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#31
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On May 30, 12:00*am, "Mark Earnest" wrote:
"BradGuth" wrote in message ... On May 29, 7:26 pm, "Mark Earnest" wrote: "BradGuth" wrote in message Everything we see or detect is as you say in the past, and everything including photons are in orbit around something. It is unlikely photons or gravitons escape the event horizon of our closed universe. **By "have looked across time" at a star I mean when you look at a star you are looking beyond the apparent time of the remote past all the way to the present. **We see the star itself, not just the stream of light emitted toward us by it. TRACE sees the actual fluid and magnetic surface stuff of a star, although it still sees only the past. **If when you look into the clear night time sky and see a star, you are seeing the star as it is. *Your brain takes away the effect of its distance from you. Either you see the star or you don't. *Be pure about it. TRACE only cost us $50M. *Thus far it's costing us less than $5M/year. **What does TRACE stand for? Transition Region and Coronal Explorer http://helios.gsfc.nasa.gov/trace_mosaic.html http://sunland.gsfc.nasa.gov/smex/tr...sion/trace.htm http://www.nasa.gov/multimedia/image...ature_221.html What we need is a replacement TRACEx100 or TEACE(e2). Actually a pair or three TRACEx100 units would be nice. ~ BG |
#32
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BG The biggest curve in space is a black hole,and that is the reason GR
predicted black holes before humankind even gave them a thought. That is also why a black hole does not relate to the universe. It is in a sense cut off from the universe. When close enough to absorb a star the material of the star is reduced to its atoms,and entering the event horizon the atoms are reduced to their building blocks(subatomic particles) Falling into a black hole is like falling into a well,and the fall is infinitely long since time has stopped,. Reason for that is these quantum submicroscopic particles have reached the speed of c TreBert |
#33
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On May 31, 5:34*am, (G=EMC^2 Glazier) wrote:
BG *The biggest curve in space is a black hole,and that is the reason GR predicted black holes before humankind even gave them a thought. That is also why a black hole does not relate to the universe. It is in a sense cut off from the universe. When close enough to absorb a star the material of the star is reduced to its atoms,and entering the event horizon the atoms are reduced to their building blocks(subatomic particles) *Falling into a black hole is like falling into a well,and the fall is infinitely long since time has stopped,. Reason for that is these quantum submicroscopic particles have reached the speed of c TreBert The Great Attractor will eventually become our black hole demise or perhaps wormhole exit away from this universe, because thus far there's nothing as having emerged from within "The Great Attractor". However, by the time we get there, our passive sun will have pooped out, and perhaps even a good billion years before then all forms of life as we know it will have ceased to exist/coexist on Eden/Earth. Seems our cosmic God(s) and for certain those Gods of so many previous and other soon to be defunct galaxies screwed up such cosmic things far worse than even our mostly Republican faith-based Mafia could imagine. Perhaps once a hundred some odd galaxies become the black hole core of our Great Attractor, that yet another terrific BH implosion and subsequent expansion will take place. ~ BG |
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