Monday, April 16, 2012

Space! - Page 2

Quote:








Applying the principles of thermodynamics, one could assume that life of the universe is finite and will summarily end when all matter reaches the same temperature.



Of course, the span of time it would take to reach such a temperature is so vast that no one can really grasp it.




That's just when you perm iT for a while

Things change in the universe

Including what we can see.

Still so very Cool, yet un-commented on|||"Space might be the final frontier, but it's made in a Hollywood basement."

Sorry, had to!

That's pretty damn cool.|||Isn't (supposed) dark matter suppose to explain why galaxies hold together and (supposed) dark energy explains the behavior of galaxies regarding one another? This seems like a candidate to get rid of dark energy, now we need to figure out what's missing in the galaxies. I've always wondered about subatomic particles floating through the nothing that may be currently relevant or maybe just leftover junk from a previous iteration of a universe that once inhabited our universe's 'space', but long since 'unzipped'. Or perhaps it's a phenomena of a connected, parallel universe interacting with our own universe. Maybe that's where the excess gravity is dumped or where gravitons pop to when they get unbound from their atoms. I've always wondered about a parallel dimension that acts sort of like the 'scaffolding' behind our universe. I think that'd be pretty groovy...

A planet where waffles grow on trees?! I call dibs!!|||I love how science can call out, well it 90% more universe, but its still the kind we only see 10% of.

Sounds like a religion huh?|||It's like that with nearly all science, including seemingly trivial matters, e.g. that the earth is circling around the sun and not the other way around. Did you ever proove it for yourself or did you just read about people who are said to have made certain experiments or observations.

The difference is that you are used to the established theories and not used to new ones. But surprise us with a conspiracy theory about it |||Quote:








It's like that with nearly all science, including seemingly trivial matters, e.g. that the earth is circling around the sun and not the other way around. Did you ever proove it for yourself or did you just read about people who are said to have made certain experiments or observations.




Very few of us would take the time to map the retrograde motions of the planets of our solar system.



If really interested , however, once could easily observe the larger moons of Jiupiter with only a small telescope. In doing so, you would be tracing the steps of Gallieo ... one of the greatest scientists of all time.



I have seen them. How about you?|||Well lets see at the same time we are exploreing farther into Space and Time as well.

Using the Large Hadron Collider's new dataset results.

The world's largest atom smasher set a record for high-energy collisions on Tuesday, March 30, 2010 by crashing proton beams into each other at three times more force than ever before. In a milestone in the $10 billion Large Hadron Collider's ambitious bid to reveal details about theoretical particles and microforces, scientists at the European Organization for Nuclear Research, or CERN, collided the beams and took measurements at a combined energy level of 7 trillion electron volts.|||Quote:








It's like that with nearly all science, including seemingly trivial matters, e.g. that the earth is circling around the sun and not the other way around. Did you ever proove it for yourself or did you just read about people who are said to have made certain experiments or observations.

The difference is that you are used to the established theories and not used to new ones. But surprise us with a conspiracy theory about it




LOL really you read me that way?

Old Wittgenstein Jokes?

The Day the Universe Changed Series is my Favorite example.



Just watch the first Two minutes and 20 seconds and You have my theory!|||I noticed your point, but others might not, so regard it as being directed at the others. One day you might be grateful for me making you explain your posting .


Quote:








If really interested , however, once could easily observe the larger moons of Jiupiter with only a small telescope. In doing so, you would be tracing the steps of Gallieo ... one of the greatest scientists of all time.



I have seen them. How about you?




A few years ago I tried it with binoculars (which should be good enough to see them), but my hands weren't calm enough and I didn't have a tripod for it. But you made me curious again, maybe I will build something with Lego stones or so |||oh no's!!

good thing it isn't Donkey Kong

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