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Age of the Solar System.



 
 
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  #1  
Old October 10th 03, 06:25 AM
Knut Ove Hauge
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Default Age of the Solar System.

If you go to the link below, you will find the basic theory to calculate
the age of the Sun and the solar system. A resume of the theory is that
the solar system is expanding according to the overall expansion in the
universe, and the planets are pushed outwards. It also implements that
the planets are created as the sun shrink and it has to get rid of some
mass. It takes about a billon years to create a planet, and if we
calculate with 10 planets including the Moon and no more planets outside
Pluto, we get an age of 10 billion years. This is less than the current
opinion of the age of the universe today which also have increased
during the years. You should skip the equations and read the summary and
the chapter about how the sun is pulsating, when you visit the site.

http://home.no.net/knutove/gravity/indexg.html

  #2  
Old October 10th 03, 06:53 AM
Knut Ove Hauge
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Default Age of the Solar System.

The age of the Earth also fits in the description below with it's age of
3.9 billion years. It's planet number 3 from the sun so it should be
more than 3 billion years old. If it's 3.9 it should only take 100
million years before a new planet is created. That also mean that the
sun is in an expansion state, and I would like to know if anybody could
answer, what happens to the surface temperature when it expands. Is it
getting colder or hotter? I think it's getting hotter.








Knut Ove Hauge wrote:
If you go to the link below, you will find the basic theory to calculate
the age of the Sun and the solar system. A resume of the theory is that
the solar system is expanding according to the overall expansion in the
universe, and the planets are pushed outwards. It also implements that
the planets are created as the sun shrink and it has to get rid of some
mass. It takes about a billon years to create a planet, and if we
calculate with 10 planets including the Moon and no more planets outside
Pluto, we get an age of 10 billion years. This is less than the current
opinion of the age of the universe today which also have increased
during the years. You should skip the equations and read the summary and
the chapter about how the sun is pulsating, when you visit the site.

http://home.no.net/knutove/gravity/indexg.html


  #3  
Old October 10th 03, 02:18 PM
Greg Neill
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Posts: n/a
Default Age of the Solar System.

"Knut Ove Hauge" wrote in message
...
If you go to the link below, you will find the basic theory to calculate
the age of the Sun and the solar system. A resume of the theory is that
the solar system is expanding according to the overall expansion in the
universe, and the planets are pushed outwards. It also implements that
the planets are created as the sun shrink and it has to get rid of some
mass. It takes about a billon years to create a planet, and if we
calculate with 10 planets including the Moon and no more planets outside
Pluto, we get an age of 10 billion years. This is less than the current
opinion of the age of the universe today which also have increased
during the years. You should skip the equations and read the summary and
the chapter about how the sun is pulsating, when you visit the site.


As usual, Knut, your numerology is way off base. You can't
even match the *known* ages of the Sun and planets.


  #4  
Old October 17th 03, 10:42 PM
Steve Willner
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Default Age of the Solar System.

In article ,
Knut Ove Hauge writes:
That also mean that the
sun is in an expansion state, and I would like to know if anybody could
answer, what happens to the surface temperature when it expands. Is it
getting colder or hotter? I think it's getting hotter.


Pulsating variable stars get cooler when they expand. (Minimum
temperature is not exactly synchronized with maximum radius,
however.)

As for the Sun, I'm not aware of any evidence that it is expanding.
According to stellar evolution models, it should be expanding very
slowly (less than a part per billion per year), but I would not
expect that to be measurable.

--
Steve Willner Phone 617-495-7123
Cambridge, MA 02138 USA
(Please email your reply if you want to be sure I see it; include a
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email may be sent to your ISP.)
  #5  
Old October 23rd 03, 11:59 AM
Knut Ove Hauge
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Default Age of the Solar System.

Thanks for your answer.
KOH.

Steve Willner wrote:

In article ,
Knut Ove Hauge writes:

That also mean that the
sun is in an expansion state, and I would like to know if anybody could
answer, what happens to the surface temperature when it expands. Is it
getting colder or hotter? I think it's getting hotter.



Pulsating variable stars get cooler when they expand. (Minimum
temperature is not exactly synchronized with maximum radius,
however.)

As for the Sun, I'm not aware of any evidence that it is expanding.
According to stellar evolution models, it should be expanding very
slowly (less than a part per billion per year), but I would not
expect that to be measurable.


--
Gravity Measurement

http://home.no.net/knutove/gravity/indexg.html

 




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