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Galactic fossil is 13.2 billion years old
"Galactic fossil is 13.2 billion years old
ABC Science Online Monday, 14 May 2007 Astronomers say a star in our galaxy is 13.2 billion years old, which makes it nearly as ancient as the universe itself. The star, named HE 1523-0901, would have formed almost at the dawn of time, just a fraction after the birth of the universe 13.7 billion years ago." http://www.abc.net.au/science/news/s...2042.htm?space Hmmm. Double-A |
#2
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Galactic fossil is 13.2 billion years old
Double-A What if we find a lot of White Dwarfs that are only half way
in their life time of using up their residual heat? That would ,make them 50 billion years old. Hmmm That kills my idea that the universe is 22 billion years old. bert |
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Galactic fossil is 13.2 billion years old
On Jun 14, 5:00 am, (G=EMC^2 Glazier) wrote:
Double-A What if we find a lot of White Dwarfs that are only half way in their life time of using up their residual heat? That would ,make them 50 billion years old. Hmmm That kills my idea that the universe is 22 billion years old. bert That would, but they haven't found any yet. Double-A |
#4
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Galactic fossil is 13.2 billion years old
Double-A A fossil of 13.2 billion years begs the question. How long did
it take gravity to evolve this fossil starting with its first atoms,and molecules? when the imperial thinkers start taking in all the time to create all things they will come to the conclusion that 22 billion years makes for very young universes. bert |
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Galactic fossil is 13.2 billion years old
On Jun 20, 6:22 am, (G=EMC^2 Glazier) wrote:
Double-A A fossil of 13.2 billion years begs the question. How long did it take gravity to evolve this fossil starting with its first atoms,and molecules? when the imperial thinkers start taking in all the time to create all things they will come to the conclusion that 22 billion years makes for very young universes. bert Bert, stars in globular clusters were long thought to be over 15 billion years old. Now they have tried to reduce those estimates to conform to the overall age of the universe estimate. But maybe they were right in the first place. Double-A |
#6
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Galactic fossil is 13.2 billion years old
Double-A Just one spacetime when neutrons were created long after the
BB begs the question. How long did it take them to create all the hydrogen?,and why was it not homogenized evenly through out space.and make just one galaxy of 6 trillion stars? That would make more sense than billions of separate galaxies spread out further than our most powerful telescopes can see. bert |
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Galactic fossil is 13.2 billion years old
On Jun 21, 3:43 am, (G=EMC^2 Glazier) wrote:
Double-A Just one spacetime when neutrons were created long after the BB begs the question. How long did it take them to create all the hydrogen?,and why was it not homogenized evenly through out space.and make just one galaxy of 6 trillion stars? That would make more sense than billions of separate galaxies spread out further than our most powerful telescopes can see. bert Quantum uncertainties in the primal atom? Double-A |
#8
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Galactic fossil is 13.2 billion years old
Double-A What exactly is a primal atom? How does the uncertainty
principle help solve no homogenization? bert |
#9
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Galactic fossil is 13.2 billion years old
On Jun 22, 5:03 am, (G=EMC^2 Glazier) wrote:
Double-A What exactly is a primal atom? How does the uncertainty principle help solve no homogenization? bert I was referring to the universe when it was still no larger than an atom. Quantum uncertainties and fluctuations would exist in something so small. Then when it is suddenly blown up into something very large, those quantum fluctuations might become frozen into the density differences we see in the universe today: some places strings of galaxies, some places empty space. Double-A |
#10
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Galactic fossil is 13.2 billion years old
Double-A Spaces intrinsic energy had an infinite area before it was
compressed into an area the size of a pea(BB). Atoms did not form at this spacetime. Atoms formed much latter when great heat was diluted into space. At this time of creation great certainty was in order.to fine tune the force of gravity to fine tune the strong force to fine tune EM Left to chance the universe would have cancelled itself out into radiation. bert |
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