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Science Forum Index » Physics Forum » Solar System Compression Unit...
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| Noke... |
Posted: Sat Jun 28, 2008 5:00 pm |
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Guest
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Hi,
Say you will compress the entire solar system into the size of
atom (mini big crunch), what is the unit where the energy would
be compressed into a dot called?
Is there no minimum diameter for a given energy?
I just want to imagine how something planck size can
give rise to a universe with over 100 billion galaxies. |
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| Spaceman... |
Posted: Sat Jun 28, 2008 10:11 pm |
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Guest
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Noke wrote:
Quote: Hi,
Say you will compress the entire solar system into the size of
atom (mini big crunch), what is the unit where the energy would
be compressed into a dot called?
Is there no minimum diameter for a given energy?
I just want to imagine how something planck size can
give rise to a universe with over 100 billion galaxies.
It can't,
The big bang is a bunch of crap.
So far not one person has even been able to get 2 atoms
to take up the same amount of space, nevermind
a billion billion billion etc.. stars and planets.
The beginning we term the "big bang" was more than likely
a big crash.
Matter we see already was basically 2 or more objects
(massive black holes much bigger than anything we know of today)
that crashed at a slight angled impact to create the spin
of everything we see today.
The Big Crash of stuff that was already here
is what is should be known as.
Remember that little silly fact from long ago,
"You can neither create nor destroy matter"?
That makes the big bang theory pretty silly huh?
:)
--
James M Driscoll Jr
Spaceman |
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