1 posted on
03/30/2012 6:30:11 PM PDT by
U-238
To: SunkenCiv; KevinDavis
2 posted on
03/30/2012 6:31:17 PM PDT by
U-238
To: SunkenCiv; KevinDavis
3 posted on
03/30/2012 6:31:29 PM PDT by
U-238
To: U-238
A long time ago in a galaxy far, far away.
To: U-238
In the beginning, the Universe contained almost no chemical elements other than hydrogen and helium.Yeah well, then there was humans and global warming.....
5 posted on
03/30/2012 6:33:04 PM PDT by
EGPWS
(Trust in God, question everyone else)
To: U-238
Star mining. Just don’t pig out and collapse that pig.
8 posted on
03/30/2012 6:34:45 PM PDT by
bigheadfred
(MY PET TAPEWORM (OBIWAN) IS AN INSANE MILITARY HATING LEFTIST)
To: U-238; martin_fierro; Charles Henrickson
Ich bin ein [13] Billioner
10 posted on
03/30/2012 6:43:19 PM PDT by
mikrofon
(Ich bin ein Tagliner)
To: U-238
A star containing very little bar hydrogen and helium...
OK, so how is hydrogen inside a bar different from ordinary hydrogen?
If this star is 375 light-years away, the light they are analyzing left the star about the time Harvard College was founded.
To: U-238
Wow!, Wow, and Wow!!
So, some planets are dense in metals, and others are not: 375 light years away; a Carl Sagan “billions of years ago.”
I guess that will make it very difficult for the super heads to explain Earth, a metallic planet: vs. with Jupitor or Neptune, gaseous planets. Here, in our own sun system. Who woulda thunk?
How much grant money is funneled to these folk???
27 posted on
03/30/2012 8:02:49 PM PDT by
Noob1999
(Loose Lips, Sink Ships)
To: U-238
From what i have gathered in the past NOTHING 375 light years away can be 13 Billion years old.
13 Billion years ago this local space did not exist.
32 posted on
03/30/2012 9:16:55 PM PDT by
mowowie
To: U-238
To: U-238
38 posted on
03/30/2012 10:34:22 PM PDT by
Captain Beyond
(The Hammer of the gods! (Just a cool line from a Led Zep song))
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson