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re: Neat picture of two galaxies that passed each other
Posted on 12/2/16 at 7:31 am to NOLApurpleandgold
Posted on 12/2/16 at 7:31 am to NOLApurpleandgold
quote:
Armageddon was a movie, not a documentary
Shut your mouth!
Posted on 12/2/16 at 7:35 am to EyeTwentyNole
quote:
I absolutely believe humans are too stupid to figure the universe out, we never will and weren't meant to. Our mistake is considering ourselves intelligent instead of just the least dumb earthlings
Perhaps now. But you're looking at a moment in time. Who's to say that one day we (or earth based life anyway) will not be as far advanced from us as we are from say an earthworm. Or even an amoeba.
Posted on 12/2/16 at 7:37 am to SabiDojo
quote:
What's wild and scary is that the universe is expanding at an alarmingly accelerating rate...and we don't know why.
Clearly, the answer is climate change...
Posted on 12/2/16 at 7:44 am to DavidTheGnome
So how did space itself come into existence?
Posted on 12/2/16 at 7:57 am to Methuselah
quote:
From Hitchikers Guide to the Galaxy.
Upvote for these quotes. Love all these books.
Posted on 12/2/16 at 7:58 am to The Mick
Cosmologists still claim the only remaining hypothesis is the Big Bang.
Posted on 12/2/16 at 8:01 am to thegreatboudini
^^That's great and all, but what is the black stuff around the universe? That has always been the stumper to me.
This post was edited on 12/2/16 at 8:01 am
Posted on 12/2/16 at 8:08 am to slackster
Animation of two galaxies colliding
Posted on 12/2/16 at 8:11 am to slackster
IMO it's just space not yet inhabited by matter. But with an ever expanding universe (though slowing, still expanding), it may be inhabited at some point.
Posted on 12/2/16 at 8:14 am to thegreatboudini
quote:
IMO it's just space not yet inhabited by matter. But with an ever expanding universe (though slowing, still expanding), it may be inhabited at some point.
Not slowing, accelerating. There's redshift in all directions.
Posted on 12/2/16 at 8:14 am to DavidTheGnome
I wonder how many years are compressed into that 2 second animation?
Posted on 12/2/16 at 8:16 am to slackster
quote:
^^That's great and all, but what is the black stuff around the universe? That has always been the stumper to me.
I think that's the stumper for everyone.
If the universe is so big, what was there before the big bang. Nothing? what is nothing? makes my brain hurt.
would you give up your life on earth this second, if by doing so you would know every answer you could possible ask about the universe, and even the ones you wouldn't even know to ask? This assuming if you don't choose this you live out your life and die and know nothing.
Posted on 12/2/16 at 8:17 am to Methuselah
I don't think humans can survive long to get to that point but even so, even that kind of growth is still simplistic and miniscule compared to the size and complexity of the universe. And when I say universe I mean whatever started it, is outside the barriers of it, multiple/parallel universes, etc. I just highly doubt a human brain, the organ itself, can figure out what the hell is going on.
Posted on 12/2/16 at 8:37 am to Titus Pullo
quote:
I don't believe in life inn outer space.
"Belief" has always been one of the biggest problems facing science. You have no basis for thinking something, but you think it anyway, call it "belief" and hold it out there as something that is perfectly reasonable when it is, in fact, the opposite.
Posted on 12/2/16 at 9:09 am to ByteMe
quote:
It's a no brainer. There are more stars in our galaxy than there are grains of sand on Earth
No, it's estimated there are at least a billion times more grains of sand on Earth than stars in the Milky Way. What you're saying is thought to be true for stars in the Universe.
quote:
and there are more galaxies than the stars in the Milky Way.
That appears to be the current thinking, perhaps by a factor of 10.
Posted on 12/2/16 at 9:10 am to ByteMe
quote:
There are more stars in our galaxy than there are grains of sand on Earth,
I hate to split hairs here but.....
quote:
the Earth has roughly (and we're speaking very roughly here) 7.5 x 10^18 grains of sand, or seven quintillion, five hundred quadrillion grains
LINK
vs
quote:
Our own Milky Way is home to around 300 billion stars
LINK
Posted on 12/2/16 at 9:15 am to buffbraz
I found an article that talked about grains of sand in the sextillions, which is 10^21. Combining with your article, 10 million to over a billion times as many grains of sand on Earth as stars in the Milky Way. What's a factor of 100 anyway?
Posted on 12/2/16 at 9:17 am to buffbraz
quote:
I hate to split hairs here but.....
Not exactly splitting hairs because he was way off. I'm assuming he meant universe
Posted on 12/2/16 at 9:27 am to HeadChange
quote:
I hate to split hairs here but.....
Not exactly splitting hairs because he was way off. I'm assuming he meant universe
I knew what he meant, just making a correction....all are staggering numbers.
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