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Black Hole Strikes Deepest Musical Note Ever Heard



 
 
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  #11  
Old September 11th 03, 06:32 PM
Bill Sheppard
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Call me pedantic, but I understood sound waves can't travel through
space - not
enough matter to shake all about. I
remember an experiment was done once where some guy pumped air out of

a
chamber in which a bell was ringing, and when all the air was

extracted, you
couldn't hear the thing.


Not pedantic at all, reverand. The interstellar gas thru which those
"sound" waves are propagating is more rarified than the best man-made
vacuum. How much "sonic" energy is gonna be transmitted thru such a
rarified gas? Yet Chandra is seeing some pretty substanbtial structuring
in those outbound compression-rarefaction waves. Why not just
acknowledge them for what they a compression-rarefaction waves in the
matrix of space itself, otherwise known as 'gravity waves', propagating
at c?
Predicted by Einstein, gravity waves have never been
*directly* detected (too much terrestrial background noise). Recently,
GW radiation was indirectly inferred by the spin-up of a binary pulsar
(Taylor & Hulse, 1974).
Now for the first time, the Chandra images are showing
direct GW signatures. So why is it being presented as 'sonic' energy?
Yeah, it's because space is 'pure void' and
'nothingness'. The old chestnut at work, determined never to acknowledge
the reality of the spatial medium, or VED.
Ho hum
oc

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  #12  
Old September 11th 03, 06:32 PM
Bill Sheppard
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default

Call me pedantic, but I understood sound waves can't travel through
space - not
enough matter to shake all about. I
remember an experiment was done once where some guy pumped air out of

a
chamber in which a bell was ringing, and when all the air was

extracted, you
couldn't hear the thing.


Not pedantic at all, reverand. The interstellar gas thru which those
"sound" waves are propagating is more rarified than the best man-made
vacuum. How much "sonic" energy is gonna be transmitted thru such a
rarified gas? Yet Chandra is seeing some pretty substanbtial structuring
in those outbound compression-rarefaction waves. Why not just
acknowledge them for what they a compression-rarefaction waves in the
matrix of space itself, otherwise known as 'gravity waves', propagating
at c?
Predicted by Einstein, gravity waves have never been
*directly* detected (too much terrestrial background noise). Recently,
GW radiation was indirectly inferred by the spin-up of a binary pulsar
(Taylor & Hulse, 1974).
Now for the first time, the Chandra images are showing
direct GW signatures. So why is it being presented as 'sonic' energy?
Yeah, it's because space is 'pure void' and
'nothingness'. The old chestnut at work, determined never to acknowledge
the reality of the spatial medium, or VED.
Ho hum
oc

Anti-spam address: oldcoot88atwebtv.net
Change 'at' to@

  #13  
Old September 11th 03, 10:17 PM
HellPopeHuey
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Carusus wrote in message ...

Sound can travel through interstellar gas - it explains this in the article.


Thank you. I love people who can READ, although my own retention is
beginning to flap like the rotting drawing room drapes in a Tennessee
Williams extravaganza. Also, a truly enormous amount of gas can travel
through Usenet.

Here's a modest treat for alt.astronomy members who never asked for
the vulgar intrusion of the SubGenius mob. Intriguing stuff.

www.ipac.caltech.edu/Outreach/Multiwave

--

HellPope Huey,
Our cat has lost 30% of her manners,
which were a quart low to begin with.
Anybody need some driving gloves?

You were weak; I made you beefy.
You were bland; I made you tasty.
- Lea & Perrins commercial

"Toe-tappingly tragic."
- "Futurama"
  #14  
Old September 11th 03, 10:17 PM
HellPopeHuey
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default

Carusus wrote in message ...

Sound can travel through interstellar gas - it explains this in the article.


Thank you. I love people who can READ, although my own retention is
beginning to flap like the rotting drawing room drapes in a Tennessee
Williams extravaganza. Also, a truly enormous amount of gas can travel
through Usenet.

Here's a modest treat for alt.astronomy members who never asked for
the vulgar intrusion of the SubGenius mob. Intriguing stuff.

www.ipac.caltech.edu/Outreach/Multiwave

--

HellPope Huey,
Our cat has lost 30% of her manners,
which were a quart low to begin with.
Anybody need some driving gloves?

You were weak; I made you beefy.
You were bland; I made you tasty.
- Lea & Perrins commercial

"Toe-tappingly tragic."
- "Futurama"
 




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