13 things that do not make sense

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Massive Quasars
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13 things that do not make sense

Post by Massive Quasars »

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duffman91
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Post by duffman91 »

That was extremelly informative. I've always liked your posts.
4days
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Post by 4days »

:icon14:
Ryoki
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Post by Ryoki »

Interesting stuff :icon14:
[size=85][color=#0080BF]io chiamo pinguini![/color][/size]
Pext
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Post by Pext »

nice read!
blood.angel
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Post by blood.angel »

I think the Belfast one has already been discredited by a science TV program, making it the same as the placebo effect.
Who
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Post by Who »

cool
R00k
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Post by R00k »

Can somebody explain something to me?

#2 - The Horizon Problem... When they talk about the microwave background radiation. Are they talking about the radiation OUTSIDE the known universe, the radiation just at the edges, or the uniform radiation throughout our universe?

From the way it reads, I take it they're talking about the uniformity of the radiation throughout our universe. But my roommate tells me that background microwave radiation is what's at the edge of the universe according to Stephen Hawking; and not throughout the center of our universe. Which just doesn't make sense to me.

Can anybody shed a little light on this for me?
Pext
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Post by Pext »

i think they are talking about the distance at which you cant differentiate between signals and background radiation anymore and strangely the distance is equal in all directions. or am i wrong? mq? :D
Arkleseizure
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Post by Arkleseizure »

Read it yesterday when I found it on Digg.
Guest

Post by Guest »

Good evening my friends

I didn't read it all but saved it in my favorites.
Very interesting.

Thanks for the link.
If you find anything else like that, please post it again.

Pete
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Post by Guest »

You're Optimus Primes Alt aren't you?
Guest

Post by Guest »

Kracus wrote:You're Optimus Primes Alt aren't you?
Are you testicules' brother?

Pete
Massive Quasars
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Post by Massive Quasars »

R00k, I don't know what your friend is talking about. Either I'm ignorant of this, or he's wrong, or you haven't explained his position properly.
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Scourge
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Post by Scourge »

Interesting stuff. Kinda getting the urge to jump head first into some astronomy the rest of the weekend. :icon14:
mjrpes
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Post by mjrpes »

Webb's are not the only results that suggest something is missing from our understanding of alpha. A recent analysis of the only known natural nuclear reactor, which was active nearly 2 billion years ago at what is now Oklo in Gabon, also suggests something about light's interaction with matter has changed.
what exactly would a natural nuclear reactor be?

EDIT: from number 12 in the article.
Massive Quasars
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Post by Massive Quasars »

Here, and how.
[url=http://www.marxists.org/][img]http://img442.imageshack.us/img442/3050/avatarmy7.gif[/img][img]http://img506.imageshack.us/img506/1736/leninzbp5.gif[/img][img]http://img506.imageshack.us/img506/1076/modulestalinat6.jpg[/img][img]http://img506.imageshack.us/img506/9239/cheds1.jpg[/img][/url]
Guest

Post by Guest »

That was interesting. So hot fusion really exists?
blood.angel
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Post by blood.angel »

ToxicBug wrote:That was interesting. So hot fusion really exists?
Its hot fusion that works in stars.
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Bacon
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Post by Bacon »

Nice read :icon14:
[b]CAPSLOCK IS ON[/b]
Arkleseizure
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Post by Arkleseizure »

mjrpes wrote:
Webb's are not the only results that suggest something is missing from our understanding of alpha. A recent analysis of the only known natural nuclear reactor, which was active nearly 2 billion years ago at what is now Oklo in Gabon, also suggests something about light's interaction with matter has changed.
what exactly would a natural nuclear reactor be?

EDIT: from number 12 in the article.
A natrual reactor would be a star or other solid piece of matter in the universe able to with stand the fusion and fission of the atoms.
Arkleseizure
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Post by Arkleseizure »

R00k wrote:Can somebody explain something to me?

#2 - The Horizon Problem... When they talk about the microwave background radiation. Are they talking about the radiation OUTSIDE the known universe, the radiation just at the edges, or the uniform radiation throughout our universe?

From the way it reads, I take it they're talking about the uniformity of the radiation throughout our universe. But my roommate tells me that background microwave radiation is what's at the edge of the universe according to Stephen Hawking; and not throughout the center of our universe. Which just doesn't make sense to me.

Can anybody shed a little light on this for me?
For one, Stephen Hawking is a complete idiot. Other than that, the background radiation is simply the radiation in the background of the universe. Not the edge, since we don't know where the edge was. If it was at the edge, then how do we know it's there? More than likely it means across the whole universe.
R00k
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Post by R00k »

Massive Quasars wrote:R00k, I don't know what your friend is talking about. Either I'm ignorant of this, or he's wrong, or you haven't explained his position properly.
Could you maybe just clarify to me what that part of the article is about then?

It seems to me to be saying that background radiation throughout the known universe has uniform heat.
My roommate is trying to convince me that they aren't talking about heat throughout the universe, but rather that they are trying to say the heat is uniform around the actual edge of the universe, where it is expanding into whatever is beyond.

His theory is that maybe what's beyond the universe is causing a type of friction against the universe's expansion, therfore creating the uniform heat around the edges. Which I think is total bunk of course.
R00k
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Post by R00k »

Arkleseizure wrote:
R00k wrote:Can somebody explain something to me?

#2 - The Horizon Problem... When they talk about the microwave background radiation. Are they talking about the radiation OUTSIDE the known universe, the radiation just at the edges, or the uniform radiation throughout our universe?

From the way it reads, I take it they're talking about the uniformity of the radiation throughout our universe. But my roommate tells me that background microwave radiation is what's at the edge of the universe according to Stephen Hawking; and not throughout the center of our universe. Which just doesn't make sense to me.

Can anybody shed a little light on this for me?
For one, Stephen Hawking is a complete idiot. Other than that, the background radiation is simply the radiation in the background of the universe. Not the edge, since we don't know where the edge was. If it was at the edge, then how do we know it's there? More than likely it means across the whole universe.
That was basically my thought as well. It's not like we can even see the edge, so how in hell can we say what the heat around it is like? :smirk:
Arkleseizure
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Post by Arkleseizure »

Check Hawking's website on Microwave Background Enegry, doesn't mention anything about the edge. Just the gasses left over from the big bang.
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