#1
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What if (On Water)
What if the Earth had no water? We just have to walk on the Moon to see
what the Earth would be like. This begs the question Where did all this water come from? If by water comets ,why just the EaRTH? That also begs the question How did these comets get all that ice water? I don't think there is anything more than the comet "theory",and I find I have trouble living with that. It would work for me if the Earth had molecules of water,but not the amount the Earth has. Bert |
#2
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What if (On Water)
"G=EMC^2 Glazier" wrote in message ... What if the Earth had no water? We just have to walk on the Moon to see what the Earth would be like. This begs the question Where did all this water come from? If by water comets ,why just the EaRTH? That also begs the question How did these comets get all that ice water? I don't think there is anything more than the comet "theory",and I find I have trouble living with that. It would work for me if the Earth had molecules of water,but not the amount the Earth has. Bert Beeert, almost all the first generation stars met their demise in the form of a super nova. That is because their composition was what the BB provided, namely 75% Hydrogen, 20% Helium and 5% misc. It took a huge ball of this light stuff to start the nuclear furnace within, and it burned furiously, sometimes only 200,000 years, before they blew up, seeding the Universe with most of the elements of the periodic table. One of those elements was Oxygen, which very easily bonded with the still most abundant of elements, Hydrogen, to make water (ice). Scientists have suggested that most of the Kuiper Belt and the Oort Cloud consist of those icy objects, which, when ejected from their orbits by gravitational interaction (or even a physical bump), are then commonly referred to as comets. During the early stages of the formation of the Solar System, all planets were more or less bombarded in equal proportions by these icy comets, but Earth, due to its atmosphere was able to retain the ice (water), whereas planets and moon without that kind of mantle of protection saw their share of the precious stuff evaporate and drift off into space to either plunge into the Sun or drift to the nether regions to re-attach themselves to new Kuiper Belt objects. |
#3
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What if (On Water)
On Jun 22, 5:32 am, (G=EMC^2 Glazier) wrote:
What if the Earth had no water? We just have to walk on the Moon to see what the Earth would be like. This begs the question Where did all this water come from? If by water comets ,why just the EaRTH? That also begs the question How did these comets get all that ice water? I don't think there is anything more than the comet "theory",and I find I have trouble living with that. It would work for me if the Earth had molecules of water,but not the amount the Earth has. Bert There's still no official hard peer replicated science on behalf of the survival of raw h2o ice in space, or much less of salty ice existing/coexisting in 1 AU space. It's all a Zionist/Nazi (aka DARPA) game of their keeping us as snookered village idiots and otherwise dumbfounded past the point of no return. Sirius used to represent a complex binary star/solar system of 7+ solar mass, and from that is most likely where our icy proto-moon came from. - Brad Guth Brad_Guth Brad.Guth BradGuth |
#4
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What if (On Water)
"BradGuth" wrote in message ... On Jun 22, 5:32 am, (G=EMC^2 Glazier) wrote: What if the Earth had no water? We just have to walk on the Moon to see what the Earth would be like. This begs the question Where did all this water come from? If by water comets ,why just the EaRTH? That also begs the question How did these comets get all that ice water? I don't think there is anything more than the comet "theory",and I find I have trouble living with that. It would work for me if the Earth had molecules of water,but not the amount the Earth has. Bert There's still no official hard peer replicated science on behalf of the survival of raw h2o ice in space, or much less of salty ice existing/coexisting in 1 AU space. It's all a Zionist/Nazi (aka DARPA) game of their keeping us as snookered village idiots and otherwise dumbfounded past the point of no return. Thought you were born that way, Brad ... |
#5
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What if (On Water)
Hagar I know how heavy elements like oxygen came to be. One of my
questions was why water comets? There are none in our solar system at this time. Going all the way out to the Oort belt and saying "here they are" Is once upon a time ****" Or I can say "Were you there Hagar. I can safely say the Oort cloud only has tiny space out rocks. Why not Go figure Bert |
#6
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What if (On Water)
On Jun 22, 10:16 am, "Hagar" wrote:
"BradGuth" wrote in message ... On Jun 22, 5:32 am, (G=EMC^2 Glazier) wrote: What if the Earth had no water? We just have to walk on the Moon to see what the Earth would be like. This begs the question Where did all this water come from? If by water comets ,why just the EaRTH? That also begs the question How did these comets get all that ice water? I don't think there is anything more than the comet "theory",and I find I have trouble living with that. It would work for me if the Earth had molecules of water,but not the amount the Earth has. Bert There's still no official hard peer replicated science on behalf of the survival of raw h2o ice in space, or much less of salty ice existing/coexisting in 1 AU space. It's all a Zionist/Nazi (aka DARPA) game of their keeping us as snookered village idiots and otherwise dumbfounded past the point of no return. Thought you were born that way, Brad ... So, DARPA isn't allowing you or others of your brown-nosed kind to say one honest science or physics word about ice in space. Silly status quo damage-control, as per brown-nosed minion usual of yourself. - Brad Guth Brad_Guth Brad.Guth BradGuth |
#7
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What if (On Water)
On Jun 22, 10:41 am, (G=EMC^2 Glazier) wrote:
Hagar I know how heavy elements like oxygen came to be. One of my questions was why water comets? There are none in our solar system at this time. Going all the way out to the Oort belt and saying "here they are" Is once upon a time ****" Or I can say "Were you there Hagar. I can safely say the Oort cloud only has tiny space out rocks. Why not Go figure Bert Hagar is clearly from the Zionist dark side, if not from a black hole. An interstellar migrating/rogue space rock of 7.35e22 kg should make a really good electrostatic charged plus gravity core for collecting into an impressive ice ball, especially once having migrated through a couple of icy Oort clouds. - Brad Guth Brad_Guth Brad.Guth BradGuth |
#8
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What if (On Water)
"G=EMC^2 Glazier" wrote in message ... Hagar I know how heavy elements like oxygen came to be. One of my questions was why water comets? There are none in our solar system at this time. Going all the way out to the Oort belt and saying "here they are" Is once upon a time ****" Or I can say "Were you there Hagar. I can safely say the Oort cloud only has tiny space out rocks. Why not Go figure Bert Beeert, both the Kuiper Belt and the Oort Cloud are populated predominantly by "Ices", with water ice the most abundant, followed by ammonia ice and then methane ice. These objects are not necessarily nice round balls, even though some of the larger ones (Sedna) are spheroid. These objects are really considered asteroids, until they, either by gravitational interaction with neighboring bodies or even by physical collision, propelled towards the Sun. At that juncture they become comets. Keep in mind that the outer edge of the Oort Cloud is a distance of 2 LYs from the sun, and the long period comets (Halley's) originate and retreat there. However, water ice is the largest single component of those bodies. In the Oort Cloud, that is an educated scientific guess. In the Kuiper Belt, it has been verified by spectral analysis. In a newly discovered Solar System in the Making (do a search for Spitzer telescope pictures) huge amounts of water vapor have been detected in the primordial soup that surrounds the fledgling star. So it appears that water in the Universe is the rule, rather than the exception. And rightly so, it is, after all, the most important ingredient in beer. |
#9
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What if (On Water)
On Jun 22, 5:32*am, (G=EMC^2 Glazier) wrote:
What if the Earth had no water? *We just have to walk on the Moon to see what the Earth would be like. *This begs the question *Where did all this water come from? *If by water comets ,why just the EaRTH? * That also begs the question How did these comets get all that ice water? *I don't think there is anything more than the comet "theory",and I find I have trouble living with that. It would work for me if the Earth had molecules of water,but not the amount the Earth has. * Bert The real question is, how did the moon lose all its water? Double-A |
#10
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What if (On Water)
On Jun 22, 11:27*am, "Hagar" wrote:
"G=EMC^2 Glazier" wrote in message ... Hagar *I know how heavy elements like oxygen came to be. *One of my questions was why water comets? *There are none in our solar system at this time. Going all the way out to the Oort belt and saying "here they are" Is once upon a time ****" *Or I can say "Were you there Hagar. *I can safely say the Oort cloud only has tiny space out rocks. *Why not Go figure *Bert Beeert, both the Kuiper Belt and the Oort Cloud are populated predominantly by "Ices", with water ice the most abundant, followed by ammonia ice and then methane ice. *These objects are not necessarily nice round balls, even though some of the larger ones (Sedna) are spheroid. These objects are really considered asteroids, until they, either by gravitational interaction with neighboring bodies or even by physical collision, propelled towards the Sun. *At that juncture they become comets. *Keep in mind that the outer edge of the Oort Cloud is a distance of 2 LYs from the sun, and the long period comets (Halley's) originate and retreat there. However, water ice is the largest single component of those bodies. In the Oort Cloud, that is an educated scientific guess. *In the Kuiper Belt, it has been verified by spectral analysis. In a newly discovered Solar System in the Making (do a search for Spitzer telescope pictures) huge amounts of water vapor have been detected in the primordial soup that surrounds the fledgling star. *So it appears that water in the Universe is the rule, rather than the exception. *And rightly so, it is, after all, the most important ingredient in beer. Also, known by its chemical classification as dihydrogen monoxide, it has been found extremely hazardous in many applications, enumerated here - http://www.dhmo.org/facts.html |
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