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what if (on colliding galaxies)



 
 
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  #51  
Old August 5th 08, 10:54 AM posted to alt.astronomy
BradGuth
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Default what if (on colliding galaxies)

On Aug 4, 5:34 pm, Timberwoof
wrote:
In article
,

BradGuth wrote:
Why are you so afraid of gravity and the tidal radius of consequences
when things get near enough to matter?


Well, you are a never-ending fount of undefined terms and phrases! What,
pray tell, is a "tidal radius of consequences"?


Your "prey tell" is fully noted. I'll let you know as soon as I can
precisely word it so that folks like yourself don't implode like
another BH God fart.

~ Brad Guth Brad_Guth Brad.Guth BradGuth
  #52  
Old August 5th 08, 11:05 AM posted to alt.astronomy
BradGuth
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Default what if (on colliding galaxies)

On Aug 4, 6:39 pm, "Warren G. Harding" wrote:
Timberwoof wrote:
In article
,
BradGuth wrote:


Why are you so afraid of gravity and the tidal radius of consequences
when things get near enough to matter?


Well, you are a never-ending fount of undefined terms and phrases! What,
pray tell, is a "tidal radius of consequences"?


As usual, Brad needs you to define his random techno-phrases for him.
He can't do it.

If I was forced to guess, in this example, the tidal radius of
consequences would have to be approximately 42 Tesla. With gravity
factored in, the elliptical tidal radius would expand to 53 ****ts.


That's an interesting set of numbers. Is that per kg or per solar
mass?

Have you got a computer simulation of such tidal interactive energy
instead of force?

btw, how many teraVolts is our Selene/moon charged with? (or doesn't
an electrostatic charge account for anything)

Is our Selene/moon of a positive or negative charge, or does it
alternate?

~ Brad Guth Brad_Guth Brad.Guth BradGuth
  #53  
Old August 5th 08, 11:34 AM posted to alt.astronomy
G=EMC^2 Glazier[_1_]
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Posts: 10,860
Default what if (on colliding galaxies)

`Scott Very nice post I agree with it I never started this post with
the meaning that stars had to hit one another,for that has to be a very
rare event. Since I am always bringing in gravity to evolve all that is
I have to consider these two galaxies have massive black holes and that
could be the big rub. All my pictures in my universe picture scrape book
were taken by the Hubble. I know shock wave is used to describe the
aftermath of a supernova explosion but looking at the Cartwheel galaxy
that word shock wave jumped into my mind. Scott what would have been a
better word? The right terminology can be tricky. I find
galaxies colliding very interesting. With billions and billions of large
galaxies it can not be all that rare. If you have more information on
them please post. Your virtual friend Bert PS good reason for us
being friends Scott is we both love astronomy Right Painius

  #54  
Old August 5th 08, 11:48 AM posted to alt.astronomy
G=EMC^2 Glazier[_1_]
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Posts: 10,860
Default what if (on colliding galaxies)

Cactus Saul I am laughing at 6am on what you just posted. When my late
wife Ruth told her friends I have a pet cockroach some would not visit
any more. Big Moe got rid of those nasty white hens,and that was good.
Big Moe always slept against the sand box card board wall,but I found
him dead right in the middle of the box. I took his body out to lake
Toho and gave him a Viking funeral. The time Big Moe and I had
together gave us a chance to know each other. He trusted me and I could
tell. I miss him Bert

  #55  
Old August 5th 08, 11:57 AM posted to alt.astronomy
G=EMC^2 Glazier[_1_]
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Posts: 10,860
Default what if (on colliding galaxies)

Cactus Saul Using the word dumb for a cockroach is not true. Best to
keep in mind they have been around for 250,000,000 years and will
inherit the Earth. When in 450 million years from now aliens find life
on Earth they will be looking at Big Moe ancestors Go figure Bert

  #56  
Old August 5th 08, 12:13 PM posted to alt.astronomy
G=EMC^2 Glazier[_1_]
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Posts: 10,860
Default what if (on colliding galaxies)

Timberhead Are you giving me the business?Shockwave begs this question.
What is the structure of a vacuum of space shockwave.? Earth
quakes under water can create a shockwave,but water is its medium,and
since it can not be compressed its a very good one. My fastest
pictures ever taken prove a shock wave comes after the explosion. I took
a picture of a wine glass full of milk hit by a bullet Glass cracked
but the black shock waves were not showing up yet in the milk. That
picture was also shown at MIT on the Eddington strobe wing(fourth floor)
Out of all this came my lapse time for inertia. Gee its only 7am and I
am already bragging. I want my Nobel Bert

  #57  
Old August 5th 08, 03:09 PM posted to alt.astronomy
Saul Levy Saul Levy is offline
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Posts: 21,291
Default what if (on colliding galaxies)

Very good, Pres.! That's at least within 1% of the correct values.
lmao!

Maybe BradBoi will incorporate this into his STHICK? lmao!

Saul Levy


On Mon, 04 Aug 2008 19:39:49 -0600, "Warren G. Harding"
wrote:

Timberwoof wrote:

In article
,
BradGuth wrote:

Why are you so afraid of gravity and the tidal radius of consequences
when things get near enough to matter?


Well, you are a never-ending fount of undefined terms and phrases! What,
pray tell, is a "tidal radius of consequences"?


As usual, Brad needs you to define his random techno-phrases for him.
He can't do it.

If I was forced to guess, in this example, the tidal radius of
consequences would have to be approximately 42 Tesla. With gravity
factored in, the elliptical tidal radius would expand to 53 ****ts.

  #58  
Old August 5th 08, 03:17 PM posted to alt.astronomy
Saul Levy Saul Levy is offline
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First recorded activity by SpaceBanter: Jul 2006
Posts: 21,291
Default what if (on colliding galaxies)

I'm sure by then, BEERTbrain, that they will find them owning and
living in condos and wearing mink coats! lmao!

Global cooling, remember?

Saul Levy


On Tue, 5 Aug 2008 06:57:50 -0400, (G=EMC^2
Glazier) wrote:

Cactus Saul Using the word dumb for a cockroach is not true. Best to
keep in mind they have been around for 250,000,000 years and will
inherit the Earth. When in 450 million years from now aliens find life
on Earth they will be looking at Big Moe ancestors Go figure Bert

  #59  
Old August 5th 08, 03:42 PM posted to alt.astronomy
Saul Levy Saul Levy is offline
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Posts: 21,291
Default what if (on colliding galaxies)

Is GOD tormenting you, BradBoi? lmfjao!

Aw, too bad!

Saul Levy


On Tue, 5 Aug 2008 02:42:43 -0700 (PDT), BradGuth
wrote:

On Aug 4, 3:56 pm, "GOD" wrote:
"BradGuth" wrote in message

...



On Aug 2, 2:12 am, "GOD" wrote:
"BradGuth" wrote in message


...


There's lots of colliding galaxies to work with. Several having
collided multiple times is what makes for good eye-candy, though
likely trillions upon trillions of mostly innocent lives having been
lost per galactic collision.


If there's a cosmic God, it's a god of vast evil and torture.


* Brad Guth Brad_Guth Brad.Guth BradGuth


D o n' t m a k e m e c o m e d o w n t h e r e !


--
Unohoo


And you're going to do something as horrific or worse off than
colliding galaxies?


Is GOD being a species racist kind of guy or gal, or just typically
bipolar and sadistic as per usual?


* Brad Guth Brad_Guth Brad.Guth BradGuth


Galaxies collide all the time. It's not my fault. You make your own choices.
That's what "free will" is all about. I did not invent, nor do I maintain
racism, bipolarism or sadism. Those are all human choices. Would you rather
be a puppet on a string? I can arrange it.

--
Free Will Hunting


You get a real kick out of intentionally tormenting and traumatizing
trillions upon trillions of mostly innocent souls, don't you. You
must be another DARPA Zionist/Nazi, cloaked as a born-again
Republican.

~ Brad Guth Brad_Guth Brad.Guth BradGuth

  #60  
Old August 6th 08, 12:28 AM posted to alt.astronomy
Painius Painius is offline
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First recorded activity by SpaceBanter: Jan 2007
Posts: 4,144
Default what if (on colliding galaxies)

"G=EMC^2 Glazier" wrote...
in message ...

`Scott Very nice post I agree with it I never started this post with
the meaning that stars had to hit one another,for that has to be a very
rare event. Since I am always bringing in gravity to evolve all that is
I have to consider these two galaxies have massive black holes and that
could be the big rub. All my pictures in my universe picture scrape book
were taken by the Hubble. I know shock wave is used to describe the
aftermath of a supernova explosion but looking at the Cartwheel galaxy
that word shock wave jumped into my mind. Scott what would have been a
better word? The right terminology can be tricky. I find
galaxies colliding very interesting. With billions and billions of large
galaxies it can not be all that rare. If you have more information on
them please post. Your virtual friend Bert PS good reason for us
being friends Scott is we both love astronomy Right Painius


Right, Bert!

I L O V E T H I S U N I V E R S E

happy days and...
starry starry nights!

--
Indelibly yours,
Paine Ellsworth

P.S.: Thank YOU for reading!

P.P.S.: http://painellsworth.net


 




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