Hello Sputnick,
I for one hope the sun's gravity is fairly constant because the only way I could envision the Earth speeding up by having the distance between us and the Sun decrease. In other words, were goin' in!
I think at last look er were slowing down.....Whew.
APOD: Sideways Galaxy NGC 3628 (2008 May 15)
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- G'day G'day G'day G'day
- Posts: 2881
- Joined: Fri Nov 18, 2005 8:04 am
- Location: Sydney Australia
Hello All
Spudnick said
The Electric theory has alot going for it in combination with plasma cosmology.
Two theories:
1) The standard model, burning Hydrogen. You can google for this info.
2) The sun years gone by was formed on a remnant Neutron core after a supernova. This Neutron core having a density of 10^ 17 Kg/m3 has had enough matter and energy to last 12 gyrs.
You can read up on it:
http://www.omatumr.com/PapersArxiv.html
NASA is sending a probe in the near future to study the Sun and from this probe I hope many issues will be solved.
Spudnick said
There is a connection throughout the galaxy. But! the main power from the sun is generated by fusion and fission chain reactions.My goodness - I just went back and read plasma further - "The Sun may be powered, not from within itself, but from outside, by the electric (Birkeland) currents that flow in our arm of our galaxy as they do in all galaxies." Oh my goodness .. I could be right after all.
The Electric theory has alot going for it in combination with plasma cosmology.
Two theories:
1) The standard model, burning Hydrogen. You can google for this info.
2) The sun years gone by was formed on a remnant Neutron core after a supernova. This Neutron core having a density of 10^ 17 Kg/m3 has had enough matter and energy to last 12 gyrs.
You can read up on it:
http://www.omatumr.com/PapersArxiv.html
NASA is sending a probe in the near future to study the Sun and from this probe I hope many issues will be solved.
Harry : Smile and live another day.
HEAPOW: Filigree (2008 May 12)
Last week's High Energy Astrophysics Picture of the Week (HEAPOW), Filigree, pictured the hot gas linking two galaxy clusters.Sputnick wrote:I just read about a (to me) recent discovery of normally invisible superheated gas connecting galaxies which would not be considerered 'close neighbours' .. the author (in Scientific American I believe it was) was speculating that this gas might be part of the Dark Matter factor.
HEAPOW: Filigree (2008 May 12)
ESA: XMM-Newton discovers part of missing matter in the Universe
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- G'day G'day G'day G'day
- Posts: 2881
- Joined: Fri Nov 18, 2005 8:04 am
- Location: Sydney Australia
G'day
The link
http://heasarc.gsfc.nasa.gov/docs/objec ... 3_xmm.html
Is fantastic.
Now I know what they did with the BLOB.
Try this for a different view
http://heasarc.gsfc.nasa.gov/docs/xmm/xmmgof.html
The link
http://heasarc.gsfc.nasa.gov/docs/objec ... 3_xmm.html
Is fantastic.
Now I know what they did with the BLOB.
Try this for a different view
http://heasarc.gsfc.nasa.gov/docs/xmm/xmmgof.html
Harry : Smile and live another day.