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squirt1 wrote:I think that may be 365 days x 3 yrs x 187,000(rounded off) PER SECOND !!!!!!!!!! to travel to its top . Want to feel small ?
The Sushi Hunter wrote:squirt1 wrote:I think that may be 365 days x 3 yrs x 187,000(rounded off) PER SECOND !!!!!!!!!! to travel to its top . Want to feel small ?
Well, you want to feel small....better yet, you want to realize something that will completely blow your mind? Think about this for a moment. When you look out into the night sky with a fairly decent telescope and can see M31 (Andromeda), what you see is a little tiny speck of white light, appears to be about the size of a grain of sand. However.....that little speck of white light is 220,000 light-years in diameter from one side to the other. Which means if you were actually at Andromeda and you were traveling the speed of light, it would take you 220,000 years to travel from one end to the other. And the kicker is you are able to see at one time each end of this galaxy. When you look at that little speck of white light, your looking right at 220,000 light years of distance. That is absolute amazing!
SteveForever wrote:The Sushi Hunter wrote:squirt1 wrote:I think that may be 365 days x 3 yrs x 187,000(rounded off) PER SECOND !!!!!!!!!! to travel to its top . Want to feel small ?
Well, you want to feel small....better yet, you want to realize something that will completely blow your mind? Think about this for a moment. When you look out into the night sky with a fairly decent telescope and can see M31 (Andromeda), what you see is a little tiny speck of white light, appears to be about the size of a grain of sand. However.....that little speck of white light is 220,000 light-years in diameter from one side to the other. Which means if you were actually at Andromeda and you were traveling the speed of light, it would take you 220,000 years to travel from one end to the other. And the kicker is you are able to see at one time each end of this galaxy. When you look at that little speck of white light, your looking right at 220,000 light years of distance. That is absolute amazing!
that is incredible...I would love to own a telescope..
Sarah wrote:Space IS just insanely large... here's another comparison picture, from Earth to the edge of the known universe... (click the link for the image, it's too big to post)
http://img706.imageshack.us/img706/3708/spacewy.jpg
And the intro from the movie Contact just blows my mind... the whole movie really underlines how small our little planet is in the scheme of things.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PLQF-4uyD4Y
LtVanish wrote:This stuff is really interesting and hard to put in perpective, it gives me a headache just thinking about how huge the Universe really is. Some scientist want to believe that there are numerous Universes now. Last year I was hearing about a Supernova that was like 7 billion light years away and we are just now seeing it, this means that star exploded over 7 billion years ago, before our planet or solar system even existed, and we are just now seeing the light from this.
squirt1 wrote:I think this will be on the Discovery channel. He states there are many types of life in the universe in the 100 billion galaxies. Any that could get here would be so far ahead of us that their motives could be resources or anything. He seems to be saying lay low & call no attention to this planet. Anyway, he has been a noted scientist the last 30 yrs and it is so hard that he has his severe physical disabilites while his brain(genius) is soooo intact. Now, last week Drudge had up a new Nebula that had a pillar that was 3 light years tall. It was taken by Hubble. I think that may be 365 days x 3 yrs x 187,000(rounded off) PER SECOND !!!!!!!!!! to travel to its top . Want to feel small ?
parfait wrote:LtVanish wrote:This stuff is really interesting and hard to put in perpective, it gives me a headache just thinking about how huge the Universe really is. Some scientist want to believe that there are numerous Universes now. Last year I was hearing about a Supernova that was like 7 billion light years away and we are just now seeing it, this means that star exploded over 7 billion years ago, before our planet or solar system even existed, and we are just now seeing the light from this.
You probably mean string theory. Check out anything starring Michio Kaku. It's pretty complex stuff, but extremely awesome. Our future is out there, not on earth.
parfait wrote:LtVanish wrote:This stuff is really interesting and hard to put in perpective, it gives me a headache just thinking about how huge the Universe really is. Some scientist want to believe that there are numerous Universes now. Last year I was hearing about a Supernova that was like 7 billion light years away and we are just now seeing it, this means that star exploded over 7 billion years ago, before our planet or solar system even existed, and we are just now seeing the light from this.
You probably mean string theory. Check out anything starring Michio Kaku. It's pretty complex stuff, but extremely awesome. Our future is out there, not on earth.
LtVanish wrote:This stuff is really interesting and hard to put in perpective, it gives me a headache just thinking about how huge the Universe really is. Some scientist want to believe that there are numerous Universes now. Last year I was hearing about a Supernova that was like 7 billion light years away and we are just now seeing it, this means that star exploded over 7 billion years ago, before our planet or solar system even existed, and we are just now seeing the light from this.
parfait wrote:LtVanish wrote:This stuff is really interesting and hard to put in perpective, it gives me a headache just thinking about how huge the Universe really is. Some scientist want to believe that there are numerous Universes now. Last year I was hearing about a Supernova that was like 7 billion light years away and we are just now seeing it, this means that star exploded over 7 billion years ago, before our planet or solar system even existed, and we are just now seeing the light from this.
You probably mean string theory. Check out anything starring Michio Kaku. It's pretty complex stuff, but extremely awesome. Our future is out there, not on earth.
The Sushi Hunter wrote:SteveForever wrote:The Sushi Hunter wrote:squirt1 wrote:I think that may be 365 days x 3 yrs x 187,000(rounded off) PER SECOND !!!!!!!!!! to travel to its top . Want to feel small ?
Well, you want to feel small....better yet, you want to realize something that will completely blow your mind? Think about this for a moment. When you look out into the night sky with a fairly decent telescope and can see M31 (Andromeda), what you see is a little tiny speck of white light, appears to be about the size of a grain of sand. However.....that little speck of white light is 220,000 light-years in diameter from one side to the other. Which means if you were actually at Andromeda and you were traveling the speed of light, it would take you 220,000 years to travel from one end to the other. And the kicker is you are able to see at one time each end of this galaxy. When you look at that little speck of white light, your looking right at 220,000 light years of distance. That is absolute amazing!
that is incredible...I would love to own a telescope..
It would have to be a huge telescope if you expect to see it like the picture I attached above. With the average telescope, it will be just a very tiny speck of light. With a 8" to 9" telescope it will be a few times bigger then a speck of light, but nothing more then that. And it will only be in black and white. When you see it in color, usually thats because they used some sort of filter system when the image was recorded. But yeah, when I was a teen, I'd spend hours out in the field during moonless nights looking at the stars with my telescope. Cooler winter months are the best, the air doesn't have a lot of activity when it's cooler compared to when it's warmer and that makes looking "through" earth's atmosphere more transparent. One of the most peaceful and relaxing ways I used to spend my time when I was a kid was looking at the stars with my telescope at night.
Thenightbull wrote:Well i hope when the aliens do get here it won't be like independence day.
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