Recent content by Swimfit
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Graduate Does Dark Energy follow the same rule as energy?
I just wanted to clarify I meant to say seems to to growing stronger but not growing in the total percentage of it to everything else in the universe- Swimfit
- Post #6
- Forum: Astronomy and Astrophysics
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Graduate Does Dark Energy follow the same rule as energy?
Thanks so much for your answer! Dark energy is a mysterious thing. From what I've read it seems to be growing stronger too.- Swimfit
- Post #5
- Forum: Astronomy and Astrophysics
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Graduate Does Dark Energy follow the same rule as energy?
Thanks for your answer- Swimfit
- Post #3
- Forum: Astronomy and Astrophysics
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Graduate Does Dark Energy follow the same rule as energy?
Ok this may be another stupid Question that I always seem to ask! Does Dark Energy follow the same rule as energy? E=MC^2 or E=MC2?- Swimfit
- Thread
- Dark energy Energy
- Replies: 21
- Forum: Astronomy and Astrophysics
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Graduate Standing in nothingness before the Big Bang
So is there gravity without mass? Or does the mass create the gravity? -
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Graduate Standing in nothingness before the Big Bang
So your saying that at the Big Bang gravity would move as fast as the light? And that gravity would only be felt or sensed first in the fabric of space time? Now the sun thing would the sun stay there without the fabric of space time or continue to move? -
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Graduate Standing in nothingness before the Big Bang
Marcus thanks so much for your post it was very informative! Instead of all the critical comments made by others. All I was trying to do was find out in what order things might be felt. Gravity, light and the explosion. I really didn't mean that I could actually stand in nothingness or what ever... -
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Graduate Standing in nothingness before the Big Bang
Jeeze flatland! You did not see the post I wrote just above this one to Jackmell! You might even try 1 that wrote just before that one! -
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Graduate Standing in nothingness before the Big Bang
No worries Jackmell : you were not the only one, so I thought I would make it clear I understood the error of my ways. And thanks for the reply it was interesting read about the phase- transitions. Others hinted at the too. Anything that anyone reply's is always interesting! If I could swim... -
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Graduate Standing in nothingness before the Big Bang
I am so sorry I wrote the question badly! I hope everyone can get over it! Let me state I know that I can not stand in nothingness! I just posted it that way so I could witness the Big Bang and how I would feel the effects of the the Big Bang as far as Gravity, light, and force and in what... -
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Graduate Standing in nothingness before the Big Bang
Chalnoth Thanks for the reply I didn't even consider an anti- particle if it had been put that way I would have thought they might have balanced themselves out. But I guess what made on one side is also made on the other. And I didn't know there couldn't be pure energy! I thought that was the... -
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Graduate Standing in nothingness before the Big Bang
Question: in the above note to me it say's annihilation operators reduce the # of particles. Then the next quote is matter is born or dies. Now the annihilation operators do they completely destroy the particle or cause it to change form or change form like becoming pure energy. So since we are... -
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Graduate Standing in nothingness before the Big Bang
Thanks Naty1 for your response! It was very deep I will need to reread several times to get it to sink in. I found it very interesting though! I was a little busy at work to be able to ponder on it. I've been listening the fabric of the Cosmos are there any other good books that are on audio... -
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Graduate Standing in nothingness before the Big Bang
So the first black hole is really just a shadow of the emerging new universe? Or the new universe is emerging from the black hole, which was the singlularty? If I'm understanding you right the first one is the right one. Kool god I love all this stuff! The universe is so amazing! -
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Graduate Standing in nothingness before the Big Bang
As far as I understood it that gravity is noticed immediately because of the fabric of space I think, and light must travel, so you would notice the water first then the moon blinking out. This is just what I read but I could be wrong. It is just the way I understood it. I'm not a physicist.