Search found 233 matches
- Tue Jan 31, 2006 1:31 am
- Forum: The Bridge: Discuss an Astronomy Picture of the Day
- Topic: Dark Matter
- Replies: 161
- Views: 42423
- Sun Jan 29, 2006 3:30 pm
- Forum: The Bridge: Discuss an Astronomy Picture of the Day
- Topic: Starburst Galaxy
- Replies: 32
- Views: 14492
Sorry Harry, I can't sit idle and watch bad science being propagated. The fundamentals I'm referring to is you misuse of terminology, stating speculation as fact, supporting one speculation with another, ignoring good science, and so on. It has nothing to do with me agreeing or disagreeing with your...
- Sun Jan 29, 2006 1:25 am
- Forum: The Bridge: Discuss an Astronomy Picture of the Day
- Topic: Starburst Galaxy
- Replies: 32
- Views: 14492
Harry: I can tell you are reading a lot and have made great progress, but I'm not sure if you are reading what you need to be reading. The fundamentals need to be well understood before valid judgments can be made on the speculative side of science. Snooping around web page after web page looking fo...
- Sat Jan 28, 2006 6:08 pm
- Forum: The Bridge: Discuss an Astronomy Picture of the Day
- Topic: Starburst Galaxy
- Replies: 32
- Views: 14492
Black holes do give up energy and mass; they expel gravitons, magnetic fields... The event horizon contains part or possibly all of the mass of a black hole, it is theoretically possible that the all the matter is at the event horizon and evaporates becoming smaller and smaller until its no long is ...
- Sat Jan 28, 2006 3:24 pm
- Forum: The Bridge: Discuss an Astronomy Picture of the Day
- Topic: Starburst Galaxy
- Replies: 32
- Views: 14492
I am fully aware of what is known and assumed about black hole and neutron stars and know the difference. When there is a finite amount of mass loosing a finite % of its total, at some point the mass left will equal zero. There is no 100% efficient reaction in the universe. Entropy = net loss - alwa...
- Sat Jan 28, 2006 1:56 am
- Forum: The Bridge: Discuss an Astronomy Picture of the Day
- Topic: Starburst Galaxy
- Replies: 32
- Views: 14492
So there are clusters of dense matter (any matter of our universe), sending out matter/energy to less dense areas over an infinite amount of time. After some amount of time, a very, very long time, our universe would have recycled itself over and over becoming smaller/less dense each time because of...
- Fri Jan 27, 2006 11:25 pm
- Forum: The Bridge: Discuss an Astronomy Picture of the Day
- Topic: Starburst Galaxy
- Replies: 32
- Views: 14492
- Fri Jan 27, 2006 10:47 pm
- Forum: The Bridge: Discuss an Astronomy Picture of the Day
- Topic: Starburst Galaxy
- Replies: 32
- Views: 14492
Your ideas are very limited. Go read more My ideas are limited to the laws of physics, observations and logic. Reading other peoples speculations can be interesting, but if one truly understands the science, the flaws in some of these speculative theories automatically negates their validity. Let m...
- Fri Jan 27, 2006 1:04 pm
- Forum: The Bridge: Discuss an Astronomy Picture of the Day
- Topic: Starburst Galaxy
- Replies: 32
- Views: 14492
Let's say you had a balloon that could become infinity large, how long would it take to fill it at 1 mole/hour? Then how long would it take at infinite moles/hour? Photons, gravitons, neutrinos, etc. are all spreading out across the universe from dense areas to less dense areas, that is the basis of...
- Fri Jan 27, 2006 3:44 am
- Forum: The Bridge: Discuss an Astronomy Picture of the Day
- Topic: Mars Rocks! (now APOD 26/01/2006)
- Replies: 36
- Views: 18454
I can guarantee that the light portion is not H2O or CO2, neither one would last more than a few hours, but the dark portion is definitely basaltic. The light portion must be either the bedrock salts or a volcanic ash, it depends on where the rock originated from - how and how far did it travel to f...
- Fri Jan 27, 2006 2:40 am
- Forum: The Bridge: Discuss an Astronomy Picture of the Day
- Topic: Mars Rocks! (now APOD 26/01/2006)
- Replies: 36
- Views: 18454
- Fri Jan 27, 2006 2:34 am
- Forum: The Bridge: Discuss an Astronomy Picture of the Day
- Topic: Dark Matter
- Replies: 161
- Views: 42423
Kovil stated: First let me appologise to Mr Bilderback, as I was angry and condescending in my last post. I must have read some of your posts that were written in haste as you did not explain things to my liking. Since then I have read several of your posts that are good. I was hasty in my judgement...
- Thu Jan 26, 2006 1:52 pm
- Forum: The Bridge: Discuss an Astronomy Picture of the Day
- Topic: Dark Matter
- Replies: 161
- Views: 42423
The time duration is measured by the collection of particles and energy in the detectors that are meters in length, reverse engineering the collision can reveal what happened and when. Black Hole? I don't think so. It is speculation that the particles they expected to see were re-absorbed and given ...
- Thu Jan 26, 2006 12:37 am
- Forum: The Bridge: Discuss an Astronomy Picture of the Day
- Topic: Mars Rocks! (now APOD 26/01/2006)
- Replies: 36
- Views: 18454
- Wed Jan 25, 2006 1:53 pm
- Forum: The Bridge: Discuss an Astronomy Picture of the Day
- Topic: Mars Rocks! (now APOD 26/01/2006)
- Replies: 36
- Views: 18454
- Wed Jan 25, 2006 12:53 pm
- Forum: The Bridge: Discuss an Astronomy Picture of the Day
- Topic: Mars Rocks! (now APOD 26/01/2006)
- Replies: 36
- Views: 18454
Mars Rocks! (now APOD 26/01/2006)
[edited by makc - please, people, make smaller pics! originally posted pic here]
Does anyone want to state their interpretation on the makeup of the large two-toned gray in the center right hand side of this picture?
- Mon Jan 23, 2006 7:25 pm
- Forum: The Bridge: Discuss an Astronomy Picture of the Day
- Topic: D. rad Bacteria: Candidate Astronauts
- Replies: 3
- Views: 2179
- Sun Jan 22, 2006 4:51 pm
- Forum: The Bridge: Discuss an Astronomy Picture of the Day
- Topic: D. rad Bacteria: Candidate Astronauts
- Replies: 3
- Views: 2179
- Sun Jan 22, 2006 4:46 pm
- Forum: The Bridge: Discuss an Astronomy Picture of the Day
- Topic: Is the color true?
- Replies: 6
- Views: 3074
The intensity and spectrum of the light being reflected can have a substantial determination on its perceived color. Color correction filters are used in most photography situations - a subjective artistic decision. The amazing human brain does this correction automatically (within limitations). Usi...
- Sun Jan 22, 2006 4:01 am
- Forum: The Bridge: Discuss an Astronomy Picture of the Day
- Topic: Is it art? Apollo 12 self-portrait
- Replies: 6
- Views: 2726
- Sun Jan 22, 2006 3:39 am
- Forum: The Bridge: Discuss an Astronomy Picture of the Day
- Topic: Dark Matter
- Replies: 161
- Views: 42423
The expansion and acceleration of the universe theory is a derivative of the red shift, age, temperature, % hydrogen, and location of galaxies and galactic clusters. Light emitted from sources closer to the point of vector conjunction are red shifted, light sources farthest from the vector conjuncti...
- Sun Jan 22, 2006 12:24 am
- Forum: The Bridge: Discuss an Astronomy Picture of the Day
- Topic: Dark Matter
- Replies: 161
- Views: 42423
- Sat Jan 21, 2006 11:49 pm
- Forum: The Bridge: Discuss an Astronomy Picture of the Day
- Topic: LL Ori and the Orion Nebula 20th Jan
- Replies: 8
- Views: 3829
- Sat Jan 21, 2006 12:01 am
- Forum: The Bridge: Discuss an Astronomy Picture of the Day
- Topic: Dark Matter
- Replies: 161
- Views: 42423
Hey, the whole credo for tenure has always been 'publish, publish, publish'. And if you don't have anything to contribute within the 'mainstream', and you can't write fiction effectively, you need an outlet for something you can shoot out in a short time with little effort. Excellently stated my go...
- Fri Jan 20, 2006 11:51 pm
- Forum: The Bridge: Discuss an Astronomy Picture of the Day
- Topic: Is the color true?
- Replies: 6
- Views: 3074
It would be the opposite; it will most likely be false color unless it says true color. Many of the pictures are taken in wavelengths of energy not visible to the human eye, and/or many times a composite of everything from infrared to gamma rays. Many times the false-colors are exaggerated to show d...