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Beyond the Universe

United States Polar Offline
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#46

Love topics like these as well! Although I don't agree with the "multiverse" or "universal simulation" theories, I always wonder about the size of universal objects compared to Earth and how small, insignificant we and our planet are compared to the vast reaches of the dark realm.
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Rishi Offline
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#47
( This post was last modified: 05-08-2018, 10:45 AM by Rishi )

(05-08-2018, 10:19 AM)Polar Wrote: Love topics like these as well! Although I don't agree with the "multiverse" or "universal simulation" theories, I always wonder about the size of universal objects compared to Earth and how small, insignificant we and our planet are compared to the vast reaches of the dark realm.

Experts themselves aren't at agreement with each other!

But what fascinates me is how insignificant our belief is, vis-a-vis the actual fact. Before relativity happened the whole scientific community had a wrong concept. Maybe someday in future even it will be proved erroneous!

Many people even struggle to visualise time as a dimension... I have been laughed at (initially) when i said Earth's revolution in helical shaped on 4d graph!

Nowadays, i try not to have an opinion. What do i know?

BTW, this is good simplified explanation. Loved it!



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United States Polar Offline
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#48

@Rishi,

Yeah, time is a dimension we still don't really understand yet, but it is real. I do think some conspiracy theories are true regarding space (i.e., "NASA is hiding stuff" or "There is life on other planets"), but 90% of them fall flat on actual, concrete scientific proof.
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United States Polar Offline
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#49

Interesting article about the odd magnetic field of Ganymede and how the field shapes it's land anatomy...

Ganymede: Jupiter’s Biggest Moon Reveals Its Secrets For The First Time In 20 Years
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Rishi Offline
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(05-08-2018, 10:52 AM)Polar Wrote: @Rishi,

Yeah, time is a dimension we still don't really understand yet, but it is real. I do think some conspiracy theories are true regarding space (i.e., "NASA is hiding stuff" or "There is life on other planets"), but 90% of them fall flat on actual, concrete scientific proof.

This should help.




Just imagine how the sun is moving through space as time passes.  Happy
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Matias Offline
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#51
( This post was last modified: 05-09-2018, 03:28 AM by Matias )

@sanjay 

I already knew this video. It is simply sensational ..... a trip in every way. A message for all to develop humility. Humility of attitude, of thought and of knowledge. There are also no words to describe the melody of Mr. Evangelos Odysseas Papathanassiou.
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Rishi Offline
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#52
( This post was last modified: 05-15-2018, 08:02 AM by Rishi )


*This image is copyright of its original author


If light can travel freely through space, why isn't the Earth perfectly lit all the time? Where does all the light from all the stars get lost?


*This image is copyright of its original author

Lee Mosley, Author: The Structure of Space (Amazon)

Congratulations! You've discovered Olber’s Paradox
Some time ago, scientists believed that the Universe might be infinite in extent and infinitely old. If that were so, they — Olber among them — reasoned that looking out into the night sky, we should see so many hundreds of billions of stars and more stars between them and more between them that all we would see is infinite starlight; a brightly-lit sky in every direction.The paradox is that we did not see such a thing when we believed we should.

Now, we have an answer. Actually, several answers…
First, the universe is not infinitely old; it’s only thirteen and a half billion years old, so it hasn't had enough time to make enough stars, though there certainly are plenty of them.

Second, the universe is not infinite; the universe (for us) extends to a visual limit. We just can’t observe anything past that visual horizon, so the number of stars we see (including all frequencies of radiation) is limited.

Third, there is a goodly amount of gas and dust throughout the universe, dimming starlight which passes through it.

Fourth, starlight grows dimmer as a natural function of distance. Very distant stars are not visible to the eye and are a challenge to register even on the most sensitive of instruments.

Fifth, as we look into the distance, we are also peering into the deep past; into a younger universe that had even less time to make stars.

Finally, starlight grows “old.” It dulls into the deep red end of the spectrum, becoming feeble and weaker in energy.
So, maybe no paradox after all.
But you’re in good company with Olber and with lots of other scientists who wondered exactly the same thing
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United States Polar Offline
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#53

Proxima Centauri b: The Habitability Question

This is a pretty recent and interesting article about our nearest possible Earth-like planet, Proxima Centauri b in the Proxima Centauri star system. Its water composition could be up to 30% (!!!) compared to Earth's 1% of its total mass, so this Proxima Centauri b should definitely have plenty of water deep under its surface as well. However, the problems are the flares emitted from the sun (it's much closer to its sun than we are), which could possibly tear/have torn up any atmosphere which it once had or that it still continues to have.
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Virgin Islands, U.S. Rage2277 Offline
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#54

wespenre.com alot of reading in this one..very intriguing
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Virgin Islands, U.S. Rage2277 Offline
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#55

ages of uras by anton parks is another interesting one
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Canada Wolverine Away
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#56
Wink  ( This post was last modified: 10-05-2018, 12:38 PM by Wolverine )

@Rishi wrote:


"Maya actually can be best described as "unreal", not illusion, which can be misinterpreted as hallucination. (Language barrier, can't explain better)

Like you don't know while dreaming that everything around you is not real, only when you wake up do you realise. Similarly everything around you now is not real, in the "time before time" the universe was nothing & that's were it'll go back one the hourglass is drained. Think of the internet... one solar flare & everything we think exists could go *poof*
Every action one makes is for naught, like a stone in a river, it may cause a turbulence & the water finally flows again as if the stone never existed."


Probably you know the funny story with professor George Berkeley and his friend prof X.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_Berkeley

Irish philosopher George Berkeley had a theory similar to ideas of Vedanta and insisted that external world around us is unreal, it's exist only in our mind and is created by our mind, so if our senses bring wrong information to the brain there is no way to prove the existence of the material world. Prof Berkeley often liked to discuss and argue on the topic with his friend prof X in the Trinity college. One day after similar fierce discussion both men got out of the building of university. Outside was raining really strong. Than George Berkeley opened his umbrella to hide from the pouring rain. Suddenly prof X asked him laughing: 

- Prof Berkeley, why did you open your umbrella if the rain does not exist according your theory?

Berkeley in first moment got confused of such a question but then answered firmly:
- You see my friend - the rain for sure does not "exist" only "wets"...  Ha Ha 


The philosophy of Ancient India is so sophisticated than only few people in the world understand it same as theory of relativity of Einstein physicists say is understand properly only by 50-100 scientists. Its probably the highest point the human speculation has ever reached.
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Rishi Offline
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#57
( This post was last modified: 10-05-2018, 01:49 PM by Rishi )

(10-05-2018, 12:37 PM)Wolverine Wrote: Berkeley in first moment got confused of such a question but then answered firmly:
- You see my friend - the rain for sure does not "exist" only "wets"...  Ha Ha 

That's not a good reply. Actually the primary school of thought that opposed this concept, used to argue that the laws of cause & effect wouldn't apply for Maya. You can't kill yourself by jumping of a cliff in your dream or hallucination, but "real" rain wets.

Counter-argument is, that's the only form of "dream" humans witness, where the laws don't apply.  
Some being might have dream where they do hold true... or are different. In that case, the rain in your dream too would wet you (or might burn you), but it'd still be a vision in a sleeping man's head. 
Like the dreams in inception... 

That reminds me, watch the 2018 movie "Ghost Stories". That'll definitely help!

"Just as a born-blind man cannot imagine a rainbow, can we not comprehend a more real world as long as we are in an unreal one until the maya (dream) shatters."
-original quote translated something like this. Forgot source.
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Canada Wolverine Away
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#58
( This post was last modified: 10-07-2018, 08:24 AM by Wolverine )

(10-05-2018, 01:44 PM)Rishi Wrote: That's not a good reply. 

For sure is not good, that's why Berkeley was a subject of many jokes... Western civilization is materialistic by nature and Western people tend to trust 100% to their eyes and ears while Indian civilization is a spiritual and Indians were always tending to go beyond the visible things. 

Look at Taj Mahal - what we see - something almost unreal, kind of mirage or maya, a building who is going in any moment to "evaporate" in the air. Such a building is not possible to be created outside of India.


*This image is copyright of its original author


Conseption of "maya" is the soul of India. Recently I red a historian Valdemar Hansen's book "The peacock throne'", he says: "Whatever it is, it seems native to India: an enigma embracing its own history yet curiosly impervious to any moment in time. The Taj suggests an endurance beyond now and then, beyond tideless Jamuna river that seeps as its foundations. Now and then are maya - illusion, a freakish pattern of impermanence. Three hundred and more years of history can be palimpsested with the transparency of layers of cellophane, and may well be an Indian illusion."

So, in what way should go India now in 21 century, could she become a new China? Indians were always been very good in dealing with things who are invisible and cant be touched with hand - philosophy, mathematics etc  and were always very weak with dealing with everytning which can be touched by hand. Could modern India can start produce gigantic quantities of material goods as China - refrigerators, radios, cars and become an industrial super power as China - I don't think that it could hapenn in full degree. India should follow her own way - become a economic superpower in producing not goods, but services who cant be touched by hand - IT technology, softwear, film industry and others - hence to become an post-industrial age economy of information. Do not try to became as the West or China.
Indian film industry should also try to became competitive in the world markets and probably later in this century Bollywood to become equal to Holywood, but that needs a lot of reforms and ambition.
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Croatia FritzRaw Offline
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#59

I wouldn't generalize like that, Wolverine. There is plenty of spirituality in the west, as well as materialistic people in India. I wish it was the way you're describing it, but I just don't think it's that simple.
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Turkey Arctotherium Offline
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(09-18-2014, 01:36 AM)Pckts Wrote: Largest known Stars
Stars are the center to planets, their gravitational pull is what forces planets to orbit, the radiation they admit  is also what keeps or allows planets to bare life. If a planet has a OZ layer strong enough to resist the stars planets it allows life to form. At least in the case of earth, life doesn't necessarily need a star to survive though, really the only thing that life needs is water, or at least we think. Proof of this is on our very own planet, deep sea creatures that never see the sun are as abundant as creatures who survive from it.
If you want to feel small, look up into the sky. Stare at the brightest light at night, those are stars and sometimes one of the few planets we can see from earth. Each one of those stars could be as large as the sun or 100s or 1000s of times larger. They have planets just look ours, moons, solar winds and gasses and their own gravitational pull that comes from them. Some of them could already have turned in to supernovas and exploded and the light has just not hit us yet. You look up and you are literally looking into the past, this light is "lightyears" away and we wont live long enough in our lifetime to see them implode unless the exact right time frame occurs.

Here is a list of the 10 largest stars known to manStars are immense balls of burning plasma that are held together by their own gravity. The star that we are most familiar with is our Sun. However, compared to many of the other stars in the Universe our central stars is, well, kinda puny.
Below is a list of the 10 largest (by diameter) stars known to exist in the Universe.A few caveats: First, this is only known stars, there could be larger ones out there. Second, some of these stars are variable, meaning that they regularly expand and shrink. And lastly, there is, like virtually all astronomy measurements, an inherent bit of error. But it should be fairly close.

*This image is copyright of its original author
Tim Brown/ The Image Bank/ Getty Images 1. VY Canis MajorisThis red hypergiant star is by far the largest known. It has an estimated radius between 1800 and 2100 times the radius of our Sun. With this size it would reach nearly to the orbit of Saturn if placed in our solar system. The star is located roughly 4,900 light-years from Earth in the constellation Canis Majoris.
AdsHome Solar Systemsunrun.comGo Solar For $0 Down With Sunrun. Free Install Upkeep & Maintenance.Solar Systemhorizonsolarpower.com/SaveNowAre You Overpaying For Electricity? Reduce Electric Bill & Save Now!2. VV Cephei ALocated in the constellation Cepheus, about 2,400 light-years from Earth, this red hypergiant star is estimated to be between 1,600 and 1,900 times the radius of the Sun.3. Mu CepheiAlso located in the constellation Cepheus, this red supergiant is about 1650 times the radius of our Sun. It is also one of the most luminous stars in the Milky Way galaxy, at more than 38,000 times the Sun's luminosity.AdsLockout Tagout Softwarewww.nisoft.comeclipse, for your Lockout, Tagout and Safety Permit Software needs.Top 10 Best Cloud Storagethetop10bestonlinebackup.comCloud Storage Providers Reviewed. Read Our in Depth Reviews!4. V838 MonocerotisThis red variable star located in the constellation Monoceros, is about 20,000 light-years from Earth. It may be larger than either Mu Cephei or VV Cephei A, but because of its distance form the Sun its actual size is difficult to determine. Therefore a range is typically given of between 1170 and 1970 solar radii. 5. WOH G64Once thought to rival Canis Majoris this red hypergiant located in the constellation Dorado has recently been determined to be about 1,540 times the radius of the Sun. It is actually located outside of the Milky Way Galaxy in the Large Magellanic Cloud, another nearby galaxy.AdsConsumer Reports Websitewww.consumerreports.orgFind the Top & Worst Rated Products Unbiased Tests, Ratings & Reviews6. V354 CepheiSlightly smaller than WOH G64, this red hypergiant is 1520 solar radii. At a relatively close 9,000 light-years from Earth, V354 Cephei is located in the constellation Cepheus.7. KY CygniKY Cygni is at least 1420 times the radius of the Sun, but some estimates would have it topping this list at a whopping 2,850 solar radii. However, the actual value is thought to lie closer to the lower bound, bringing it down to number 7 on our list. It is located about 5,000 light-years from Earth in the constellation Cygnus.8. KW SagittariiRepresenting the constellation Sagittarius, this red supergiant is no slouch at 1460 times the radius of our Sun. 9. RW CepheiOur third entry from the Constellation Cepheus, this star may not seem all that large in its own neighborhood, but there aren't many others in our galaxy or nearby that can rival it. This red supergiant's radius is not well agreed upon, being placed somewhere between 1260 and 1650 solar radii.10. BetelgeuseOur final entry, and the last star known to have a radius in excess of 1000 times that of our Sun, Betelgeuse is probably the most well known of the red supergiants. This is partially due to the fact that at roughly 640 light-years form Earth, it is very close compared to the other stars on this list. Also, it lies in perhaps the most famous of all the constellations, Orion. This 1,180 solar radii star is expected to go supernova any time, which would usher in an unprecidenced opportunity to witness such an event so closely. More »
http://space.about.com/od/stars/tp/The-T...-Stars.htm

 

*This image is copyright of its original author



Roberta Humpreys thinks Vy Canis Majoris up to 2100 solar radii.
I don't say Uy Scuti is largest star.Because Uy Scuti don't have a catalog.
First,Vy Canis Majoris upped to 2200-4000 solar radii(If this true,Quasi-Star or other Hypothetical stars don't like huge)
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