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Cloaked spaceship around Mercury and a new Earth

Anyone see the ESOcast where they just now caught the light from a Quasar that popped 12.9 billion years ago?

"This ESOcast is about the discovery of the most distant quasar found to date. This brilliant beacon is powered by a black hole with a mass two billion times that of the Sun. It is by far the brightest object yet discovered in the early Universe."

http://www.eso.org/public/archives/videos/medium_mpeg1/eso1122a.mpg
 
an astrophysicist I met explained it best... If you take all the stars in the Milky Way, 1% of those will have solar systems. Of those solar systems 1% of them will have Earth like planets. That leaves someplace in the neighborhood of 65 Billion Earth like planets.

I saw it explained on the History channel as: There are more stars in the sky than there are grains of sand on earth.


Basically, anyone that thinks we are alone, will be sorely dissapointed.
 
the borg

jammin311-31777-albums916-28413.jpg

Im going to agree with EeePee.

Give her a couple more boobs and Im in."thumbsup"
 
I'm not very familiar with teh whole space thing, but thats pretty damn neat. I was wondering how far away it was since a "light year" doesn't mean to much to me. After some research I cam up with this. A light year is about 6 TRILLION miles a way. With todays technology we would be able to arrive about 22 million years from today:mrgreen:
 
I was wondering how far away it was since a "light year" doesn't mean to much to me. After some research I cam up with this. A light year is about 6 TRILLION miles a way. With todays technology we would be able to arrive about 22 million years from today:mrgreen:
Yep, it is the distance that light travels in one earth year. BTW, it only takes light from the sun (about 93 million miles away) 8.5 minutes to get to earth."thumbsup"
 
either way is cool to me.

It is either is something nothing to do with mercury that caused it, to it was mercuries trail....

I have never considered space as empty as they think, for a small object it may seem so. But for something with as much displacement as a planet, there is a trail of where its been...space can't be empty.

But I'm not confident that science has a firm grip on light and energy just yet.
I afraid they may know just enough to be arrogant, and that arrogance unfortunately may likely blind them to additional possabilities and discoveries we have yet to learn about energy.


You know they have TV shows which explain this stuff. "thumbsup" Is it fair to write off the cumulative lifetime work of hundreds of skeptics because you have a hunch?

The only skeptics I know are scientists, and their skepticism come in packets of "these specific conclusions drawn from this pool of evidence published in these papers."

It would be like me, with no prior experience, watching some WEROCK and saying I have a hunch all of these builders and drivers are wrong. I think I really know how to build a sweet rock crawler and all these guys who have been refining and building upon each other for their entire lives - they are just silly and incorrect.
 
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I think I really know how to build a sweet rock crawler and all these guys who have been refining and building upon each other for their entire lives - they are just silly and incorrect.

And that's how the Chainlink truck was born...
 
I'm not very familiar with teh whole space thing, but thats pretty damn neat. I was wondering how far away it was since a "light year" doesn't mean to much to me. After some research I cam up with this. A light year is about 6 TRILLION miles a way. With todays technology we would be able to arrive about 22 million years from today:mrgreen:
Not true at all. We can travel at the speed of light if we can figure out how do stop and how to not hit anything along the way. Also we wouldn't be able to see in front of us, only behind us. And we would need to figure out how to protect ourselves from the A/B/G rays through space....

But here is some rough figures for you. We can travel through space at 1,000,000 MPH and do it safely says most NASA guys. A light year isn't a measure of speed it's a measure of distance. That Earth is 600 light years away. A light year is roughly 6,000,000,000,000 miles. So that would make that Earth 3,600,000,000,000,000 miles away. So if we can figure out how to even travel at 1/2 the speed of light we can get there pretty quick!
 
The Chainlink travels at the speed of light, therefore, I do not have any pictures.
 
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