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Andromeda is going to collide with us. Save the Milky Way!



 
 
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  #21  
Old March 7th 18, 02:46 AM posted to alt.astronomy
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Default Andromeda is going to collide with us. Save the Milky Way!


Gravity is way too weak a force to hold something as massive as a galaxy together.

Well it obviously does. If not gravity, then what ?

Lots of things go faster than 186,000 miles per second.

OK, so name just one.

But when something goes that fast it exits the universe--that is why it cannot be observed.

What are you talking about ?

Your problem is that you are trying to talk according to the system. The system does not function. It never did.

I saw you mention the "system" in an earlier post. What system ? What
are you talking about ?
  #23  
Old March 7th 18, 11:46 AM posted to alt.astronomy
Mark Earnest[_2_]
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Default Andromeda is going to collide with us. Save the Milky Way!

On Tuesday, March 6, 2018 at 7:46:36 PM UTC-6, casagi wrote:

Gravity is way too weak a force to hold something as massive as a galaxy together.

Well it obviously does. If not gravity, then what ?



No one knows. But you are never going to find the answer if you keep inserting explanations that make no sense.



Lots of things go faster than 186,000 miles per second.

OK, so name just one.


Matter from exploding stars; some rogue planets--especially ones knocked free from close to their stars.



But when something goes that fast it exits the universe--that is why it cannot be observed.

What are you talking about ?


Traveling to distant stars fast enough to get there puts you in another reality that is not in the universe and does not apply to its rules. Space debris and cosmic rays cannot harm you in this state.


Your problem is that you are trying to talk according to the system. The system does not function. It never did.

I saw you mention the "system" in an earlier post. What system ? What
are you talking about ?


Man's language makes no sense. People think they are making sense but they are not. No one has the will or inclination to pursue a thought or answer through to its successful completion. So it ends up that no one knows anything.


  #24  
Old March 7th 18, 11:48 AM posted to alt.astronomy
Mark Earnest[_2_]
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Default Andromeda is going to collide with us. Save the Milky Way!

On Tuesday, March 6, 2018 at 9:46:36 PM UTC-6, Sjouke Burry wrote:
On 7-3-2018 2:46, casagiannoni wrote:

Gravity is way too weak a force to hold something as massive as a galaxy together.

Well it obviously does. If not gravity, then what ?

Lots of things go faster than 186,000 miles per second.

OK, so name just one.

But when something goes that fast it exits the universe--that is why it cannot be observed.

What are you talking about ?

Your problem is that you are trying to talk according to the system. The system does not function. It never did.

I saw you mention the "system" in an earlier post. What system ? What
are you talking about ?

He is stringing words together he has seen or heard
in a random way.
Thats his science.
The poor critter loves stirring mud.


No comments from the peanut gallery.

  #25  
Old March 7th 18, 01:50 PM posted to alt.astronomy
Daniel60
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Default Andromeda is going to collide with us. Save the Milky Way!

On #2 #3, Mark Earnest wrote:
On Tuesday, March 6, 2018 at 7:46:36 PM UTC-6, casagi wrote:

Gravity is way too weak a force to hold something as massive as a galaxy together.

Well it obviously does. If not gravity, then what ?


No one knows. But you are never going to find the answer if you keep inserting explanations that make no sense.


Isn't there two other forces ... Centripetal Force and Centrifugal
Force, or some such?? One acts to try to pull an orbiting object towards
the centre whilst the other acts to force the object away from the
centre. When the two are equal (or is it "close to equal") the object
orbits the centre.

Lots of things go faster than 186,000 miles per second.

OK, so name just one.


Matter from exploding stars; some rogue planets--especially ones knocked free from close to their stars.


I'm not sure about 'exploding Star matter" but there is something that
travels faster than light ... the stuff for which scientists place
detectors deep down mines. Is it quarks or some such?

But when something goes that fast it exits the universe--that is why it cannot be observed.

What are you talking about ?


Traveling to distant stars fast enough to get there puts you in another reality that is not in the universe and does not apply to its rules. Space debris and cosmic rays cannot harm you in this state.


Your problem is that you are trying to talk according to the system. The system does not function. It never did.

I saw you mention the "system" in an earlier post. What system ? What
are you talking about ?


Man's language makes no sense. People think they are making sense but they are not. No one has the will or inclination to pursue a thought or answer through to its successful completion. So it ends up that no one knows anything.

Man's language makes sense to most people that know how to use it properly.

--
Daniel
  #28  
Old March 8th 18, 01:35 AM posted to alt.astronomy
Hägar
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Posts: 595
Default Andromeda is going to collide with us. Save the Milky Way!

"Notroll2016" wrote in message news
"Hägar" wrote in message
...

"Whisper" wrote in message
...

On 7/03/2018 1:31 AM, wrote:
The absolute bottom line on all this IS :

Distances are so vast, that Man's NEVER going to go anywhere outside
the Solar system.

Do the simple math :

Distance = Speed x Time

Even at near or equal light speed, which is most extreemly UN-likely,
times would be prohibitive due to very great distances. At current
conventional space travel speeds, times would be thousands of
MILLENNIA !

I believe this is the reason that we're NOT visited by allien species
which likely populate the cosmos ...



Correct. If you reduce the size of a typical star down to a dime you'd
only get 4 stars in the whole of USA. That's how sparse the Milky Way
is. I vote no actual 'collision'.


*** there are photos of Galaxies that actually have "collided" and
as you said, without nary a scratch. There were gravitational
displacement disturbances, but no physical collisions.
The analogy I like: it is like throwing a football through the
equatorial plane of our Solar System and hitting a planet.

***Trailer parks will be the first to go. You're ****ed. Again.


Or like throwing a football through noTroll's brain ... it

would pass through without ever touching any gray matter ...

  #29  
Old March 8th 18, 02:52 PM posted to alt.astronomy
[email protected]
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Posts: 537
Default Andromeda is going to collide with us. Save the Milky Way!


Gravity is way too weak a force to hold something as massive as a galaxy together.

Well it obviously does. If not gravity, then what ?

No one knows. But you are never going to find the answer if you keep inserting explanations that make no sense.

The current model, based on gravity alone holding things together,
balanced against the effective centripetal and centrifugal forces as
in any orbit, works just fine.

Lots of things go faster than 186,000 miles per second.

OK, so name just one.

Matter from exploding stars; some rogue planets--especially ones knocked free from close to their stars.

None of these things go anywhere near light speed,
let alone exceed it.

But when something goes that fast it exits the universe--that is why it cannot be observed.

Flash ! - the universe is everything by definition.
  #30  
Old March 8th 18, 04:04 PM posted to alt.astronomy
Mark Earnest[_2_]
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Posts: 1,124
Default Andromeda is going to collide with us. Save the Milky Way!

On Thursday, March 8, 2018 at 7:52:21 AM UTC-6, casagi wrote:

Gravity is way too weak a force to hold something as massive as a galaxy together.

Well it obviously does. If not gravity, then what ?

No one knows. But you are never going to find the answer if you keep inserting explanations that make no sense.

The current model, based on gravity alone holding things together,
balanced against the effective centripetal and centrifugal forces as
in any orbit, works just fine.

Lots of things go faster than 186,000 miles per second.

OK, so name just one.

Matter from exploding stars; some rogue planets--especially ones knocked free from close to their stars.

None of these things go anywhere near light speed,
let alone exceed it.

But when something goes that fast it exits the universe--that is why it cannot be observed.

Flash ! - the universe is everything by definition.


You have a long way to go as bound up by technicalities and sporadic ideas off the cuff as you are. One day you will learn workable language. Everyone will.

 




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