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Does anyone know how much they weigh?
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Loyd Jones posted:
Does anyone know how much they weigh? Between one and three times the mass of the sun. -- David W. Knisely Prairie Astronomy Club: http://www.prairieastronomyclub.org Hyde Memorial Observatory: http://www.hydeobservatory.info/ ********************************************** * Attend the 11th Annual NEBRASKA STAR PARTY * * July 18-23, 2004, Merritt Reservoir * * http://www.NebraskaStarParty.org * ********************************************** |
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Lloyd JONES wrote:
Does anyone know how much they weigh? A lot! |
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![]() "Lloyd JONES" wrote in message ... Does anyone know how much they weigh? A neutron star comet landed in my swimming pool last week. It was about the size of a flake of pepper, and it weighs 30 tons. I currently am using it as a counterweight to my drawbridge. |
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Yeah Right, LOL
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To answer my question I just looked it up on the net and it said "A single
thimbleful of neutron-star material would weigh 100 million tons or more, as much as a good-sized mountain on Earth" If anyone's interested here's the link. http://blueox.uoregon.edu/~jimbrau/a...Chapter22.html |
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Hi LLoyd If you dropped a one pound weight from a height of 3 feet here
on Earth if it hit your big toe it would hurt. If you did the same thing on a neutron star the impact force would have the energy of a one mega ton H-Bomb. I have never read anything about the actual weight of a neutron star. I know its mass density is three times less than a blackhole,so its three times lighter. The Earth's surface could not hold up a piece of a neutron star the size of a drop of water. That is why there is a theory about what happened in Siberia in 1905.that goes like this. A very small object with the mass density of a neutron star came down in Siberia,and passed through the Earth and came out through the Atlantic ocean,and went off into deep space. It must be funny to see a neutron star having a star even larger than the Sun revolving around such a small object. LLoyd LIGO(gravity detected) has the best chance of detecting gravity waves is by honing in on a binary neutron star system. My thoughts on this is LIGO should only be used in deep space. Even the moon is better than the Earth. Bert |
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From Bert:
My thoughts on this is LIGO should only be used in deep space. Bert, i know you have a hard and fast rule against GOOGling, but a rule needs to be broken once in a while. If you'd do a Google under 'Laser Interferometer Space Antenna' (LISA), you find that a deep space GW detector is already in the works in Europe. oc |
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Hi oc It is a promise I made to my late friend "Joe" that I will not go
to Google. When he was alive I cheated a little,but now that is impossible for me. He felt I had enough foundation(knowledge) to think up ideas of my own,and that was better than being corrupted by ideas of others. For me it just might work(I hope) oc as you pointed out gravity wave detecters are going to be put in space. I could easily predicted that. I have posted there are to many 18 wheelers,and that alone can cause mirrors to wiggle. I don't oc like gravity wave detecters being to close to our solar system. I would like a gravity detecter out about 2LY from the sun,and yet my thoughts tell me its to close. Bert |
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It probably is WEIGHTLESS since it is measure of force to keep it from
falling. It is too fast, too dense, too massive, and too hot to be held :-) "Lloyd JONES" wrote in message ... Does anyone know how much they weigh? |
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