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Post by End Zone on Jan 13, 2021 4:11:36 GMT -7
public.nrao.edu/news/quasar-new-distance-record/Science has a major problem this morning. A massive quasar J0313–1806, aka black hole, was discovered by ALMA, a deep space exploration tool, and reported through science webpages. The quasar J0313–1806 shouldn't exist, using accepted black hole modeling techniques. The universe was not old enough for this quasar to form to it's massive size over 13 billion years ago. Question: The quasar formed via an unknown process, Y/N? Some might even ask the harder question: Did the quasar precede the big bang as we theoretically know it?
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Post by thomas cat on Jan 15, 2021 18:46:28 GMT -7
public.nrao.edu/news/quasar-new-distance-record/Science has a major problem this morning. A massive quasar J0313–1806, aka black hole, was discovered by ALMA, a deep space exploration tool, and reported through science webpages. The quasar J0313–1806 shouldn't exist, using accepted black hole modeling techniques. The universe was not old enough for this quasar to form to it's massive size over 13 billion years ago. Question: The quasar formed via an unknown process, Y/N? Some might even ask the harder question: Did the quasar precede the big bang as we theoretically know it? lol...I say yes to the unknown process. I watch show's like "How the Universe Works" and any thing similar. The one thing I have learned is, the universe is not only weirder than you think, but weirder than you can imagine. Things like planets made of diamonds, space itself expanding, and I don't want to even to get into dark energy and dark matter. We call it dark because we know its there but we have no idea of what it really is. The one thing I think I will most regret when I die, is I didn't live long enough to know some of these things.
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Post by wildcardboy on Aug 13, 2021 17:38:58 GMT -7
New Post, to an old thread.
But this is interesting. And it might be concerning.
As is there might be a possibility that it might eat up our earth in the future?
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Post by End Zone on Aug 14, 2021 3:13:53 GMT -7
New Post, to an old thread. But this is interesting. And it might be concerning. As is there might be a possibility that it might eat up our earth in the future? Interesting question, WCB. I'm no astrophysicist and doubt the Forum membership has anyone with the PhD. I do have knowledge about something eating up the earth, and that something is the sun, in more than 10 billion or more years. I won't wait for it. Here is the best answer to your question -- recommend read both links, below: The Sun is about 4.6 billion years old - gauged on the age of other objects in the solar system that formed around the same time. And, based on observations of other Milky Way galaxy stars, astronomers predict our sun will reach the end of its life in about another 10 billion years--that is, the warming and life-giving sun's life as we know it today will end. When the sun does finally start it's transition to a classic white dwarf, similar to 100s of millions of other known white dwarfs in the Milky Way galaxy, the outer layer of our sun slowly will expand to as far as Jupiter's orbit, meaning that the earth will be briefly inside the sun's outer-most nuclear fusion layer, which is super hot and something like several millions degrees F. The earth 'eating' will happen fast though, probably in a few earth seconds. Even the earth's massive iron core, which is surrounded by several thousand miles of molten mantle and the rocky outer layer where we live, will simply vaporize and become nothing more than a puffy cloud of hot interstellar gas moving outward from the center of the former solar system. Think crematory ash blowing in the wind, but even thinner and lighter. www.bing.com/search?q=end+of+sun&form=ANSPH1&refig=f88e2eeaec114dfd8f2a660442de2244&pc=U531faculty.wcas.northwestern.edu/~infocom/The%20Website/end.html
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