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Dec 23 2008 04:16am
Quote (Potassium_LLD @ Sat, Dec 13 2008, 06:30am)
how many planets did it create?


none, the anti-particle was still inside the female.
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Dec 23 2008 10:26am
Quote (Tonstorung @ Thu, Dec 11 2008, 09:52pm)
There was nothing... AND SUDDENLY IT EXPLODED

Lol.


/thread imo
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Dec 23 2008 11:21am
Quote (Lampee @ Wed, Dec 10 2008, 07:18pm)
'the' big bang cannot be recreated. CERN scientist are trying to create similar circumstances like in the first 'seconds' (parts of seconds wink.gif) of our universe. regarding the theory of relativity its quite even hard to define how long a second was. sorry for the bad english but im missing the specific vocabulary^^. however, time and space were defined with 'the' big bang, it cannot happen a second time in the existing space of this universe (at least i think so tongue.gif)


Just because it hasn't been successful doesn't mean it can't be recreated.
And what would happen if they succeeded?
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Dec 24 2008 03:18am
Quote (njaguar @ Wed, Dec 10 2008, 10:23am)
One thing that always intrigued me was the thought of super black holes. Collapsed stars that become so massive that they become black holes (even light cannot escape their pull of gravity), and eventually these get larger and larger as they suck up more and more matter around them, eventually whole solar systems and galaxies.. Perhaps it is one of these that sparks an explosion that is similar to the "Big Bang", but maybe on an individual scale (unless the black hole becomes large enough to suck in the whole universe, and the point of "explosion" just happens to exactly be the size OF the universe's matter combined...)

ohmy.gif


The black holes will eventually die out once they have consumed everything a certain number of miles around them. Unless one happens close to our galaxy, which it most likely won't, there is no point in worrying about them. Although, there always will be the slight chance of a black hole or supernova completely wiping us out and destroying our solar system any second.
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Dec 24 2008 03:20am
Quote (RapDawg @ Wed, Dec 24 2008, 01:18am)
The black holes will eventually die out once they have consumed everything a certain number of miles around them. Unless one happens close to our galaxy, which it most likely won't, there is no point in worrying about them. Although, there always will be the slight chance of a black hole or supernova completely wiping us out and destroying our solar system any second.


our star isnt expected to die for quite some time. it has plenty of fuel to prevent its implosion
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Dec 24 2008 03:21am
Quote (Kamikizzle @ Wed, Dec 24 2008, 12:20am)
our star isnt expected to die for quite some time. it has plenty of fuel to prevent its implosion


Indeed, but the future could have many things instore for us, we could easily succumb to a supernova or a meteor.
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Dec 24 2008 03:23am
Quote (RapDawg @ Wed, Dec 24 2008, 01:21am)
Indeed, but the future could have many things instore for us, we could easily succumb to a supernova or a meteor.


a supernova?
thats a star blowing up. i dont think a star blowing up near us (which is still pretty damn far away) will do anything. and if a meteor comes will just have bruce willis and ben afleck land on it and blow it up with a nuke.
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Dec 24 2008 03:27am
Quote (Kamikizzle @ Wed, Dec 24 2008, 12:23am)
a supernova?
thats a star blowing up. i dont think a star blowing up near us (which is still pretty damn far away) will do anything. and if a meteor comes will just have bruce willis and ben afleck land on it and blow it up with a nuke.


A supernova could theoretically alter it's sorroundings in such a way that they could affect our galaxy, but enough on that, the main excitment seems to lie in black holes.

A blackhole could open up inside our galaxy and consume us all.
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Dec 24 2008 05:34am
Quote (RapDawg @ Wed, Dec 24 2008, 09:27am)
A supernova could theoretically alter it's sorroundings in such a way that they could affect our galaxy, but enough on that, the main excitment seems to lie in black holes.

A blackhole could open up inside our galaxy and consume us all.


Well theres already a super massive black hole at the center of our galaxy...its not recent at all either.
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Dec 24 2008 09:12am
No matter how many times you reiterate it, religous fundementalists never understand that 'How can something come from nothing?' is a total non-sequiter. To them it's the most profound thing in the world; common sense, because they don't have any knowledge on the matter at hand. Rather painfully, blindingly ignorant. It's a facinating topic nonetheless smile.gif
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