Created 20 years ago2004-07-04 20:04:52 UTC by BrattyLord
Hey, I remember doing that!for me, last year, grade 11 maths C.......im surprised i remember it
Elon: Thats not time travel, thats just being slightly accelerated in time like some astronaughts experiance, there is a big difference.Thats the only way to travel through time though, and whats the diffrence, you'll end up in the future! Well at list modern pshycis tell thats the only way...
0.999999999.... = 1 because of the proof above.Uh, he said the same thing, actually, really.
not anything else
the odds are that there is at least ONE other planet which can support lifePart of the drake equation predicts that chance is small.
I just love numbers, remember this SOCATOA for Pythagoras theorem?Maybe you don't. SOH CAH TOA, perhaps?
Our galaxy don't have any other planets that support life. I heard that every solar system was checked and it was found out there was not one star that is cappable to have life in it.How could we possebly know?
Maybe Seventh would remember "Pairwise Orhagonal Vectors"Nope, never heard of them.
and what is relative to Euclidion Geometry ?
Since the universe is infinite, it would be impossible for it to have a center.Well, according to einstein, the universe is infinite, but still, it isn't.
reminds me of black holes again... black hole's gravity is so strong that light bends when passing anywhere near its center of mass.Yeah, that is really interesting.
I'm having trouble understanding einstein's theory. You can't compare the universe to earth. Earth is one big rock that holds you on it as you walk around. The universe is just space. If you were randomly placed in any spot in the known universe, the odds are high that you would be so far away from anything, that all you would see around you is blackness. You can compare yourself moving in space to a galaxy moving in space. Are you saying that every galaxy in the universe is eventually going to travel back to where it used to be?Not what I ment exacly.
Black holes don't suck in all light, Just the stuff closest to it. If you looked right at a black hole in space, and were just close enough to resist it's gravity, you would see stars on the other side of the black hole in a "bubble" around the center of the invisible mass. The gravity bends most of the light, and only sucks in the closest light.No, not all light, sorry if you missunderstood me.
Anyway i lent it to my friend but when i get it back, i can quote some things from the book for you guys. It explains a lot about mostly everything.?That would be cool.
It's hard to describeIt is, isn't it, ^^
The universe is not just very hard to understand, It is TOO hard to understand for the human mindBut, I'll try to see if I've understood.
Just my opinion.There are billions of stars in the galaxy.
I don't believe in that they have checked every solar-system in the galaxy since there are over a million stars in there.
Geez Elon... that post makes no sense at all.He's a pro at nonsence
If it doesn't get to our eyes then how do we see it.I believe there are ways of spotting black holes with radiation sensors or something similar, I watched a documentary about it not too long ago and the black hole would show up on the graph.
Will we be able to translate their language? (vica versa)oh yeah, we'll frag them real good...
Will they be hostile?
Will WE be hostile?
So Elon does that mean that we are seeing in the night sky is what happened millions of years ago, what do you think about this theoryIf we see suns that are a million light years away then yes. The north star is 400 light years away from us.
We can't see if there are any life in any other solarsystems, YET.No we can't, but we can estimate if there are life in there acording to the location of the planet, his orbit and the distence between it and that solar system's sun...ect