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Starburst Galaxy

Posted: Thu Jan 26, 2006 7:55 am
by harry
See link

http://antwrp.gsfc.nasa.gov/apod/ap040601.html

Why does this Galaxy M82 have so many deaths and births of stars over and above the MilkyWay.

Wow!!!!!!!!!

Posted: Thu Jan 26, 2006 8:02 am
by astroton
Beautifully Coloured picture. Looks like the galaxy is packed more densely than normal. Triggering quick condensation to form new giant stars. The stars in close proximity might be interfering with one another. Thus evolving lot quicker than normal!!!!

Posted: Thu Jan 26, 2006 9:53 am
by harry
smile no time to evolve.

One day when more info is at hand the recycling process will become one of the greatest discoveries.

Posted: Thu Jan 26, 2006 10:46 am
by astroton
I think, the word evolution should be confined to the living. The recycle to nonliving.

I have my theory to explain all but don't have math to back it up! Looks like I will have to invent 1.

Posted: Fri Jan 27, 2006 10:35 am
by harry
Evolution and recycle go hand in hand.

Living or dead

Posted: Fri Jan 27, 2006 1:04 pm
by S. Bilderback
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 entropy. If the universe was static, it would have to be infinitely old and by the properties of matter, a mathematical representation model states that the universe would be infinite in size, infinitely cold, and what ever the smallest unit of matter, each would be an infinite distance apart.

Please don't forget how big infinity is. It is the major flaw in your theory and any effort to explain it away is in direct conflict to the theory itself.

Evolution and recycle go hand in hand.

Living or dead
That is only true in a closed system with a net loss to entropy.

Posted: Fri Jan 27, 2006 1:31 pm
by makc
astroton wrote:I have my theory to explain all but don't have math to back it up.
Just a side note, a theory is nought without its math. In other words: I have my theory for Santa Claus, but that doesnt mean there is actually Santa Claus.

Posted: Fri Jan 27, 2006 3:03 pm
by BMAONE23
But Makc,
What math coveres the Santa Clause??? :lol:

Posted: Fri Jan 27, 2006 10:06 pm
by harry
Hello Bilderback

The only thing that will hold you back is yourself.

You have good writing skills.

But! you limit yourself.


No model is mine.
No theory is mine.


Bilderback said

"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 entropy. If the universe was static, it would have to be infinitely old and by the properties of matter, a mathematical representation model states that the universe would be infinite in size, infinitely cold, and what ever the smallest unit of matter, each would be an infinite distance apart. "

"Please don't forget how big infinity is. It is the major flaw in your theory and any effort to explain it away is in direct conflict to the theory itself."


Your ideas are very limited. Go read more

Posted: Fri Jan 27, 2006 10:47 pm
by S. Bilderback
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 me try this:

Do you believe the universe is infinite in age?

Posted: Fri Jan 27, 2006 10:59 pm
by harry
The Universe has no age and is infinite.

Posted: Fri Jan 27, 2006 11:25 pm
by S. Bilderback
OK, so you theoretical universe is infinitely old.

Stars give off light, gravity, neutrinos that travel out from the source, am I correct in that assumption?

Posted: Sat Jan 28, 2006 12:59 am
by astroton
I don think we have ability to study further than visible universe. Restriction to the speed of light is a restriction to our ability (so far). But, since most theories on the origins of universe tend to be speculative, I would most certainly speculate that the multiverse is infinite. The blue shifted galaxies and hubble's (not the telescope but the original one) findings are good enough proof on receding galaxies. If you believe in that (and the proof is substantial), the origins of our abode that we call universe seem to point towards big bang or some such event. I would say conversion of energy to mass and vice versa is an infinite process.

Posted: Sat Jan 28, 2006 1:00 am
by harry
Bilderback stated:

"OK, so you theoretical universe is infinitely old.

Stars give off light, gravity, neutrinos that travel out from the source, am I correct in that assumption?"


Correct

Posted: Sat Jan 28, 2006 1:31 am
by astroton
makc wrote:
astroton wrote:I have my theory to explain all but don't have math to back it up.
Just a side note, a theory is nought without its math. In other words: I have my theory for Santa Claus, but that doesnt mean there is actually Santa Claus.
Mak, I don have math for my theory but, I have math for ability of speculative theory's success or failure. It goes like this,

In any reference frame (field of study), ability of speculative theory to succeed (S) is proportional to,

Author’s ability to make friends in the field (A)
Author’s ability to please powerful people in the field (P)
1 / Author’s ability to suppress easily targettable competition (T)
Authors ability to say,” Yes I meant that too" when competition is not easy to suppress. (Y)
Number of years author lives to protect his theory (L)

The value of the constant is 1.

Posted: Sat Jan 28, 2006 1:54 am
by harry
If you define Santa Clause as daddy. Than Santa Clause exists.

If you define any theory with the correct foundations than they will not collapse even when you are gone.

Posted: Sat Jan 28, 2006 1:56 am
by S. Bilderback
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 the matter/energy lost due to entropy - the photons, neutrinos ... etc. moving from the dense areas of the universe speeding away at the speed of light. Without new matter/energy entering the universe, all aspects of the universe would reach equilibrium at either infinity or 1/infinity. The universe would end up being infinitely large, the smallest possible units of matter/energy moving away from each other at C, and be at absolute zero.

This scenario makes no sense unless you can explain how the matter/energy lost to entropy is somehow pulled back or formed into high-density areas to reform the hot dense matter/energy the universe IS made of.

This is theoretically possible but it requires the Big Bang to make it work.

So now it is up to you to show how the matter/energy that should become less dense and colder, can reform as hot dense matter.

Posted: Sat Jan 28, 2006 2:56 am
by astroton
harry wrote:If you define Santa Clause as daddy. Than Santa Clause exists.

If you define any theory with the correct foundations than they will not collapse even when you are gone.
Daddy does not give you infinite life (as per the speculative theory in question)

How do you prove such a speculative theory is based on correct / incorrect foundation without math backing?

Speculative theories without math still float and succed before dying a terrible death.

Posted: Sat Jan 28, 2006 8:52 am
by harry
Bilderback

You are going around in circles.

I think you are on the wrong track.

A process of recycling is not according to your logic.

------------------------------------------------

Astroton

Maths is great,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,and you can make it twist the truth.

Observations are great and if you can see it you can believe it.

Maths in the past has been used to support the Big Bang,,,,,,,,the maths did not work.


What part do you disagree?
--------------------------------------------------

You can believe what ever you want.
Many cosmologists have lived their whole life thinking of one model and than changing with recent deep field images.

Posted: Sat Jan 28, 2006 9:00 am
by harry
Look at the links

http://antwrp.gsfc.nasa.gov/cgi-bin/apo ... lack+Holes+
http://antwrp.gsfc.nasa.gov/cgi-bin/apo ... tron+stars


Maybe you will get to feel the Neutron star and the black holes


Smile

Posted: Sat Jan 28, 2006 3:24 pm
by S. Bilderback
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 - always. I'm not saying there is no recycling of matter/energy, I'm saying it can't continue indefinitely.

I didn't ask for any math, observation proves that matter/energy is going from dense to less dense areas and cooling as it go. If the universe is infinitely old, the cold less dense mater/energy has to reform into hot dense matter some how. All you need to do is state a theory as to how that happens. If you can't, the theory of a recycling universe you support is not valid no matter what happens in or near a black hole or neutron star.

Posted: Sat Jan 28, 2006 4:38 pm
by BMAONE23
Bilderback,
About the only way to cause something like a black hole to give up mass and energy without loosing any substance would be if the densness of the mass itself causes a link (gateway) to another dimension and draws energy and mass from it to be expelled into our own. If this were the case then it might also serve to explain the apparent weight (mass) of the visible universe being so small compared to its total apparent gravity. perhaps "Dark Matter/Energy" is actually being expelled from other dimensions into our own VIA the black holes.

Posted: Sat Jan 28, 2006 6:08 pm
by S. Bilderback
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 a black hole and becomes something else - like collapses into a neutron star or explodes as a large gamma ray burst.

It is not known if there are singularity, finite sized objects, warped spaces holes, active event horizons or something completely different making up a black hole - it all loose theory.

Posted: Sat Jan 28, 2006 10:38 pm
by harry
Hello Bilderback

In my opinion

You have your ideas inside out.


The event Horizon is a point is space where light cannot escape.

Neutron stars are the seeds for blackholes.

Black Holes only get smaller by the internal gravitational convectional currents that create jet streams and expell matter. As for evaporation I don't think so.

Smile

But! thats my opinion.

Posted: Sat Jan 28, 2006 11:08 pm
by gordhaddow
Actually, the radius of the event horizon for a given mass is smaller than the radius of a neutron star of equivalent mass. And a black hole is only giving up mass if we can grant that gravitons are not massless. Anything that we can detect being 'excreted' by a black hole was probably never within the black hole, but consists of degenerate matter from the 'atmosphere' surrounding the event horizon being ejected as a result of a combination of rotational and electromagnetic forces.