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How Old is our Universe?



 
 
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  #91  
Old June 20th 07, 07:01 AM posted to alt.astronomy
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Default How Old is our Universe?

Have you ever observed any thermal emission from any black hole, which
is supposed to be originating from this Hawking radiation?

  #92  
Old June 20th 07, 07:27 AM posted to alt.astronomy
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Default How Old is our Universe?

As far as I can see, only quantum decoherence will occur from
absorbing and disintegrating one of the units from an entangled
particle pair.

  #93  
Old June 20th 07, 12:20 PM posted to alt.astronomy
G=EMC^2 Glazier[_1_]
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Default How Old is our Universe?

Double-A Hawkings is not a great hypothetical thinker. BH do not
evaporate no more than neutron stars emitting electrons. Nothing can
get out of a hole in space. Stuff can orbit the hole(make a disk) but
once in nothing can get out not even neutrinos. Before going in
particle pairs can be made to split by the great speed,and gravitational
force. One goes in the other is flung back into space all at speeds of
99.999999999999999999 of 'c' Reality is stuff that enters a BH is
reduced in mass to sub-microscopic particles. Atoms striped of electrons
Quarks are striped of their strong force(glueons) and enter as single
sub-particles with no positive fractional charges. Reality is all
forces gravity created Strong,Weak and Electromagnetic no longer exist.
What is inside a BH is highly compress space's intrinsic energy. I can
relate this to the very first universe that was created without black
holes. That took place eons ago. Our universe is a mini universe
that was created like all other mini universes from a black hole that
has reached its critical mass of 6 trillion Suns. There
are as many mini universes as flakes of snow in an endless storm. They
are created in pairs. They are all exactly the same right down to the
number of electrons. Fact is universes are easier to create than snow
flakes. bert

  #94  
Old June 20th 07, 12:36 PM posted to alt.astronomy
G=EMC^2 Glazier[_1_]
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Default How Old is our Universe?

Zan You can compare time i9n a black hole as being in a space ship
going at 99.999999999999999999 of 'c' A photon has no time. It can be
every where at once. Inside a black hole the photon of a light clock
has no angle,because it has no motion. Inside a black hole electrons
can not exist. They have no spinning cloud,and without spin there can
not be electrons. Motion is the heart of the sub-microscopic realm,and
the black holes great gravity has taken away this internal motion. Its
only motion is compressing all that is to its core. Zan you can ask me
how strong this force of gravity inside a black hole is? I have that
answer. bert PS more imperial thinking done with the help of Bud
light

  #95  
Old June 20th 07, 12:39 PM posted to alt.astronomy
G=EMC^2 Glazier[_1_]
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Default How Old is our Universe?

Zan As there are an infinite number of gravity areas in the cosmos
there are an infinite number of time zones. That is reality bert

  #96  
Old June 20th 07, 12:49 PM posted to alt.astronomy
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Double-A How dare you have take Hawking thinking over my imperial
thinking. I'm reporting this to our captain nightbat. This has to be the
start of mutiny. I demand satisfaction. It will be who can watch the
Wizard of Oz over and over (none stop) the longest. I will bring the MSP
chips bert

  #97  
Old June 20th 07, 06:39 PM posted to alt.astronomy
G=EMC^2 Glazier[_1_]
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Default How Old is our Universe?

Double-a Time moves very slow for an hydrogen atom.Its life time can be
infinite. Photons can stop time because of their great constant speed.
There are photons that came out of the BB that are still free and part
of the universe today. bert

  #98  
Old June 20th 07, 06:44 PM posted to alt.astronomy
G=EMC^2 Glazier[_1_]
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Default How Old is our Universe?

Zan Best to keep in mind if water had a volume the size of our solar
system it would be a black hole That comes out of the imperial
knowledge of a classical book bert

  #99  
Old June 20th 07, 06:48 PM posted to alt.astronomy
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Double-A If three neutron stars were to merge it would than have the
mass density of a black hole. One of the key feature of a black hole is
its rate of spin. I will do a post on that. bert

  #100  
Old June 21st 07, 02:20 AM posted to alt.astronomy
Double-A[_1_]
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Default How Old is our Universe?

On Jun 19, 11:01 pm, wrote:
Have you ever observed any thermal emission from any black hole, which
is supposed to be originating from this Hawking radiation?



No, this has never been observed. But if Hawking is wrong about this,
it will make the experimental attempts to create black holes at Cern
much more dangerous!

Double-A


 




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