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" writes:
Closing, and destined to merge in about 4.5 billion years, is often touted as a collision, but this is very misleading. There will be essentially no resulting star collisions, although lots of gravitational interactions, and the formation of one super galaxy. Pity that no human is likely to witness anything, for a number of good reasons. I surmise the only individuals out in internet-land fearing that galactic mergers lead to billions of stellar collissions are those who never, at the least, possessed a passing interest in the subject of astronomy. Imagining the scale of a simple lightyear is beyond most people's imagination (including myself). I have a feeling we will be around but as something evolved into something else. We'll need to leave earth within 50,000 years, and likely well before this. We have that amount of time to discover the means of high density energy storage to conduct multi-dimensional travel. We'll also need to catalog every young main sequence star in the galaxy or beyond that is going through a quiet period in magnetic activity and also possess rocky planets residing in the goldilocks zone. Assuming we manage to leave here and find a suitable planet around another star, we'll be spread along many planets suitable for us. Our original planet will be a distant memory as our sun grows into a red giant and destroys most of the moons and planets in orbit. In 4.5 billion years, I'm sure we'll still be bipedal but I'd bet a five dollar footlong that we'll no longer possess hair and our average heigth will vary from epoch to epoch. Our average lifespans will exceed two-hundred years. If we're smart, we'll identify a planet in a relatively isolated galaxy with tons of habitable planets and galactic stability. I wouldn't want to reside in the galaxy during a merger. Sure, we're not worrying about stellar collissions, but we would have to worry about nearby stars or black holes passing close by and interrupting the delicate gravitational balance of our planets and alter the orbits and perhaps eject others. Of course, our solar system will either comprise of a red giant with scorched outer planet cores or a white dwarf with a smattering of asteroid belt remnants. -- Daniel Visit me at: gopher://gcpp.world |
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On 12/09/2020 3:38 pm, Daniel wrote:
" writes: Closing, and destined to merge in about 4.5 billion years, is often touted as a collision, but this is very misleading. There will be essentially no resulting star collisions, although lots of gravitational interactions, and the formation of one super galaxy. Pity that no human is likely to witness anything, for a number of good reasons. I surmise the only individuals out in internet-land fearing that galactic mergers lead to billions of stellar collissions are those who never, at the least, possessed a passing interest in the subject of astronomy. Imagining the scale of a simple lightyear is beyond most people's imagination (including myself). I have a feeling we will be around but as something evolved into something else. We'll need to leave earth within 50,000 years, and likely well before this. We have that amount of time to discover the means of high density energy storage to conduct multi-dimensional travel. We'll also need to catalog every young main sequence star in the galaxy or beyond that is going through a quiet period in magnetic activity and also possess rocky planets residing in the goldilocks zone. Assuming we manage to leave here and find a suitable planet around another star, we'll be spread along many planets suitable for us. Our original planet will be a distant memory as our sun grows into a red giant and destroys most of the moons and planets in orbit. In 4.5 billion years, I'm sure we'll still be bipedal but I'd bet a five dollar footlong that we'll no longer possess hair and our average heigth will vary from epoch to epoch. Our average lifespans will exceed two-hundred years. If we're smart, we'll identify a planet in a relatively isolated galaxy with tons of habitable planets and galactic stability. I wouldn't want to reside in the galaxy during a merger. Sure, we're not worrying about stellar collissions, but we would have to worry about nearby stars or black holes passing close by and interrupting the delicate gravitational balance of our planets and alter the orbits and perhaps eject others. Of course, our solar system will either comprise of a red giant with scorched outer planet cores or a white dwarf with a smattering of asteroid belt remnants. This is all science fiction fantasy. The simple truth is we evolved on earth & would never survive not only the trip to other rocky planets with water in the goldilocks zone, but we wouldn't survive on those planets even if we somehow got there. We didn't evolve on those planets so would die pretty quickly in alien environments. My advice is enjoy the here & now. The future will take care of itself, whether humans are here or not. |
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Il 12/09/2020 10:53, Whisper ha scritto:
This is all science fiction fantasy.Â* The simple truth is we evolved on earth & would never survive not only the trip to other rocky planets with water in the goldilocks zone, but we wouldn't survive on those planets even if we somehow got there.Â* We didn't evolve on those planets so would die pretty quickly in alien environments.Â* My advice is enjoy the here & now.Â* The future will take care of itself, whether humans are here or not. I totally agree with you. Very clever post. Luigi Caselli |
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Whisper wrote on 12/09/2020 6:53 PM:
On 12/09/2020 3:38 pm, Daniel wrote: " writes: Closing, and destined to merge in about 4.5 billion years, is often touted as a collision, but this is very misleading. There will be essentially no resulting star collisions, although lots of gravitational interactions, and the formation of one super galaxy. Pity that no human is likely to witness anything, for a number of good reasons. I surmise the only individuals out in internet-land fearing that galactic mergers lead to billions of stellar collissions are those who never, at the least, possessed a passing interest in the subject of astronomy. Imagining the scale of a simple lightyear is beyond most people's imagination (including myself). I have a feeling we will be around but as something evolved into something else. We'll need to leave earth within 50,000 years, and likely well before this. We have that amount of time to discover the means of high density energy storage to conduct multi-dimensional travel. We'll also need to catalog every young main sequence star in the galaxy or beyond that is going through a quiet period in magnetic activity and also possess rocky planets residing in the goldilocks zone. Assuming we manage to leave here and find a suitable planet around another star, we'll be spread along many planets suitable for us. Our original planet will be a distant memory as our sun grows into a red giant and destroys most of the moons and planets in orbit. In 4.5 billion years, I'm sure we'll still be bipedal but I'd bet a five dollar footlong that we'll no longer possess hair and our average heigth will vary from epoch to epoch. Our average lifespans will exceed two-hundred years. If we're smart, we'll identify a planet in a relatively isolated galaxy with tons of habitable planets and galactic stability. I wouldn't want to reside in the galaxy during a merger. Sure, we're not worrying about stellar collissions, but we would have to worry about nearby stars or black holes passing close by and interrupting the delicate gravitational balance of our planets and alter the orbits and perhaps eject others. Of course, our solar system will either comprise of a red giant with scorched outer planet cores or a white dwarf with a smattering of asteroid belt remnants. This is all science fiction fantasy.Â* The simple truth is we evolved on earth & would never survive not only the trip to other rocky planets with water in the goldilocks zone, but we wouldn't survive on those planets even if we somehow got there.Â* We didn't evolve on those planets so would die pretty quickly in alien environments.Â* My advice is enjoy the here & now.Â* The future will take care of itself, whether humans are here or not. "We didn't evolve on those planets ...." but doesn't mean that something/someone hasn't or will not develop there! -- Daniel |
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On 13/09/2020 4:31 pm, Daniel65 wrote:
Whisper wrote on 12/09/2020 6:53 PM: On 12/09/2020 3:38 pm, Daniel wrote: " writes: Closing, and destined to merge in about 4.5 billion years, is often touted as a collision, but this is very misleading. There will be essentially no resulting star collisions, although lots of gravitational interactions, and the formation of one super galaxy. Pity that no human is likely to witness anything, for a number of good reasons. I surmise the only individuals out in internet-land fearing that galactic mergers lead to billions of stellar collissions are those who never, at the least, possessed a passing interest in the subject of astronomy. Imagining the scale of a simple lightyear is beyond most people's imagination (including myself). I have a feeling we will be around but as something evolved into something else. We'll need to leave earth within 50,000 years, and likely well before this. We have that amount of time to discover the means of high density energy storage to conduct multi-dimensional travel. We'll also need to catalog every young main sequence star in the galaxy or beyond that is going through a quiet period in magnetic activity and also possess rocky planets residing in the goldilocks zone. Assuming we manage to leave here and find a suitable planet around another star, we'll be spread along many planets suitable for us. Our original planet will be a distant memory as our sun grows into a red giant and destroys most of the moons and planets in orbit. In 4.5 billion years, I'm sure we'll still be bipedal but I'd bet a five dollar footlong that we'll no longer possess hair and our average heigth will vary from epoch to epoch. Our average lifespans will exceed two-hundred years. If we're smart, we'll identify a planet in a relatively isolated galaxy with tons of habitable planets and galactic stability. I wouldn't want to reside in the galaxy during a merger. Sure, we're not worrying about stellar collissions, but we would have to worry about nearby stars or black holes passing close by and interrupting the delicate gravitational balance of our planets and alter the orbits and perhaps eject others. Of course, our solar system will either comprise of a red giant with scorched outer planet cores or a white dwarf with a smattering of asteroid belt remnants. This is all science fiction fantasy.Â* The simple truth is we evolved on earth & would never survive not only the trip to other rocky planets with water in the goldilocks zone, but we wouldn't survive on those planets even if we somehow got there.Â* We didn't evolve on those planets so would die pretty quickly in alien environments.Â* My advice is enjoy the here & now.Â* The future will take care of itself, whether humans are here or not. "We didn't evolve on those planets ...." but doesn't mean that something/someone hasn't or will not develop there! Don't be naive. Reality is very different to 'Lost in space'. |
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Whisper wrote on 13/09/2020 7:44 PM:
On 13/09/2020 4:31 pm, Daniel65 wrote: Whisper wrote on 12/09/2020 6:53 PM: On 12/09/2020 3:38 pm, Daniel wrote: " writes: Closing, and destined to merge in about 4.5 billion years, is often touted as a collision, but this is very misleading. There will be essentially no resulting star collisions, although lots of gravitational interactions, and the formation of one super galaxy. Pity that no human is likely to witness anything, for a number of good reasons. I surmise the only individuals out in internet-land fearing that galactic mergers lead to billions of stellar collissions are those who never, at the least, possessed a passing interest in the subject of astronomy. Imagining the scale of a simple lightyear is beyond most people's imagination (including myself). I have a feeling we will be around but as something evolved into something else. We'll need to leave earth within 50,000 years, and likely well before this. We have that amount of time to discover the means of high density energy storage to conduct multi-dimensional travel. We'll also need to catalog every young main sequence star in the galaxy or beyond that is going through a quiet period in magnetic activity and also possess rocky planets residing in the goldilocks zone. Assuming we manage to leave here and find a suitable planet around another star, we'll be spread along many planets suitable for us. Our original planet will be a distant memory as our sun grows into a red giant and destroys most of the moons and planets in orbit. In 4.5 billion years, I'm sure we'll still be bipedal but I'd bet a five dollar footlong that we'll no longer possess hair and our average heigth will vary from epoch to epoch. Our average lifespans will exceed two-hundred years. If we're smart, we'll identify a planet in a relatively isolated galaxy with tons of habitable planets and galactic stability. I wouldn't want to reside in the galaxy during a merger. Sure, we're not worrying about stellar collissions, but we would have to worry about nearby stars or black holes passing close by and interrupting the delicate gravitational balance of our planets and alter the orbits and perhaps eject others. Of course, our solar system will either comprise of a red giant with scorched outer planet cores or a white dwarf with a smattering of asteroid belt remnants. This is all science fiction fantasy.Â* The simple truth is we evolved on earth & would never survive not only the trip to other rocky planets with water in the goldilocks zone, but we wouldn't survive on those planets even if we somehow got there.Â* We didn't evolve on those planets so would die pretty quickly in alien environments.Â* My advice is enjoy the here & now.Â* The future will take care of itself, whether humans are here or not. "We didn't evolve on those planets ...." but doesn't mean that something/someone hasn't or will not develop there! Don't be naive.Â* Reality is very different to 'Lost in space'. Ah!! So you're one of the "Divine Intervention" team, are you?? ;-P -- Daniel |
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