Posted on 11/20/2012 7:03:34 PM PST by Free ThinkerNY
Bah - humbug! You sound like a future Grumpy Old Man.
You wrote:
“You sound like a gibbering fool.
No offense, take care.”
You say I should take no offense at that? Really I don’t take much since I know the source.
Future? I might already be at the grumpy old man stage.
Water from Saturn and Jupiter are not in solar/Earth orbit.
>> “ I might already be at the grumpy old man stage.” <<
.
Good! Join the club :o)
These fools are chompin at the bit for something that they’re not going to find: life that isn’t Earth-originated.
Astronomers recently discovered the most water vapor ever detected, about 12 billion light years away surrounding a quasar, in the amount of about 140 *trillion* times all the water in our oceans.
In this environment it continues to produce this mass amount of water vapor according to astronomers. Astronomers found water is pervasive throughout the universe, going back to the early stages of the universe. In fact, there is water vapor and water in the form of frozen ice all over our Milky Way Galaxy.
Gas clouds observed in Orion region alone are said to generate enough water molecules in a single day to fill the Earth's oceans sixty times over. It's believed much of the water in the solar system was originally produced in a giant water-vapor clouds like the one observed in Orion.
>> “Astronomers recently discovered the most water vapor ever detected, about 12 billion light years away” <<
Do you envision that arriving here soon?
“It’s believed...” - Mostly by propagandists for ignorance.
So what's your point? That any comet that orbits the sun came from Earth? Nut hatchery.
The comets are principally in an orbit around Earth. Some of them are also coplanar with the sun.
Study Johannes Kepler’s theorem if you wish to understand, rather than making a fool of yourself further.
Naw, the rover didn't bring a microscope.
Nasa to engineers... “ Just ignore the old building foundations off to the left, just keep digging.”
Don't think so, pal. Every comet I've ever heard of, orbits the sun.
Some of them are also coplanar with the sun.
Which means WHAT, exactly? That all comets which orbit our sun, originated from Earth?
Answer the question and stop being so weirdly cryptic.
I'm asking you a straight question. If you know what you say you know, then explain your position. If your final defense is to tell me to study the works of Johann Kepler, then you've conceded the argument. That's a coward's cop out.
Astronomers recently discovered the most water vapor ever detected, about 12 billion light years away surrounding a quasar, in the amount of about 140 *trillion* times all the water in our oceans.
In this environment it continues to produce this mass amount of water vapor according to astronomers. Astronomers found water is pervasive throughout the universe, going back to the early stages of the universe. In fact, there is water vapor and water in the form of frozen ice all over our Milky Way Galaxy.
Gas clouds observed in Orion region alone are said to generate enough water molecules in a single day to fill the Earth's oceans sixty times over. It's believed much of the water in the solar system was originally produced in a giant water-vapor clouds like the one observed in Orion.
Do you envision that arriving here soon?
And that has what to do with your comment at the top of this post?
Incorrect again.
Hey Einstein, the Earth orbits of the comets are mapped. You can buy tables that tell you where they are at almost any time so that you can find them as they approach.
Having a bad day?
You do realize that nothing in your post is relevent to this discussion?
(fire engines are red, so they’re rushin too)
The comets do not orbit the sun, they are in orbit about the Earth, and their positions are describable relative to the Earth. The Earth lies in the plane of their orbit.
I'm no astronomer, but that doesn't pass the smell test. Comets have orbits with very long periodicity, and swing so far out into the solar system, that they can take nearly a hundred years to cycle.
It's utterly counter-intuitive to think that a planet as small as earth has enough gravitational force to entrap such an object. But the sun? Absolutely.
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