way is made up of at least two galactic units, with more on their blue-shifted way towards encountering us. *Seems hardly fair considering that everything was supposedly created via one singular big bang, not to mention that hundreds to thousands of galaxies seem headed into the Great Attractor (including us) for their final demise and/or rebirth. Our Milky Way Galaxy and its Companions (we are not alone) *http://www.public.asu.edu/~rjansen/l...ocalgroup.html Don’t forget to appreciate those Hubble, KECK and multiple other archives (including those of FAS) depicting “colliding galaxies”, soon to be ESA enhanced and expanded upon via a trio of their impressive orbital observatories, not to mention whatever the renewed and improved Hubble plus our next generation of orbital observatories should further document. *It may even become hard to find galaxies as massive as ours and Andromeda that are entirely original without their having gown via mergers. Where's the all-knowing expertise from FAS, telling us whatever they seem to know best or at least suspect is most likely. *Surely these brown-nosed clowns, faith-based bigots and closed mindsets of our Usenet/newsgroup that are enforcing their mainstream status quo (much like my personal Jewish shadow tries to do), are hopefully not speaking on behalf of FAS. All lies, deceptions and obfuscation is what it’s all about. When I’ve expected of others to share information and to otherwise constructively contribute to this topic, all we ever got at best was a stone cold shoulder, mostly negativity from a certain rabbi none the less. However, the laws of physics are seldom politically correct or otherwise faith-based, and they do not lie. Gravity Force of Attraction http://www.1728.com/gravity.htm http://www.wsanford.com/~wsanford/ca...alculator.html Cosmic molecular cloud of what created Sirius being at least 1.25e6 solar masses, at a center to center distance of 100 ly, and using our solar system mass of 2.05e30 kg for that same era, we get the following results: (100 ly = 9.46053e17 meters & 50 ly = 4.7303e17 meters) 2.05e30 kg and 2.5e36 kg at 100 ly = 3.819e20 Newtons 2.05e30 kg and 2.5e36 kg at 50 ly = 1.528e21 N 2.05e30 kg and 2.5e36 kg at 10 ly = 3.819e22 N current (sun ~ earth) gravitational force of attraction: 1.989e30 and 5.974e24 kg at 1.496e11 m = 3.541e22 N current (sun ~ mars) gravitational force of attraction: 1.989e30 and 6.418e23 kg at 2.2794e11 m = 1.639e21 N current (sun ~ pluto) gravitational force of attraction: 1.989e30 and 1.305e22 kg at 5.906e12 m = 4.964e16 N current (solar system ~ sedna) gravitational force of attraction: 2.02e30 and 4.7e21 kg at 7.867e13 m = 1.023e14 N current (solar system ~ Sirius) gravitational force of attraction: 2.02e30 and 6.9615e30 kg at 8.1365e16 m = 1.417e17 N Being that a molecular cloud of at least 1.25e6 solar masses is going to have a diameter of nearly 100 light years, as such might suggest that we use the 50 ly for the adjusted distance from the core density of such a molecular cloud, as for mutually binding us at the weak gravity force of 1.528e21 N. Of course by doubling that distance cuts this tidal binding force of gravitational attraction down to a forth. Try to remember that this wasn’t a one time kind of cosmic drive-by event, but most likely worth at least ten million years of persistent gravity pull before having cranked out those impressive Sirius stars, and for at least another million some odd years of having blown everything else (99.999% of that molecular cloud mass) away. Once again, how can this kind of nearby cosmic event and of such horrific original mass not have affected our solar system? By way of reading from what others claiming to know more than most anyone else (must be Einstein clones), it seems they’d have no problems with suggesting a 1e6:1 cosmic molecular cloud of 1.25e7 solar masses that created the Sirius star/solar system, and still using 2.05e30 kg mass for that of our solar system of that same era results in yet another 10 fold increased force of attraction for that same 50 ly distance, representing 1.528e22 N (nearly half of the sun~earth attraction). Now for a little objective perspective. If our current solar system mass of 2.02e30 kg can still manage to hold onto the highly elliptical trek of little planetoid Sedna, at the semi-major axis that offers 1.023e14 N, then it sure as hell shouldn’t have any problems whatsoever with Sirius that’s an all inclusive 3.5 solar masses and worth 1.417e17 N (1,385 times greater gravitational binding than Sedna). There’s actually a fair number of TNOs that our solar system holds onto, further proving how it’s entirely possible that we’re tidal associated with the Sirius star/solar system. ~ Brad Guth Brad_Guth Brad.Guth BradGuth BG / “Guth Usenet” |
#63
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Jun 20, 6:16*am, BradGuth wrote:
On Apr 27, 4:47*am, BradGuth wrote: Red giant stars are many, and yet still a little hard to come by, as only a few public images of whatever is within 1000 light years seem to exist that fit within the color saturated eye-candy profiles that we’ve been taught to accept. *However, the visible spectrum is extremely limited as to what is otherwise technically accessible from just above and below our genetically limited and thus inferior visual spectrum. (seems entirely odd that our human evolution was so careless in having discarded so much visual capability, in that other creatures seem to have a far wider visual spectrum capability that includes some UV and IR) “Red GiantStarFound to Have Massive Tail” *http://www.efluxmedia.com/news_Red_G...Have_Massive_T... *Mira A of several hundred solar radii (UV colorized as bluish): “A dyingstarsituated 400 light years away from us exhibits an unusual and massive tail of heated gas that spreads for more than 13 light years.” *http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mira *http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/galex/20070815/a.html Sirius B could have been much like an image of Mira A, except a whole lot larger (1000 solar radii), as viewed in visible and near IR *http://xmm.esac.esa.int/external/xmm...osium/173770_m... Mira A and lots more composite observationology from FAS *http://www.fas.org/irp/imint/docs/rst/Sect20/A6.html There are many possibilities, as for how Sirius B used to function as a truly massive (9 solarmass)star, thereby extremely hot and fast burning prior to becoming a red supergiant, creating an impressive planetary nebula phase before ending as the little white dwarf. *For all we know Sirius B was even a variable kind of red giant and then perhaps a slow nova flashover phase prior to finishing off as the white dwarf. These following examples are probably similar or perhaps representing a slightly smaller version of what the Siriusstar/solar system looked like once Sirius B had started turning itself from an impressive red supergiant into a white dwarf of perhaps 1/8th its originalmass, taking roughly 64~96,000 years for this explosivemassshedding phase to happen. *A few tens of billions of years later is when such a white dwarf eventually becomes a black dwarf, kind of black diamond spentstar, in that our universe may or may not be quite old enough to display such examples. *http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Planetary_nebula *http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Helix_Nebula *http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cat%27s_Eye_Nebula *http://apod.nasa.gov/apod/ap031207.html *http://www.uv.es/jrtorres/index6.html Betelgeuse has been a massive red giant at 20+ fold themassof our sun, and likely worth nearly 3 fold themassof the original Sirius B, and currently expanded to 1000 solar radii, and it'll be truly impressive nova whenever it transforms into a white dwarf nearly the size of Jupiter. The soon to be renewed and improved Hubble should accomplish the improved spectrum and resolution of most everything, along with other existing and soon to be deployed telescopes should give us even better composite examples of what Sirius B used to look like. *This may give some of us a better interpretation as to what transpired right next door to us, as well as having unavoidably contributed to some of what our solar system has to offer. We seem to have become closely associated with the Sirius star cluster, even though Sirius has been a relatively newish and extremely vibrant stellar evolution (quite possibly contributed from another galaxy), and especially terrestrial illuminating of the first 200~250 million years worth. It took a cosmic molecular cloud worth perhaps at least 120,000 solar masses in order to produce such a 12+ mass star system, leaving 99.99% of that molecular mass blown away and to fend for itself, at a place and time when our existing solar system wasn't any too far away. Others might go so far as to suggest a molecular cloud mass of 1.2 million, and others yet would prefer that this terrific cloud had emerged from a smaller galaxy that encountered our Milky Way. There's no way that our passive little solar system wasn't somehow directly affected by and otherwise having become somewhat tidal radius interrelated with such a nearby mass, at least associated with the mutual barycenter that's primarily dominated by the Sirius star/solar system. Lo and behold, it seems the mergers of galactic proportions isn’t nearly as uncommon as some naysayers might care to think. The Hipparcos Space Astrometry Mission: (mainstream media ignored) *http://sci.esa.int/science-e/www/are...cfm?fareaid=20 *http://www.spacedaily.com/news/milkyway-04m.html Local galactic motion simulation: *"The Geneva-Copenhagen survey of the Solar neighbourhood", by B. Nordström et al. *http://www.aanda.org/content/view/71/42/lang,en According to several physics and astronomy kinds of *observationology science (deductive interpretation of eye-candy), our Milky Way is made up of at least two galactic units, with more on their blue-shifted way towards encountering us. *Seems hardly fair considering that everything was supposedly created via one singular big bang, not to mention that hundreds to thousands of galaxies seem headed into the Great Attractor (including us) for their final demise and/or rebirth. Our Milky Way Galaxy and its Companions (we are not alone) *http://www.public.asu.edu/~rjansen/l...ocalgroup.html Don’t forget to appreciate those Hubble, KECK and multiple other archives (including those of FAS) depicting “colliding galaxies”, soon to be ESA enhanced and expanded upon via a trio of their impressive orbital observatories, not to mention whatever the renewed and improved Hubble plus our next generation of orbital observatories should further document. *It may even become hard to find galaxies as massive as ours and Andromeda that are entirely original without their having gown via mergers. Where's the all-knowing expertise from FAS, telling us whatever they seem to know best or at least suspect is most likely. *Surely these brown-nosed clowns, faith-based bigots and closed mindsets of our Usenet/newsgroup that are enforcing their mainstream status quo (much like my personal Jewish shadow tries to do), are hopefully not speaking on behalf of FAS. ~ Brad Guth Brad_Guth Brad.Guth BradGuth BG / “Guth Usenet” Sirius and us are inseparable, at least according to the physics of gravity. It’s all infowar tactical lies, deceptions and obfuscation is what it’s all about. When I’ve merely expected of others to share information and to otherwise constructively contribute to this topic and many before, all we ever got at best was a stone cold shoulder, and otherwise mostly negativity from a certain rabbi none the less. However, the laws of physics are seldom politically correct or otherwise faith-based, and they do not lie, and even the best available science doesn’t support many of those established mainstream notions. Gravity Force of Attraction http://www.1728.com/gravity.htm http://www.wsanford.com/~wsanford/ca...alculator.html Cosmic molecular cloud of what created Sirius being at least 1.25e6 solar masses, at a center to center distance of 100 ly, and using our solar system mass of 2.05e30 kg for that same era, we get the following results: (100 ly = 9.46053e17 meters & 50 ly = 4.7303e17 meters) 2.05e30 kg and 2.5e36 kg at 100 ly = 3.819e20 Newtons 2.05e30 kg and 2.5e36 kg at 50 ly = 1.528e21 N 2.05e30 kg and 2.5e36 kg at 10 ly = 3.819e22 N current (sun ~ earth) gravitational force of attraction: 1.989e30 and 5.974e24 kg at 1.496e11 m = 3.541e22 N current (sun ~ mars) gravitational force of attraction: 1.989e30 and 6.418e23 kg at 2.2794e11 m = 1.639e21 N current (sun ~ pluto) gravitational force of attraction: 1.989e30 and 1.305e22 kg at 5.906e12 m = 4.964e16 N current (solar system ~ sedna) gravitational force of attraction: 2.02e30 and 4.7e21 kg at 7.867e13 m = 1.023e14 N current (solar system ~ Sirius) gravitational force of attraction: 2.02e30 and 6.9615e30 kg at 8.1365e16 m = 1.417e17 N Creating the Sirius star/solar system was no small matter of any wussy molecular cloud. This was extremely big and it would have been entirely visible to the naked human eye. Being that a molecular cloud of at least 1.25e6 solar masses is going to have a diameter of nearly 100 light years, as such might suggest that we use the 50 ly for the adjusted distance from the core density of such a molecular cloud, as for mutually binding us at the weak gravity force of 1.528e21 N. Of course by doubling that distance cuts this tidal binding force of gravitational attraction down to a forth. Try to remember that this wasn’t a one time kind of cosmic drive-by event, but most likely worth at least ten million years of persistent gravity pull before having cranked out those impressive Sirius stars, and for at least another million some odd years of having blown everything else (99.999% of that molecular cloud mass) away. Once again, how can this kind of nearby cosmic event and of such horrific original mass not have affected our solar system? By way of reading from what others claiming to know more than most anyone else (must be Einstein clones), it seems they’d have no problems with suggesting a 1e6:1 cosmic molecular cloud of 1.25e7 solar masses that created the Sirius star/solar system, and still using 2.05e30 kg mass for that of our solar system of that same era results in yet another 10 fold increased force of attraction for that same 50 ly distance, representing 1.528e22 N (nearly half of the sun~earth attraction). Now for a little objective perspective. If our current solar system mass of 2.02e30 kg can still manage to hold onto the highly elliptical trek of little planetoid Sedna, at the semi-major axis that offers 1.023e14 N, then it sure as hell shouldn’t have any problems whatsoever with Sirius that’s an all inclusive 3.5 solar masses and worth 1.417e17 N (1,385 times greater gravitational binding than Sedna). There’s actually a fair number of TNOs that our solar system holds onto, further proving how it’s entirely possible that we are tidal radii associated with the Sirius star/solar system. ~ BG |
#64
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On May 23, 10:43*pm, BradGuth wrote:
On May 23, 11:02*am, Marvin the Martian wrote: On Sat, 23 May 2009 10:26:25 -0700, BradGuth wrote: On Apr 27, 4:47*am, BradGuth wrote: Don't you feel it is pathetic that you keep spamming 5 news groups, and you have to reply to your own posts because the only people who contribute to your threads are telling you to SFTU? Just curious. Not at all, because unlike yourself and others of your kind that only post those silly infomercial topics and failsafe replies, whereas I keep improving by way of learning, adding information to my topics and expecting that somewhere out there in Google Groups (aka Usenet/ newsgroup) land is an actual 5th grader or better kind of brain that isn't of a Zionist Nazi mindset. *~ BG Or there will be 100 years from now. Or wait, am I actually reading this? no? Sirius B is a crystal planet housing one of the natural quantum computers humans tap into though torsion fields. It is like flowers don't see bees, they just use them. |
#65
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Jun 2, 7:37*am, BradGuth wrote:
Ask yourself, why would a faith-based sadistic bigot, Mafia cabal or political mindset object to this topic? Nothing is true until officially denied. |
#66
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Jul 2, 6:38*am, gabydewilde wrote:
On Jun 2, 7:37*am, BradGuth wrote: Ask yourself, why would a faith-based sadistic bigot, Mafia cabal or political mindset object to this topic? Nothing is true until officially denied. That sounds about right. ~ BG |
#67
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Jun 20, 6:16*am, BradGuth wrote:
On Apr 27, 4:47*am, BradGuth wrote: Red giant stars are many, and yet still a little hard to come by, as only a few public images of whatever is within 1000 light years seem to exist that fit within the color saturated eye-candy profiles that we’ve been taught to accept. *However, the visible spectrum is extremely limited as to what is otherwise technically accessible from just above and below our genetically limited and thus inferior visual spectrum. (seems entirely odd that our human evolution was so careless in having discarded so much visual capability, in that other creatures seem to have a far wider visual spectrum capability that includes some UV and IR) “Red GiantStarFound to Have Massive Tail” *http://www.efluxmedia.com/news_Red_G...Have_Massive_T... *Mira A of several hundred solar radii (UV colorized as bluish): “A dyingstarsituated 400 light years away from us exhibits an unusual and massive tail of heated gas that spreads for more than 13 light years.” *http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mira *http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/galex/20070815/a.html Sirius B could have been much like an image of Mira A, except a whole lot larger (1000 solar radii), as viewed in visible and near IR *http://xmm.esac.esa.int/external/xmm...osium/173770_m... Mira A and lots more composite observationology from FAS *http://www.fas.org/irp/imint/docs/rst/Sect20/A6.html There are many possibilities, as for how Sirius B used to function as a truly massive (9 solarmass)star, thereby extremely hot and fast burning prior to becoming a red supergiant, creating an impressive planetary nebula phase before ending as the little white dwarf. *For all we know Sirius B was even a variable kind of red giant and then perhaps a slow nova flashover phase prior to finishing off as the white dwarf. These following examples are probably similar or perhaps representing a slightly smaller version of what the Siriusstar/solar system looked like once Sirius B had started turning itself from an impressive red supergiant into a white dwarf of perhaps 1/8th its originalmass, taking roughly 64~96,000 years for this explosivemassshedding phase to happen. *A few tens of billions of years later is when such a white dwarf eventually becomes a black dwarf, kind of black diamond spentstar, in that our universe may or may not be quite old enough to display such examples. *http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Planetary_nebula *http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Helix_Nebula *http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cat%27s_Eye_Nebula *http://apod.nasa.gov/apod/ap031207.html *http://www.uv.es/jrtorres/index6.html Betelgeuse has been a massive red giant at 20+ fold themassof our sun, and likely worth nearly 3 fold themassof the original Sirius B, and currently expanded to 1000 solar radii, and it'll be truly impressive nova whenever it transforms into a white dwarf nearly the size of Jupiter. The soon to be renewed and improved Hubble should accomplish the improved spectrum and resolution of most everything, along with other existing and soon to be deployed telescopes should give us even better composite examples of what Sirius B used to look like. *This may give some of us a better interpretation as to what transpired right next door to us, as well as having unavoidably contributed to some of what our solar system has to offer. We seem to have become closely associated with the Sirius star cluster, even though Sirius has been a relatively newish and extremely vibrant stellar evolution (quite possibly contributed from another galaxy), and especially terrestrial illuminating of the first 200~250 million years worth. It took a cosmic molecular cloud worth perhaps at least 120,000 solar masses in order to produce such a 12+ mass star system, leaving 99.99% of that molecular mass blown away and to fend for itself, at a place and time when our existing solar system wasn't any too far away. Others might go so far as to suggest a molecular cloud mass of 1.2 million, and others yet would prefer that this terrific cloud had emerged from a smaller galaxy that encountered our Milky Way. There's no way that our passive little solar system wasn't somehow directly affected by and otherwise having become somewhat tidal radius interrelated with such a nearby mass, at least associated with the mutual barycenter that's primarily dominated by the Sirius star/solar system. Lo and behold, it seems the mergers of galactic proportions isn’t nearly as uncommon as some naysayers might care to think. The Hipparcos Space Astrometry Mission: (mainstream media ignored) *http://sci.esa.int/science-e/www/are...cfm?fareaid=20 *http://www.spacedaily.com/news/milkyway-04m.html Local galactic motion simulation: *"The Geneva-Copenhagen survey of the Solar neighbourhood", by B. Nordström et al. *http://www.aanda.org/content/view/71/42/lang,en According to several physics and astronomy kinds of *observationology science (deductive interpretation of eye-candy), our Milky Way is made up of at least two galactic units, with more on their blue-shifted way towards encountering us. *Seems hardly fair considering that everything was supposedly created via one singular big bang, not to mention that hundreds to thousands of galaxies seem headed into the Great Attractor (including us) for their final demise and/or rebirth. Our Milky Way Galaxy and its Companions (we are not alone) *http://www.public.asu.edu/~rjansen/l...ocalgroup.html Don’t forget to appreciate those Hubble, KECK and multiple other archives (including those of FAS) depicting “colliding galaxies”, soon to be ESA enhanced and expanded upon via a trio of their impressive orbital observatories, not to mention whatever the renewed and improved Hubble plus our next generation of orbital observatories should further document. *It may even become hard to find galaxies as massive as ours and Andromeda that are entirely original without their having gown via mergers. Where's the all-knowing expertise from FAS, telling us whatever they seem to know best or at least suspect is most likely. *Surely these brown-nosed clowns, faith-based bigots and closed mindsets of our Usenet/newsgroup that are enforcing their mainstream status quo (much like my personal Jewish shadow tries to do), are hopefully not speaking on behalf of FAS. Sirius and us(our solar system) are inseparable, at least according to the regular laws of physics pertaining to gravity and orbital mechanics that seems more than sufficient. However, it’s all a mainstream of infowar tactical gauntlet of lies, deceptions and obfuscation is what it’s all about. When I’ve merely expected of others to share information and to otherwise constructively contribute to this topic and many similar ones before, all we ever got at best was a stone cold shoulder, and otherwise mostly negativity and banishment from most, as well as from a certain racist and bigotry spouting rabbi none the less. However, the laws of physics are seldom if ever politically correct or otherwise faith- based, and as such they do not lie, and even the best available science doesn’t support many of those established mainstream notions. Gravity Force of Attraction (orbital tidal radius) http://www.1728.com/gravity.htm http://www.wsanford.com/~wsanford/ca...alculator.html The cosmic molecular cloud of what created Sirius being worth at least 1.25e6 solar masses, at a center to center distance of 100 ly, and using our solar system mass of 2.05e30 kg for that same era, we get the following results for 100 ly = 9.46053e17 meters, 50 ly = 4.7303e17 meters and 10 ly = 9.46053e16 meters. 2.05e30 kg and 2.5e36 kg at 100 ly = 3.819e20 Newtons 2.05e30 kg and 2.5e36 kg at 50 ly = 1.528e21 N 2.05e30 kg and 2.5e36 kg at 10 ly = 3.819e22 N current (sun ~ earth) gravitational force of attraction: 1.989e30 and 5.974e24 kg at 1.496e11 m = 3.541e22 N current (sun ~ mars) gravitational force of attraction: 1.989e30 and 6.418e23 kg at 2.2794e11 m = 1.639e21 N current (sun ~ pluto) gravitational force of attraction: 1.989e30 and 1.305e22 kg at 5.906e12 m = 4.964e16 N current (solar system ~ sedna) gravitational force of attraction: 2.02e30 and 4.7e21 kg at 7.867e13 m = 1.023e14 N current (solar system ~ Sirius) gravitational force of attraction: 2.02e30 and 6.9615e30 kg at 8.1365e16 m = 1.417e17 N Creating the Sirius star/solar system was no small matter of any wussy little molecular cloud. This was an extremely big cloud and subsequent stellar birthing event of relatively recent times, and as such it would have been entirely visible to the naked human eyes of that era (not that any intelligent human via Darwin or intelligent design existed at that time). Being that a molecular cloud of at least 1.25e6 solar masses is going to have a diameter of nearly 100 light years, as such I might suggest that we use the 50 ly parameter for the adjusted distance from the core density of such a molecular cloud, as for mutually binding us at the weak gravity force of 1.528e21 N. Of course by doubling that distance cuts this tidal binding force of radial gravitational attraction down to a forth, whereas even at 500 ly it’s still worth 1.528e19 N, and at the 2.5e37 solar masses brings that 500 ly distance back up to being worth 1.528e20 N. Try to remember that this wasn’t a one brief time kind of a cosmic drive-by event, but most likely worth at least ten million years of persistent gravity pull before having cranked out those impressive Sirius stars, and for at least another million some odd years of having blown everything else (99.999% of that molecular cloud mass) far away. Once again, how can this kind of nearby cosmic event and of such horrific original mass not have affected our solar system? By way of reading from what others claiming to know more than most anyone else (must be Einstein clones), it seems they’d have no problems with suggesting the 1e6:1 cosmic molecular cloud of being worth 1.25e7 solar masses that created the Sirius star/solar system, and if still using 2.05e30 kg mass for that of our solar system of that same era results in yet another 10 fold increased force of attraction for that same 50 ly distance, representing 1.528e22 N (nearly half of the sun~earth attraction). Where's the all-knowing expertise from FAS, telling us whatever they seem to know best or at least suspect is most likely. Surely these brown-nosed clowns, faith-based bigots and closed mindsets of our Usenet/newsgroup that are enforcing their mainstream status quo (much like my personal Jewish shadow tries to do), are hopefully not speaking on behalf of FAS or any other professional group. ~ Brad Guth Brad_Guth Brad.Guth BradGuth BG / “Guth Usenet” |
#68
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Sirius and us(our solar system) are inseparable, at least according to
the regular laws of physics pertaining to the laws of gravity and orbital mechanics that seems more than sufficient, especially if little Sedna can be turned around at a tidal radii of 1.459e11 km that’s worth merely 2.975e13 N, whereas Sirius at 1.417e17 N (20 thousand fold stronger) and we’ve been gaining on Sirius by 7.6 km/ sec, plus most likely accelerating towards are next encounter. It’s all nothing but a mainstream infowar, a tactical gauntlet of lies, deceptions and systematic obfuscation is what it’s all about. When I’ve merely expected of others to share information and to otherwise constructively ponder and contribute to this topic and many similar ones before, all we ever got at best was a stone cold shoulder, and otherwise mostly negativity and banishment from most, as well as from a certain racist and bigotry spouting rabbi none the less. However, the laws of physics are seldom if ever politically correct or otherwise faith-based, and as such they simply do not lie, and even the best available science doesn’t support many of those established mainstream notions of excluding anything and everything that rocks a given faith-based boat.. Gravity Force of Attraction (orbital tidal radius) http://www.1728.com/gravity.htm http://www.wsanford.com/~wsanford/ca...alculator.html The cosmic molecular cloud of what created Sirius, as being worth at least 1.25e6 solar masses, while at a center to center distance of 100 ly and using our solar system mass of 2.05e30 kg for that same era, we get the following results for 100 ly (9.46053e17 m), 50 ly (4.7303e17 m) and 10 ly (9.46053e16 m). 2.05e30 kg and 2.5e36 kg at 100 ly = 3.819e20 Newtons 2.05e30 kg and 2.5e36 kg at 50 ly = 1.528e21 N 2.05e30 kg and 2.5e36 kg at 10 ly = 3.819e22 N current (sun ~ earth) gravitational force of attraction: 1.989e30 and 5.974e24 kg at 1.496e11 m = 3.541e22 N current (sun ~ mars) gravitational force of attraction: 1.989e30 and 6.418e23 kg at 2.2794e11 m = 1.639e21 N current (sun ~ pluto) gravitational force of attraction: 1.989e30 and 1.305e22 kg at 5.906e12 m = 4.964e16 N current (solar system) ~ Sedna/average gravitational attraction: 2.02e30 and 4.7e21 kg at 7.867e13 m = 1.023e14 N current (solar system) ~ Sedna/aphelion gravitational attraction: 2.02e30 and 4.7e21 kg at 1.459e14 m = 2.975e13 N current (solar system) ~ Sirius gravitational force of attraction: 2.02e30 and 6.9615e30 kg at 8.1365e16 m = 1.417e17 N Being that a molecular cloud of at least 1.25e6 solar masses is going to have a diameter of nearly 100 light years, as such I might suggest that we use the 50 ly parameter for the adjusted distance from the core density of such a molecular cloud, as for mutually binding us at the weak gravity force of 1.528e21 N. Of course by doubling that distance cuts this tidal binding force of radial gravitational attraction down to a forth, whereas even at 500 ly it’s still worth 1.528e19 N, and at the 2.5e37 solar masses brings that 500 ly distance right back up to being worth 1.528e20 N. The cosmic creation of the Sirius star/solar system was no small matter of any wussy little molecular cloud. This was an extremely large cloud and subsequent stellar birthing event of relatively recent times (250~300 MBP), and as such it would have been entirely visible to the naked human eyes of that era (not that any intelligent human via Darwin or intelligent design even existed at that time, although Ed Conrad’s “Man of Coal” seems to be of that era), and as of most recently transforming the red supergiant phase of Sirius B into a white dwarf required a helium flashover (slow nova) about as close as you can safely get, if not a little too close. By way of reading from what others claiming to know more than most anyone else (must be Einstein clones), it seems they’d have no problems with suggesting the 1e6:1 cosmic molecular cloud of having been worth 1.25e7 solar masses that created the Sirius star/solar system, and if still using 2.05e30 kg mass for that of our solar system of that same era results in yet another 10 fold increased force of attraction for that same 50 ly distance, representing 1.528e22 N (nearly half of the sun~earth attraction), and 99.9999% of this 1e6:1 molecular cloud that’s oddly nowhere to be found, by rights should have greatly affected our solar system. Try to remember that this wasn’t a one brief time kind of a cosmic drive-by event, but most likely worth at least ten million years of persistent gravity pull before ever having cranked out those impressive Sirius stars, and for at least another million some odd years of having blown everything else (99.999% of that molecular cloud) far away. Once again, how can this kind of nearby cosmic event and of such horrific original mass not have affected our solar system? Where's the all-knowing expertise from our FAS, telling us whatever they seem to know best or at least suspect is most likely, and where are those public funded supercomputer simulations. Surely these brown- nosed clowns, faith-based bigots and closed mindsets of our Usenet/ newsgroup proprietors that are continually enforcing their mainstream status quo (much like my personal Jewish shadow tries to do by trashing everyone in sight) are hopefully not speaking on behalf of our FAS or any other professional group. ~ Brad Guth Brad_Guth Brad.Guth BradGuth BG / “Guth Usenet” On Jun 20, 6:16*am, BradGuth wrote: On Apr 27, 4:47*am, BradGuth wrote: Red giant stars are many, and yet still a little hard to come by, as only a few public images of whatever is within 1000 light years seem to exist that fit within the color saturated eye-candy profiles that we’ve been taught to accept. *However, the visible spectrum is extremely limited as to what is otherwise technically accessible from just above and below our genetically limited and thus inferior visual spectrum. (seems entirely odd that our human evolution was so careless in having discarded so much visual capability, in that other creatures seem to have a far wider visual spectrum capability that includes some UV and IR) “Red GiantStarFound to Have Massive Tail” *http://www.efluxmedia.com/news_Red_G...Have_Massive_T... *Mira A of several hundred solar radii (UV colorized as bluish): “A dying star situated 400 light years away from us exhibits an unusual and massive tail of heated gas that spreads for more than 13 light years.” *http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mira *http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/galex/20070815/a.html Sirius B could have been much like an image of Mira A, except a whole lot larger (1000 solar radii), as viewed in visible and near IR *http://xmm.esac.esa.int/external/xmm...osium/173770_m... Mira A and lots more composite observationology from FAS *http://www.fas.org/irp/imint/docs/rst/Sect20/A6.html There are many possibilities, as for how Sirius B used to function as a truly massive (9 solar mass)star, thereby extremely hot and fast burning prior to becoming a red supergiant, creating an impressive planetary nebula phase before ending as the little white dwarf. *For all we know Sirius B was even a variable kind of red giant and then perhaps a slow nova flashover phase prior to finishing off as the white dwarf. These following examples are probably similar or perhaps representing a slightly smaller version of what the Sirius star/solar system looked like once Sirius B had started turning itself from an impressive red supergiant into a white dwarf of perhaps 1/8th its original mass, taking roughly 64~96,000 years for this explosive mass shedding phase to happen. *A few tens of billions of years later is when such a white dwarf eventually becomes a black dwarf, kind of black diamond spent star, in that our universe may or may not be quite old enough to display such examples. *http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Planetary_nebula *http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Helix_Nebula *http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cat%27s_Eye_Nebula *http://apod.nasa.gov/apod/ap031207.html *http://www.uv.es/jrtorres/index6.html Betelgeuse has been a massive red giant at 20+ fold the mass of our sun, and likely worth nearly 3 fold the mass of the original Sirius B, and currently expanded to 1000 solar radii, and it'll be truly impressive nova whenever it transforms into a white dwarf nearly the size of Jupiter. The soon to be renewed and improved Hubble should accomplish the improved spectrum and resolution of most everything, along with other existing and soon to be deployed telescopes should give us even better composite examples of what Sirius B used to look like. *This may give some of us a better interpretation as to what transpired right next door to us, as well as having unavoidably contributed to some of what our solar system has to offer. We seem to have become closely associated with the Sirius star cluster, even though Sirius has been a relatively newish and extremely vibrant stellar evolution (quite possibly contributed from another galaxy), and especially terrestrial illuminating of the first 200~250 million years worth. It took a cosmic molecular cloud worth perhaps at least 120,000 solar masses in order to produce such a 12+ mass star system, leaving 99.99% of that molecular mass blown away and to fend for itself, at a place and time when our existing solar system wasn't any too far away. Others might go so far as to suggest a molecular cloud mass of 1.2 million, and others yet would prefer that this terrific cloud had emerged from a smaller galaxy that encountered our Milky Way. There's no way that our passive little solar system wasn't somehow directly affected by and otherwise having become somewhat tidal radius interrelated with such a nearby mass, at least associated with the mutual barycenter that's primarily dominated by the Sirius star/solar system. Lo and behold, it seems the mergers of galactic proportions isn’t nearly as uncommon as some naysayers might care to think. The Hipparcos Space Astrometry Mission: (mainstream media ignored) *http://sci.esa.int/science-e/www/are...cfm?fareaid=20 *http://www.spacedaily.com/news/milkyway-04m.html Local galactic motion simulation: *"The Geneva-Copenhagen survey of the Solar neighborhood", by B. Nordström et al. *http://www.aanda.org/content/view/71/42/lang,en According to several physics and astronomy kinds of *observationology science (deductive interpretation of eye-candy), our Milky Way is made up of at least two galactic units, with more on their blue-shifted way towards encountering us. *Seems hardly fair considering that everything was supposedly created via one singular big bang, not to mention that hundreds to thousands of galaxies seem headed into the Great Attractor (including us) for their final demise and/or rebirth. Our Milky Way Galaxy and its Companions (we are not alone) *http://www.public.asu.edu/~rjansen/l...ocalgroup.html Don’t forget to appreciate those Hubble, KECK and multiple other archives (including those of FAS) depicting “colliding galaxies”, soon to be ESA enhanced and expanded upon via a trio of their impressive orbital observatories, not to mention whatever the renewed and improved Hubble plus our next generation of orbital observatories should further document. *It may even become hard to find galaxies as massive as ours and Andromeda that are entirely original without their having gown via mergers. Where's the all-knowing expertise from FAS, telling us whatever they seem to know best or at least suspect is most likely. *Surely these brown-nosed clowns, faith-based bigots and closed mindsets of our Usenet/newsgroup that are enforcing their mainstream status quo (much like my personal Jewish shadow tries to do), are hopefully not speaking on behalf of FAS. ~ Brad Guth Brad_Guth Brad.Guth BradGuth BG / “Guth Usenet” |
#69
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Jul 3, 5:41*am, BradGuth wrote:
Sirius and us(our solar system) are inseparable, at least according to the regular laws of physics pertaining to the laws of gravity and orbital mechanics that seems more than sufficient, especially if little Sedna can be turned around at a tidal radii of 1.459e11 km that’s worth merely 2.975e13 N, whereas Sirius at 1.417e17 N (20 thousand fold stronger) and we’ve been gaining on Sirius by 7.6 km/ sec, plus most likely accelerating towards are next encounter. It’s all nothing but a mainstream infowar, a tactical gauntlet of lies, deceptions and systematic obfuscation is what it’s all about. When I’ve merely expected of others to share information and to otherwise constructively ponder and contribute to this topic and many similar ones before, all we ever got at best was a stone cold shoulder, and otherwise mostly negativity and banishment from most, as well as from a certain racist and bigotry spouting rabbi none the less. *However, the laws of physics are seldom if ever politically correct or otherwise faith-based, and as such they simply do not lie, and even the best available science doesn’t support many of those established mainstream notions of excluding anything and everything that rocks a given faith-based boat.. Gravity Force of Attraction (orbital tidal radius) *http://www.1728.com/gravity.htm *http://www.wsanford.com/~wsanford/ca...alculator.html The cosmic molecular cloud of what created Sirius, as being worth at least 1.25e6 solar masses, while at a center to center distance of 100 ly and using our solar system mass of 2.05e30 kg for that same era, we get the following results for 100 ly (9.46053e17 m), 50 ly (4.7303e17 m) and 10 ly (9.46053e16 m). *2.05e30 kg *and *2.5e36 kg *at 100 ly = 3.819e20 Newtons *2.05e30 kg *and *2.5e36 kg *at * 50 ly = 1.528e21 N *2.05e30 kg *and *2.5e36 kg *at * 10 ly = 3.819e22 N current (sun ~ earth) gravitational force of attraction: *1.989e30 and 5.974e24 kg at 1.496e11 m = 3.541e22 N current (sun ~ mars) gravitational force of attraction: *1.989e30 and 6.418e23 kg at 2.2794e11 m = 1.639e21 N current (sun ~ pluto) gravitational force of attraction: *1.989e30 and 1.305e22 kg at 5.906e12 m = 4.964e16 N current (solar system) ~ Sedna/average gravitational attraction: *2.02e30 and 4.7e21 kg at 7.867e13 m = 1.023e14 N current (solar system) ~ Sedna/aphelion gravitational attraction: *2.02e30 and 4.7e21 kg at 1.459e14 m = 2.975e13 N current (solar system) ~ Sirius gravitational force of attraction: *2.02e30 and 6.9615e30 kg at 8.1365e16 m = 1.417e17 N Being that a molecular cloud of at least 1.25e6 solar masses is going to have a diameter of nearly 100 light years, as such I might suggest that we use the 50 ly parameter for the adjusted distance from the core density of such a molecular cloud, as for mutually binding us at the weak gravity force of 1.528e21 N. *Of course by doubling that distance cuts this tidal binding force of radial gravitational attraction down to a forth, whereas even at 500 ly it’s still worth 1.528e19 N, and at the 2.5e37 solar masses brings that 500 ly distance right back up to being worth 1.528e20 N. The cosmic creation of the Sirius star/solar system was no small matter of any wussy little molecular cloud. *This was an extremely large cloud and subsequent stellar birthing event of relatively recent times (250~300 MBP), and as such it would have been entirely visible to the naked human eyes of that era (not that any intelligent human via Darwin or intelligent design even existed at that time, although Ed Conrad’s “Man of Coal” seems to be of that era), and as of most recently transforming the red supergiant phase of Sirius B into a white dwarf required a helium flashover (slow nova) about as close as you can safely get, if not a little too close. By way of reading from what others claiming to know more than most anyone else (must be Einstein clones), it seems they’d have no problems with suggesting the 1e6:1 cosmic molecular cloud of having been worth 1.25e7 solar masses that created the Sirius star/solar system, and if still using 2.05e30 kg mass for that of our solar system of that same era results in yet another 10 fold increased force of attraction for that same 50 ly distance, representing 1.528e22 N (nearly half of the sun~earth attraction), and 99.9999% of this 1e6:1 molecular cloud that’s oddly nowhere to be found, by rights should have greatly affected our solar system. Try to remember that this wasn’t a one brief time kind of a cosmic drive-by event, but most likely worth at least ten million years of persistent gravity pull before ever having cranked out those impressive Sirius stars, and for at least another million some odd years of having blown everything else (99.999% of that molecular cloud) far away. *Once again, how can this kind of nearby cosmic event and of such horrific original mass not have affected our solar system? Where's the all-knowing expertise from our FAS, telling us whatever they seem to know best or at least suspect is most likely, and where are those public funded supercomputer simulations. *Surely these brown- nosed clowns, faith-based bigots and closed mindsets of our Usenet/ newsgroup proprietors that are continually enforcing their mainstream status quo (much like my personal Jewish shadow tries to do by trashing everyone in sight) are hopefully not speaking on behalf of our FAS or any other professional group. *~ Brad Guth Brad_Guth Brad.Guth BradGuth BG / “Guth Usenet” On Jun 20, 6:16*am, BradGuth wrote: On Apr 27, 4:47*am, BradGuth wrote: Red giant stars are many, and yet still a little hard to come by, as only a few public images of whatever is within 1000 light years seem to exist that fit within the color saturated eye-candy profiles that we’ve been taught to accept. *However, the visible spectrum is extremely limited as to what is otherwise technically accessible from just above and below our genetically limited and thus inferior visual spectrum. (seems entirely odd that our human evolution was so careless in having discarded so much visual capability, in that other creatures seem to have a far wider visual spectrum capability that includes some UV and IR) “Red GiantStarFound to Have Massive Tail” *http://www.efluxmedia.com/news_Red_G...Have_Massive_T... *Mira A of several hundred solar radii (UV colorized as bluish): “A dying star situated 400 light years away from us exhibits an unusual and massive tail of heated gas that spreads for more than 13 light years.” *http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mira *http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/galex/20070815/a.html Sirius B could have been much like an image of Mira A, except a whole lot larger (1000 solar radii), as viewed in visible and near IR *http://xmm.esac.esa.int/external/xmm...osium/173770_m... Mira A and lots more composite observationology from FAS *http://www.fas.org/irp/imint/docs/rst/Sect20/A6.html There are many possibilities, as for how Sirius B used to function as a truly massive (9 solar mass)star, thereby extremely hot and fast burning prior to becoming a red supergiant, creating an impressive planetary nebula phase before ending as the little white dwarf. *For all we know Sirius B was even a variable kind of red giant and then perhaps a slow nova flashover phase prior to finishing off as the white dwarf. These following examples are probably similar or perhaps representing a slightly smaller version of what the Sirius star/solar system looked like once Sirius B had started turning itself from an impressive red supergiant into a white dwarf of perhaps 1/8th its original mass, taking roughly 64~96,000 years for this explosive mass shedding phase to happen. *A few tens of billions of years later is when such a white dwarf eventually becomes a black dwarf, kind of black diamond spent star, in that our universe may or may not be quite old enough to display such examples. *http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Planetary_nebula *http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Helix_Nebula *http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cat%27s_Eye_Nebula *http://apod.nasa.gov/apod/ap031207.html *http://www.uv.es/jrtorres/index6.html Betelgeuse has been a massive red giant at 20+ fold the mass of our sun, and likely worth nearly 3 fold the mass of the original Sirius B, and currently expanded to 1000 solar radii, and it'll be truly impressive nova whenever it transforms into a white dwarf nearly the size of Jupiter. The soon to be renewed and improved Hubble should accomplish the improved spectrum and resolution of most everything, along with other existing and soon to be deployed telescopes should give us even better composite examples of what Sirius B used to look like. *This may give some of us a better interpretation as to what transpired right next door to us, as well as having unavoidably contributed to some of what our solar system has to offer. We seem to have become closely associated with the Sirius star cluster, even though Sirius has been a relatively newish and extremely vibrant stellar evolution (quite possibly contributed from another galaxy), and especially terrestrial illuminating of the first 200~250 million years worth. It took a cosmic molecular cloud worth perhaps at least 120,000 solar masses in order to produce such a 12+ mass star system, leaving 99.99% of that molecular mass blown away and to fend for itself, at a place and time when our existing solar system wasn't any too far away. Others might go so far as to suggest a molecular cloud mass of 1.2 million, and others yet would prefer that this terrific cloud had emerged from a smaller galaxy that encountered our Milky Way. There's no way that our passive little solar system wasn't somehow directly affected by and otherwise having become somewhat tidal radius interrelated with such a nearby mass, at least associated with the mutual barycenter that's primarily dominated by the Sirius star/solar system. Lo and behold, it seems the mergers of galactic proportions isn’t nearly as uncommon as some naysayers might care to think. The Hipparcos Space Astrometry Mission: (mainstream media ignored) *http://sci.esa.int/science-e/www/are...cfm?fareaid=20 *http://www.spacedaily.com/news/milkyway-04m.html Local galactic motion simulation: *"The Geneva-Copenhagen survey of the Solar neighborhood", by B. Nordström et al. *http://www.aanda.org/content/view/71/42/lang,en According to several physics and astronomy kinds of *observationology science (deductive interpretation of eye-candy), our Milky Way is made up of at least two galactic units, with more on their blue-shifted way towards encountering us. *Seems hardly fair considering that everything was supposedly created via one singular big bang, not to mention that hundreds to thousands of galaxies seem headed into the Great Attractor (including us) for their final demise and/or rebirth. Our Milky Way Galaxy and its Companions (we are not alone) *http://www.public.asu.edu/~rjansen/l...ocalgroup.html Don’t forget to appreciate those Hubble, KECK and multiple other archives (including those of FAS) depicting “colliding galaxies”, soon to be ESA enhanced and expanded upon via a trio of their impressive orbital observatories, not to mention whatever the renewed and improved Hubble plus our next generation of orbital observatories should further document. *It may even become hard to find galaxies as massive as ours and Andromeda that are entirely original without their having gown via mergers. Where's the all-knowing expertise from FAS, telling us whatever they seem to know best or at least suspect is most likely. *Surely these brown-nosed clowns, faith-based bigots and closed mindsets of our Usenet/newsgroup that are enforcing their mainstream status quo (much like my personal Jewish shadow tries to do), are hopefully not speaking on behalf of FAS. ~ Brad Guth Brad_Guth Brad.Guth BradGuth BG / “Guth Usenet” ”Whoever controls the past, controls the future” / George Orwell “We're ignorant of life in the universe. We only have one planet that serves as an example and in science it's not good to derive information from a sample size of one.” / David Grinspoon |
#70
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
How could the Sirius B helium flashover not have affected us?
How could the tidal radii of the Sirius star/solar system not have our solar system within its control? How could the original molecular cloud as having given birth to the extremely vibrant Sirius star/solar system have gone through our part of this galaxy so quickly, and without a trace? ~ BG On Jul 3, 5:41*am, BradGuth wrote: Sirius and us(our solar system) are inseparable, at least according to the regular laws of physics pertaining to the laws of gravity and orbital mechanics that seems more than sufficient, especially if little Sedna can be turned around at a tidal radii of 1.459e11 km that’s worth merely 2.975e13 N, whereas Sirius at 1.417e17 N (20 thousand fold stronger) and we’ve been gaining on Sirius by 7.6 km/ sec, plus most likely accelerating towards are next encounter. It’s all nothing but a mainstream infowar, a tactical gauntlet of lies, deceptions and systematic obfuscation is what it’s all about. When I’ve merely expected of others to share information and to otherwise constructively ponder and contribute to this topic and many similar ones before, all we ever got at best was a stone cold shoulder, and otherwise mostly negativity and banishment from most, as well as from a certain racist and bigotry spouting rabbi none the less. *However, the laws of physics are seldom if ever politically correct or otherwise faith-based, and as such they simply do not lie, and even the best available science doesn’t support many of those established mainstream notions of excluding anything and everything that rocks a given faith-based boat.. Gravity Force of Attraction (orbital tidal radius) *http://www.1728.com/gravity.htm *http://www.wsanford.com/~wsanford/ca...alculator.html The cosmic molecular cloud of what created Sirius, as being worth at least 1.25e6 solar masses, while at a center to center distance of 100 ly and using our solar system mass of 2.05e30 kg for that same era, we get the following results for 100 ly (9.46053e17 m), 50 ly (4.7303e17 m) and 10 ly (9.46053e16 m). *2.05e30 kg *and *2.5e36 kg *at 100 ly = 3.819e20 Newtons *2.05e30 kg *and *2.5e36 kg *at * 50 ly = 1.528e21 N *2.05e30 kg *and *2.5e36 kg *at * 10 ly = 3.819e22 N current (sun ~ earth) gravitational force of attraction: *1.989e30 and 5.974e24 kg at 1.496e11 m = 3.541e22 N current (sun ~ mars) gravitational force of attraction: *1.989e30 and 6.418e23 kg at 2.2794e11 m = 1.639e21 N current (sun ~ pluto) gravitational force of attraction: *1.989e30 and 1.305e22 kg at 5.906e12 m = 4.964e16 N current (solar system) ~ Sedna/average gravitational attraction: *2.02e30 and 4.7e21 kg at 7.867e13 m = 1.023e14 N current (solar system) ~ Sedna/aphelion gravitational attraction: *2.02e30 and 4.7e21 kg at 1.459e14 m = 2.975e13 N current (solar system) ~ Sirius gravitational force of attraction: *2.02e30 and 6.9615e30 kg at 8.1365e16 m = 1.417e17 N Being that a molecular cloud of at least 1.25e6 solar masses is going to have a diameter of nearly 100 light years, as such I might suggest that we use the 50 ly parameter for the adjusted distance from the core density of such a molecular cloud, as for mutually binding us at the weak gravity force of 1.528e21 N. *Of course by doubling that distance cuts this tidal binding force of radial gravitational attraction down to a forth, whereas even at 500 ly it’s still worth 1.528e19 N, and at the 2.5e37 solar masses brings that 500 ly distance right back up to being worth 1.528e20 N. The cosmic creation of the Sirius star/solar system was no small matter of any wussy little molecular cloud. *This was an extremely large cloud and subsequent stellar birthing event of relatively recent times (250~300 MBP), and as such it would have been entirely visible to the naked human eyes of that era (not that any intelligent human via Darwin or intelligent design even existed at that time, although Ed Conrad’s “Man of Coal” seems to be of that era), and as of most recently transforming the red supergiant phase of Sirius B into a white dwarf required a helium flashover (slow nova) about as close as you can safely get, if not a little too close. By way of reading from what others claiming to know more than most anyone else (must be Einstein clones), it seems they’d have no problems with suggesting the 1e6:1 cosmic molecular cloud of having been worth 1.25e7 solar masses that created the Sirius star/solar system, and if still using 2.05e30 kg mass for that of our solar system of that same era results in yet another 10 fold increased force of attraction for that same 50 ly distance, representing 1.528e22 N (nearly half of the sun~earth attraction), and 99.9999% of this 1e6:1 molecular cloud that’s oddly nowhere to be found, by rights should have greatly affected our solar system. Try to remember that this wasn’t a one brief time kind of a cosmic drive-by event, but most likely worth at least ten million years of persistent gravity pull before ever having cranked out those impressive Sirius stars, and for at least another million some odd years of having blown everything else (99.999% of that molecular cloud) far away. *Once again, how can this kind of nearby cosmic event and of such horrific original mass not have affected our solar system? Where's the all-knowing expertise from our FAS, telling us whatever they seem to know best or at least suspect is most likely, and where are those public funded supercomputer simulations. *Surely these brown- nosed clowns, faith-based bigots and closed mindsets of our Usenet/ newsgroup proprietors that are continually enforcing their mainstream status quo (much like my personal Jewish shadow tries to do by trashing everyone in sight) are hopefully not speaking on behalf of our FAS or any other professional group. *~ Brad Guth Brad_Guth Brad.Guth BradGuth BG / “Guth Usenet” On Jun 20, 6:16*am, BradGuth wrote: On Apr 27, 4:47*am, BradGuth wrote: Red giant stars are many, and yet still a little hard to come by, as only a few public images of whatever is within 1000 light years seem to exist that fit within the color saturated eye-candy profiles that we’ve been taught to accept. *However, the visible spectrum is extremely limited as to what is otherwise technically accessible from just above and below our genetically limited and thus inferior visual spectrum. (seems entirely odd that our human evolution was so careless in having discarded so much visual capability, in that other creatures seem to have a far wider visual spectrum capability that includes some UV and IR) “Red GiantStarFound to Have Massive Tail” *http://www.efluxmedia.com/news_Red_G...Have_Massive_T... *Mira A of several hundred solar radii (UV colorized as bluish): “A dying star situated 400 light years away from us exhibits an unusual and massive tail of heated gas that spreads for more than 13 light years.” *http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mira *http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/galex/20070815/a.html Sirius B could have been much like an image of Mira A, except a whole lot larger (1000 solar radii), as viewed in visible and near IR *http://xmm.esac.esa.int/external/xmm...osium/173770_m... Mira A and lots more composite observationology from FAS *http://www.fas.org/irp/imint/docs/rst/Sect20/A6.html There are many possibilities, as for how Sirius B used to function as a truly massive (9 solar mass)star, thereby extremely hot and fast burning prior to becoming a red supergiant, creating an impressive planetary nebula phase before ending as the little white dwarf. *For all we know Sirius B was even a variable kind of red giant and then perhaps a slow nova flashover phase prior to finishing off as the white dwarf. These following examples are probably similar or perhaps representing a slightly smaller version of what the Sirius star/solar system looked like once Sirius B had started turning itself from an impressive red supergiant into a white dwarf of perhaps 1/8th its original mass, taking roughly 64~96,000 years for this explosive mass shedding phase to happen. *A few tens of billions of years later is when such a white dwarf eventually becomes a black dwarf, kind of black diamond spent star, in that our universe may or may not be quite old enough to display such examples. *http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Planetary_nebula *http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Helix_Nebula *http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cat%27s_Eye_Nebula *http://apod.nasa.gov/apod/ap031207.html *http://www.uv.es/jrtorres/index6.html Betelgeuse has been a massive red giant at 20+ fold the mass of our sun, and likely worth nearly 3 fold the mass of the original Sirius B, and currently expanded to 1000 solar radii, and it'll be truly impressive nova whenever it transforms into a white dwarf nearly the size of Jupiter. The soon to be renewed and improved Hubble should accomplish the improved spectrum and resolution of most everything, along with other existing and soon to be deployed telescopes should give us even better composite examples of what Sirius B used to look like. *This may give some of us a better interpretation as to what transpired right next door to us, as well as having unavoidably contributed to some of what our solar system has to offer. We seem to have become closely associated with the Sirius star cluster, even though Sirius has been a relatively newish and extremely vibrant stellar evolution (quite possibly contributed from another galaxy), and especially terrestrial illuminating of the first 200~250 million years worth. It took a cosmic molecular cloud worth perhaps at least 120,000 solar masses in order to produce such a 12+ mass star system, leaving 99.99% of that molecular mass blown away and to fend for itself, at a place and time when our existing solar system wasn't any too far away. Others might go so far as to suggest a molecular cloud mass of 1.2 million, and others yet would prefer that this terrific cloud had emerged from a smaller galaxy that encountered our Milky Way. There's no way that our passive little solar system wasn't somehow directly affected by and otherwise having become somewhat tidal radius interrelated with such a nearby mass, at least associated with the mutual barycenter that's primarily dominated by the Sirius star/solar system. Lo and behold, it seems the mergers of galactic proportions isn’t nearly as uncommon as some naysayers might care to think. The Hipparcos Space Astrometry Mission: (mainstream media ignored) *http://sci.esa.int/science-e/www/are...cfm?fareaid=20 *http://www.spacedaily.com/news/milkyway-04m.html Local galactic motion simulation: *"The Geneva-Copenhagen survey of the Solar neighborhood", by B. Nordström et al. *http://www.aanda.org/content/view/71/42/lang,en According to several physics and astronomy kinds of *observationology science (deductive interpretation of eye-candy), our Milky Way is made up of at least two galactic units, with more on their blue-shifted way towards encountering us. *Seems hardly fair considering that everything was supposedly created via one singular big bang, not to mention that hundreds to thousands of galaxies seem headed into the Great Attractor (including us) for their final demise and/or rebirth. Our Milky Way Galaxy and its Companions (we are not alone) *http://www.public.asu.edu/~rjansen/l...ocalgroup.html Don’t forget to appreciate those Hubble, KECK and multiple other archives (including those of FAS) depicting “colliding galaxies”, soon to be ESA enhanced and expanded upon via a trio of their impressive orbital observatories, not to mention whatever the renewed and improved Hubble plus our next generation of orbital observatories should further document. *It may even become hard to find galaxies as massive as ours and Andromeda that are entirely original without their having gown via mergers. Where's the all-knowing expertise from FAS, telling us whatever they seem to know best or at least suspect is most likely. *Surely these brown-nosed clowns, faith-based bigots and closed mindsets of our Usenet/newsgroup that are enforcing their mainstream status quo (much like my personal Jewish shadow tries to do), are hopefully not speaking on behalf of FAS. ~ Brad Guth Brad_Guth Brad.Guth BradGuth BG / “Guth Usenet” |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
solid phase/neutron state phase transition | Rudy von Massow | Misc | 0 | January 28th 06 02:09 AM |
Koelle: Saturn retrospective | Andrew Gray | History | 63 | June 30th 05 04:26 PM |
Why is Sirius B hotter than Sirius A? | me | Astronomy Misc | 7 | April 18th 05 02:46 AM |