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Formation of iron, gold, and platinum on Earth



 
 
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  #1  
Old September 29th 17, 07:25 PM posted to alt.astronomy
Mark Earnest[_2_]
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Posts: 1,124
Default Formation of iron, gold, and platinum on Earth

Supposedly iron gold and platinum on Earth came from exploding supernovae that somehow hitched a ride with the solar system when it was forming out of hydrogen atoms. Makes no sense at all. There are not enough supernovae to do all that, and by the time the heavy elements reached all the way to our Baby Solar System, it would be so dissipated as to virtually not be there at all. Try again scientists.
  #2  
Old September 29th 17, 07:54 PM posted to alt.astronomy
Hägar
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Posts: 595
Default Formation of iron, gold, and platinum on Earth

"Mark Earnest" wrote in message
...

Supposedly iron gold and platinum on Earth came from exploding supernovae
that somehow hitched a ride with the solar system when it was forming out of
hydrogen atoms. Makes no sense at all. There are not enough supernovae to
do all that, and by the time the heavy elements reached all the way to our
Baby Solar System, it would be so dissipated as to virtually not be there at
all. Try again scientists.


***Showing off your total ignorance again, Mark ...

Here's where all that mysterious iron (last and final fusion state)
and Gold and Platinum (post SuperNova explosion state) come from:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Supernova

You could have Googled that yourself, before making an ass
of yourself.

  #3  
Old September 29th 17, 08:29 PM posted to alt.astronomy
Mark Earnest[_2_]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 1,124
Default Formation of iron, gold, and platinum on Earth

On Friday, September 29, 2017 at 1:54:13 PM UTC-5, Hägar wrote:
"Mark Earnest" wrote in message

Supposedly iron gold and platinum on Earth came from exploding supernovae
that somehow hitched a ride with the solar system when it was forming out of
hydrogen atoms. Makes no sense at all. There are not enough supernovae to
do all that, and by the time the heavy elements reached all the way to our
Baby Solar System, it would be so dissipated as to virtually not be there at
all. Try again scientists.


***Showing off your total ignorance again, Mark ...

Here's where all that mysterious iron (last and final fusion state)
and Gold and Platinum (post SuperNova explosion state) come from:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Supernova

You could have Googled that yourself, before making an ass
of yourself.


I don't care what the scientists say. They are the ones I am calling dumb, remember?

  #4  
Old September 29th 17, 11:53 PM posted to alt.astronomy
Ned Latham[_2_]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 49
Default Formation of iron, gold, and platinum on Earth

Mark Earnest wrote:
Hägar wrote:
Mark Earnest wrote:

Supposedly iron gold and platinum on Earth came from exploding
supernovae that somehow hitched a ride with the solar system
when it was forming out of hydrogen atoms. Makes no sense at
all. There are not enough supernovae to do all that, and by
the time the heavy elements reached all the way to our Baby
Solar System, it would be so dissipated as to virtually not
be there at all. Try again scientists.


Showing off your total ignorance again, Mark ...

Here's where all that mysterious iron (last and final fusion state)
and Gold and Platinum (post SuperNova explosion state) come from:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Supernova


Look abovem Hags... See where he mentions supernovae?

You could have Googled that yourself, before making an ass
of yourself.


I don't care what the scientists say. They are the ones I am calling
dumb, remember?


Bot dumb, Mark. Wilfully stupid.

Light speed is not a constant, and it is not a limit. The universe
is not expanding; there is no beginning (there is no Big Bang), and
supernovae have been fusing elements all the way up from helium
for billions of billions of years, not just 15 billion.

And a supernove near or within a galaxy will put huge amounts of
its fusions into that galaxy's gravitational field.
  #5  
Old September 30th 17, 12:19 AM posted to alt.astronomy
Mark Earnest[_2_]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 1,124
Default Formation of iron, gold, and platinum on Earth

On Friday, September 29, 2017 at 5:53:38 PM UTC-5, Ned Latham wrote:
Mark Earnest wrote:
Hägar wrote:
Mark Earnest wrote:

Supposedly iron gold and platinum on Earth came from exploding
supernovae that somehow hitched a ride with the solar system
when it was forming out of hydrogen atoms. Makes no sense at
all. There are not enough supernovae to do all that, and by
the time the heavy elements reached all the way to our Baby
Solar System, it would be so dissipated as to virtually not
be there at all. Try again scientists.

Showing off your total ignorance again, Mark ...

Here's where all that mysterious iron (last and final fusion state)
and Gold and Platinum (post SuperNova explosion state) come from:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Supernova


Look abovem Hags... See where he mentions supernovae?

You could have Googled that yourself, before making an ass
of yourself.


I don't care what the scientists say. They are the ones I am calling
dumb, remember?


Bot dumb, Mark. Wilfully stupid.

Light speed is not a constant, and it is not a limit. The universe
is not expanding; there is no beginning (there is no Big Bang), and
supernovae have been fusing elements all the way up from helium
for billions of billions of years, not just 15 billion.

And a supernove near or within a galaxy will put huge amounts of
its fusions into that galaxy's gravitational field.


You have no idea how vast outer space is. If there is a supernova across the galaxy there is virtually no chance and of the matter will ever get here.. And yes there was a Big Bang. Some things in science are right but not giving credit for it to the scientists.
  #6  
Old September 30th 17, 02:00 AM posted to alt.astronomy
Ned Latham[_2_]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 49
Default Formation of iron, gold, and platinum on Earth

Mark Earnest wrote:
Ned Latham wrote:
Mark Earnest wrote:
Hägar wrote:
Mark Earnest wrote:

Supposedly iron gold and platinum on Earth came from exploding
supernovae that somehow hitched a ride with the solar system
when it was forming out of hydrogen atoms. Makes no sense at
all. There are not enough supernovae to do all that, and by
the time the heavy elements reached all the way to our Baby
Solar System, it would be so dissipated as to virtually not
be there at all. Try again scientists.

Showing off your total ignorance again, Mark ...

Here's where all that mysterious iron (last and final fusion state)
and Gold and Platinum (post SuperNova explosion state) come from:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Supernova


Look above, Hags... See where he mentions supernovae?

You could have Googled that yourself, before making an ass
of yourself.

I don't care what the scientists say. They are the ones I am
calling dumb, remember?


Not dumb, Mark. Wilfully stupid.

Light speed is not a constant, and it is not a limit. The universe
is not expanding; there is no beginning (there is no Big Bang), and
supernovae have been fusing elements all the way up from helium
for billions of billions of years, not just 15 billion.

And a supernove near or within a galaxy will put huge amounts of
its fusions into that galaxy's gravitational field.


You have no idea how vast outer space is.


You have no idea what ideas I have.

If there is a supernova across the galaxy there is virtually


"Virtually". Do you know what "virtually" means?

no chance any of the matter will ever get here.


Irrelevant. Great gobs of it could well end up in the protostar
right next door to it.

And yes there was a Big Bang.


Crap. There are lots of Little Bangs going on. In cosmic terms,
all the time. We call (some of) them supernovae.

Some things in science are right but not giving credit for it
to the scientists.


You wanna try writing that in English?
  #7  
Old September 30th 17, 10:14 PM posted to alt.astronomy
Bast[_2_]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 1,917
Default Formation of iron, gold, and platinum on Earth



Mark Earnest wrote:
On Friday, September 29, 2017 at 5:53:38 PM UTC-5, Ned Latham wrote:
Mark Earnest wrote:
Hägar wrote:
Mark Earnest wrote:

Supposedly iron gold and platinum on Earth came from exploding
supernovae that somehow hitched a ride with the solar system
when it was forming out of hydrogen atoms. Makes no sense at
all. There are not enough supernovae to do all that, and by
the time the heavy elements reached all the way to our Baby
Solar System, it would be so dissipated as to virtually not
be there at all. Try again scientists.

Showing off your total ignorance again, Mark ...

Here's where all that mysterious iron (last and final fusion state)
and Gold and Platinum (post SuperNova explosion state) come from:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Supernova


Look abovem Hags... See where he mentions supernovae?

You could have Googled that yourself, before making an ass
of yourself.

I don't care what the scientists say. They are the ones I am calling
dumb, remember?


Bot dumb, Mark. Wilfully stupid.

Light speed is not a constant, and it is not a limit. The universe
is not expanding; there is no beginning (there is no Big Bang), and
supernovae have been fusing elements all the way up from helium
for billions of billions of years, not just 15 billion.

And a supernove near or within a galaxy will put huge amounts of
its fusions into that galaxy's gravitational field.


You have no idea how vast outer space is. If there is a supernova
across the galaxy there is virtually no chance and of the matter will
ever get here. And yes there was a Big Bang. Some things in science
are right but not giving credit for it to the scientists.






You are assuming that the supernova was far away from our little corner of
the cosmos.
The star could have been right where we are now, but existed billions of
years ago..
Of course it would not here anymore, because it blew itself apart.


  #8  
Old September 30th 17, 10:39 PM posted to alt.astronomy
Double-A[_4_]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 3,515
Default Formation of iron, gold, and platinum on Earth

On Saturday, September 30, 2017 at 2:14:18 PM UTC-7, Bast wrote:
Mark Earnest wrote:
On Friday, September 29, 2017 at 5:53:38 PM UTC-5, Ned Latham wrote:
Mark Earnest wrote:
Hägar wrote:
Mark Earnest wrote:

Supposedly iron gold and platinum on Earth came from exploding
supernovae that somehow hitched a ride with the solar system
when it was forming out of hydrogen atoms. Makes no sense at
all. There are not enough supernovae to do all that, and by
the time the heavy elements reached all the way to our Baby
Solar System, it would be so dissipated as to virtually not
be there at all. Try again scientists.

Showing off your total ignorance again, Mark ...

Here's where all that mysterious iron (last and final fusion state)
and Gold and Platinum (post SuperNova explosion state) come from:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Supernova

Look abovem Hags... See where he mentions supernovae?

You could have Googled that yourself, before making an ass
of yourself.

I don't care what the scientists say. They are the ones I am calling
dumb, remember?

Bot dumb, Mark. Wilfully stupid.

Light speed is not a constant, and it is not a limit. The universe
is not expanding; there is no beginning (there is no Big Bang), and
supernovae have been fusing elements all the way up from helium
for billions of billions of years, not just 15 billion.

And a supernove near or within a galaxy will put huge amounts of
its fusions into that galaxy's gravitational field.


You have no idea how vast outer space is. If there is a supernova
across the galaxy there is virtually no chance and of the matter will
ever get here. And yes there was a Big Bang. Some things in science
are right but not giving credit for it to the scientists.






You are assuming that the supernova was far away from our little corner of
the cosmos.
The star could have been right where we are now, but existed billions of
years ago..
Of course it would not here anymore, because it blew itself apart.



There should in that case be a remnant, a neutron star or a black hole. Nibiru?

Double-A

  #9  
Old September 30th 17, 11:03 PM posted to alt.astronomy
Mark Earnest[_2_]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 1,124
Default Formation of iron, gold, and platinum on Earth

On Saturday, September 30, 2017 at 4:14:18 PM UTC-5, Bast wrote:
Mark Earnest wrote:
On Friday, September 29, 2017 at 5:53:38 PM UTC-5, Ned Latham wrote:
Mark Earnest wrote:
Hägar wrote:
Mark Earnest wrote:

Supposedly iron gold and platinum on Earth came from exploding
supernovae that somehow hitched a ride with the solar system
when it was forming out of hydrogen atoms. Makes no sense at
all. There are not enough supernovae to do all that, and by
the time the heavy elements reached all the way to our Baby
Solar System, it would be so dissipated as to virtually not
be there at all. Try again scientists.

Showing off your total ignorance again, Mark ...

Here's where all that mysterious iron (last and final fusion state)
and Gold and Platinum (post SuperNova explosion state) come from:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Supernova

Look abovem Hags... See where he mentions supernovae?

You could have Googled that yourself, before making an ass
of yourself.

I don't care what the scientists say. They are the ones I am calling
dumb, remember?

Bot dumb, Mark. Wilfully stupid.

Light speed is not a constant, and it is not a limit. The universe
is not expanding; there is no beginning (there is no Big Bang), and
supernovae have been fusing elements all the way up from helium
for billions of billions of years, not just 15 billion.

And a supernove near or within a galaxy will put huge amounts of
its fusions into that galaxy's gravitational field.


You have no idea how vast outer space is. If there is a supernova
across the galaxy there is virtually no chance and of the matter will
ever get here. And yes there was a Big Bang. Some things in science
are right but not giving credit for it to the scientists.






You are assuming that the supernova was far away from our little corner of
the cosmos.
The star could have been right where we are now, but existed billions of
years ago..
Of course it would not here anymore, because it blew itself apart.


Judging by how infrequent nearby supernovae are, the odds that one was right on top of Baby Solar System is astronomically unlikely. Even if it were as close as the nearest star, the iron gold and platinum would have dissipated by the time it got to Baby Solar System. Scientists would know that if they had any sense.
  #10  
Old October 1st 17, 03:08 AM posted to alt.astronomy
Bast[_2_]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 1,917
Default Formation of iron, gold, and platinum on Earth



Mark Earnest wrote:
On Saturday, September 30, 2017 at 4:14:18 PM UTC-5, Bast wrote:
Mark Earnest wrote:
On Friday, September 29, 2017 at 5:53:38 PM UTC-5, Ned Latham wrote:
Mark Earnest wrote:
Hägar wrote:
Mark Earnest wrote:

Supposedly iron gold and platinum on Earth came from exploding
supernovae that somehow hitched a ride with the solar system
when it was forming out of hydrogen atoms. Makes no sense at
all. There are not enough supernovae to do all that, and by
the time the heavy elements reached all the way to our Baby
Solar System, it would be so dissipated as to virtually not
be there at all. Try again scientists.

Showing off your total ignorance again, Mark ...

Here's where all that mysterious iron (last and final fusion state)
and Gold and Platinum (post SuperNova explosion state) come from:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Supernova

Look abovem Hags... See where he mentions supernovae?

You could have Googled that yourself, before making an ass
of yourself.

I don't care what the scientists say. They are the ones I am calling
dumb, remember?

Bot dumb, Mark. Wilfully stupid.

Light speed is not a constant, and it is not a limit. The universe
is not expanding; there is no beginning (there is no Big Bang), and
supernovae have been fusing elements all the way up from helium
for billions of billions of years, not just 15 billion.

And a supernove near or within a galaxy will put huge amounts of
its fusions into that galaxy's gravitational field.

You have no idea how vast outer space is. If there is a supernova
across the galaxy there is virtually no chance and of the matter will
ever get here. And yes there was a Big Bang. Some things in science
are right but not giving credit for it to the scientists.






You are assuming that the supernova was far away from our little
corner of the cosmos.
The star could have been right where we are now, but existed billions
of years ago..
Of course it would not here anymore, because it blew itself apart.


Judging by how infrequent nearby supernovae are, the odds that one was
right on top of Baby Solar System is astronomically unlikely. Even if
it were as close as the nearest star, the iron gold and platinum would
have dissipated by the time it got to Baby Solar System. Scientists
would know that if they had any sense.





Well,....if you want to eliminate any scientific theories.
........Maybe God put it here.


 




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