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What if(On Life on Moons
Well the two large moons of Jupiter have the best chance in our solar
system. Say we find a star like our Sun having a Jupiter size planet(gas) and it is orbiting 100,000,000 miles from it. Hmmm Now it has two Moons both Earth in size. Picture it they both could have intelligent life. Best to keep in mind our solar system has many more Moons than planets. I kind of like this thinking. Ya know its kind of scary What if we are all alone in this vast universe,and just as scary is What if there are billions of aliens Which scares you the most? TreBert |
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What if(On Life on Moons
On Jul 20, 6:58*pm, bert wrote:
Well the two large moons of Jupiter have the best chance in our solar system. *Say we find a star like our Sun having a Jupiter size planet(gas) and it is orbiting 100,000,000 miles from it. Hmmm *Now it has two Moons both Earth in size. *Picture it they both could have intelligent life. Best to keep in mind our solar system has many more Moons than planets. I kind of like this thinking. *Ya know its kind of scary *What if we are all alone in this vast universe,and just as scary is What if there are billions of aliens * Which scares you the most? * TreBert If Earth orbited Jupiter at 100 million miles from the Sun, what you seem to be saying here, Bert, then Earth would have two night times instead of one. One when it rotates, and the other when it is on the side of Jupiter opposing the Sun. Earth could get quite cold. If you're talking about Ganymede and Europa, however, special radiation from star-like Jupiter may sustain strange life forms within and upon the two. |
#3
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What if(On Life on Moons
On Jul 20, 4:58*pm, bert wrote:
Well the two large moons of Jupiter have the best chance in our solar system. *Say we find a star like our Sun having a Jupiter size planet(gas) and it is orbiting 100,000,000 miles from it. Hmmm *Now it has two Moons both Earth in size. *Picture it they both could have intelligent life. Best to keep in mind our solar system has many more Moons than planets. I kind of like this thinking. *Ya know its kind of scary *What if we are all alone in this vast universe,and just as scary is What if there are billions of aliens * Which scares you the most? * TreBert That is actually really good thinking on your part. Whereas a greater than 10X Jupiter mass planet as a sub-brown dwarf with Earth and Venus sized moons (preferably each having only one ethnic race and only one faith-based cabal per moon) and as such you've got all sorts of complex and intelligent life potential to work with, that which could easily have become thousands of years more advanced than us because of their not having bogus and false flagged wars to feed. As you say, there's lots more moons than planets, so the odds are way better for some of those moons of substantially massive planets hosting intelligent other life, even it they is rogue because of having lost their main sequence sun due to its ripe old age, shouldn't matter as long as they had become at least as smart as a 5th grader, and not otherwise faith-based snookered and thus dumbfounded past the point of no return (always afraid of their own shadow, like so many here on Earth) There’s also a great potential for sufficiently advanced life existing/ coexisting within moons similar to our hot or cold Selene, but that’s entirely another testy topic worth some arguments that local Semites will usually not like because, it questions so much of our NASA/Apollo missions that have so little if anything to show for all that effort and investment. ~ BG |
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What if(On Life on Moons
"bert" wrote in message ... Well the two large moons of Jupiter have the best chance in our solar system. Say we find a star like our Sun having a Jupiter size planet(gas) and it is orbiting 100,000,000 miles from it. Hmmm Now it has two Moons both Earth in size. Picture it they both could have intelligent life. Best to keep in mind our solar system has many more Moons than planets. I kind of like this thinking. Ya know its kind of scary What if we are all alone in this vast universe,and just as scary is What if there are billions of aliens Which scares you the most? TreBert During the orbital period on the "dark side" of the Jupiter-like planet, you'd freeze your cajones off, cooked well-done by radiation. the "sunny side" transit would then give them the crispiness of KFC. Stay in your Florida **** hole, BeeertBrain. |
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What if(On Life on Moons
On Jul 20, 8:05*pm, Mark Earnest wrote:
On Jul 20, 6:58*pm, bert wrote: Well the two large moons of Jupiter have the best chance in our solar system. *Say we find a star like our Sun having a Jupiter size planet(gas) and it is orbiting 100,000,000 miles from it. Hmmm *Now it has two Moons both Earth in size. *Picture it they both could have intelligent life. Best to keep in mind our solar system has many more Moons than planets. I kind of like this thinking. *Ya know its kind of scary *What if we are all alone in this vast universe,and just as scary is What if there are billions of aliens * Which scares you the most? * TreBert If Earth orbited Jupiter at 100 million miles from the Sun, what you seem to be saying here, Bert, then Earth would have two night times instead of one. *One when it rotates, and the other when it is on the side of Jupiter opposing the Sun. *Earth could get quite cold. If you're talking about Ganymede and Europa, however, special radiation from star-like Jupiter may sustain strange life forms within and upon the two. Could be cold,and have a thick surface ice over water. Jupiter size planet would keep water moving(tides) that motion would create heat. Also strong gravity of Jupiter size would create volcanoes. adding still more heat. Well not all life on Earth is the same. Life is made to adapt. Painius has the Moon as Earth's sister planet. What if it was the size of Venus It has a mass about 95% of Earth Well it still would have draw backs for life,but it would fit in to what I am trying to picture. Fact is without our Moon I can show humankind could not exist. TreBert |
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What if(On Life on Moons
On Jul 20, 9:09*pm, Brad Guth wrote:
On Jul 20, 4:58*pm, bert wrote: Well the two large moons of Jupiter have the best chance in our solar system. *Say we find a star like our Sun having a Jupiter size planet(gas) and it is orbiting 100,000,000 miles from it. Hmmm *Now it has two Moons both Earth in size. *Picture it they both could have intelligent life. Best to keep in mind our solar system has many more Moons than planets. I kind of like this thinking. *Ya know its kind of scary *What if we are all alone in this vast universe,and just as scary is What if there are billions of aliens * Which scares you the most? * TreBert That is actually really good thinking on your part. *Whereas a greater than 10X Jupiter mass planet as a sub-brown dwarf with Earth and Venus sized moons (preferably each having only one ethnic race and only one faith-based cabal per moon) and as such you've got all sorts of complex and intelligent life potential to work with, that which could easily have become thousands of years more advanced than us because of their not having bogus and false flagged wars to feed. As you say, there's lots more moons than planets, so the odds are way better for some of those moons of substantially massive planets hosting intelligent other life, even it they is rogue because of having lost their main sequence sun due to its ripe old age, shouldn't matter as long as they had become at least as smart as a 5th grader, and not otherwise faith-based snookered and thus dumbfounded past the point of no return (always afraid of their own shadow, like so many here on Earth) There’s also a great potential for sufficiently advanced life existing/ coexisting within moons similar to our hot or cold Selene, but that’s entirely another testy topic worth some arguments that local Semites will usually not like because, it questions so much of our NASA/Apollo missions that have so little if anything to show for all that effort and investment. *~ BG BG Thanks for saying this is good thinking. When people get old they don't get listened too. They use the word "senile" Still I picture myself as a kid reading science books in the Boston library,and thinking hard to understand. TreBert |
#7
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What if(On Life on Moons
On Jul 20, 9:45*pm, bert wrote:
On Jul 20, 8:05*pm, Mark Earnest wrote: On Jul 20, 6:58*pm, bert wrote: Well the two large moons of Jupiter have the best chance in our solar system. *Say we find a star like our Sun having a Jupiter size planet(gas) and it is orbiting 100,000,000 miles from it. Hmmm *Now it has two Moons both Earth in size. *Picture it they both could have intelligent life. Best to keep in mind our solar system has many more Moons than planets. I kind of like this thinking. *Ya know its kind of scary *What if we are all alone in this vast universe,and just as scary is What if there are billions of aliens * Which scares you the most? * TreBert If Earth orbited Jupiter at 100 million miles from the Sun, what you seem to be saying here, Bert, then Earth would have two night times instead of one. *One when it rotates, and the other when it is on the side of Jupiter opposing the Sun. *Earth could get quite cold. If you're talking about Ganymede and Europa, however, special radiation from star-like Jupiter may sustain strange life forms within and upon the two. Could be cold,and have a thick surface ice over water. Jupiter size planet would keep water moving(tides) that motion would create heat. Also strong gravity of Jupiter size would create volcanoes. *adding still more heat. *Well not all life on Earth is the same. Life is made to adapt. *Painius has the Moon as Earth's sister planet. What if it was the size of Venus It has a mass about 95% of Earth * Well it still would have draw backs for life,but it would fit in to what I am trying to picture. *Fact is without our Moon I can show humankind could not exist. *TreBert- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Fact is we have gone to the Moon but in reality never touched it untill we brought its rocks back to Earth TreBert |
#8
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What if(On Life on Moons
On Jul 21, 5:02*am, bert wrote:
On Jul 20, 9:09*pm, Brad Guth wrote: On Jul 20, 4:58*pm, bert wrote: Well the two large moons of Jupiter have the best chance in our solar system. *Say we find a star like our Sun having a Jupiter size planet(gas) and it is orbiting 100,000,000 miles from it. Hmmm *Now it has two Moons both Earth in size. *Picture it they both could have intelligent life. Best to keep in mind our solar system has many more Moons than planets. I kind of like this thinking. *Ya know its kind of scary *What if we are all alone in this vast universe,and just as scary is What if there are billions of aliens * Which scares you the most? * TreBert That is actually really good thinking on your part. *Whereas a greater than 10X Jupiter mass planet as a sub-brown dwarf with Earth and Venus sized moons (preferably each having only one ethnic race and only one faith-based cabal per moon) and as such you've got all sorts of complex and intelligent life potential to work with, that which could easily have become thousands of years more advanced than us because of their not having bogus and false flagged wars to feed. As you say, there's lots more moons than planets, so the odds are way better for some of those moons of substantially massive planets hosting intelligent other life, even it they is rogue because of having lost their main sequence sun due to its ripe old age, shouldn't matter as long as they had become at least as smart as a 5th grader, and not otherwise faith-based snookered and thus dumbfounded past the point of no return (always afraid of their own shadow, like so many here on Earth) There’s also a great potential for sufficiently advanced life existing/ coexisting within moons similar to our hot or cold Selene, but that’s entirely another testy topic worth some arguments that local Semites will usually not like because, it questions so much of our NASA/Apollo missions that have so little if anything to show for all that effort and investment. *~ BG BG *Thanks for saying this is good thinking. When people get old they don't get listened too. *They use the word "senile" *Still I picture myself as a kid reading science books in the Boston library,and thinking hard to understand. * *TreBert There's a good chance of having ten fold as many moons as are planets out there. However, considering how many main sequence stars that are by now kaput, and thus having lost their tidal radial grip on whatever orbited, there should be loads of dark and icy rogue planets with icy moon(s) just about anywhere you'd care to look. Of course any rogue planets as moons of any large enough gas giant would also most likely have become rather icy, and therefore only IR astronomy and ice detection via Radar Interferometry is ever going to find them. If the host planet with its moons was substantial enough, say 10X Jupiter mass, there could be just enough local heat to keep the half of each moon facing its planet from always being frozen solid. ~ BG |
#9
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What if(On Life on Moons
On Jul 22, 1:09*am, Saul Levy wrote:
Jupiter has FOUR LARGE MOONS, BEERT! A small telescope will show them. I hope any intelligent life there is NOT SENILE LIKE YOU ARE! Saul Levy On Tue, 20 Jul 2010 16:58:18 -0700 (PDT), bert wrote: Well the two large moons of Jupiter have the best chance in our solar system. *Say we find a star like our Sun having a Jupiter size planet(gas) and it is orbiting 100,000,000 miles from it. Hmmm *Now it has two Moons both Earth in size. *Picture it they both could have intelligent life. Best to keep in mind our solar system has many more Moons than planets. I kind of like this thinking. *Ya know its kind of scary *What if we are all alone in this vast universe,and just as scary is What if there are billions of aliens * Which scares you the most? * TreBert- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Cactus Saul You are doting on "senile" Doting is a sure sign of being senile Get the picture? If not look in the mirror O ya TreBert |
#10
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What if(On Life on Moons
On Jul 22, 1:11*am, Saul Levy wrote:
You ARE SENILE, BEERT! It means MORE than just OLD! Saul Levy On Wed, 21 Jul 2010 05:02:45 -0700 (PDT), bert wrote: BG *Thanks for saying this is good thinking. When people get old they don't get listened too. *They use the word "senile" *Still I picture myself as a kid reading science books in the Boston library,and thinking hard to understand. * *TreBert- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Cactus Saul you are still doting on "senile" You are giving yourself away each day TreBert |
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