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What happens to matter that isn't vibrating?
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What happens to matter that isn't vibrating?
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What happens to matter that isn't vibrating?
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Reply #60 on:
23/05/2010 09:28:53 »
The big problem with cold fusion as a solution to the energy crisis is that it simply doesn't work.
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UndergroundRisingUnited
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What happens to matter that isn't vibrating?
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Reply #61 on:
23/05/2010 21:26:06 »
The point you speak of is Critical Mass of the sun? It already has passed, ignition has been completed, the chain of events will continue until the fuel is gone. Fuel is its mass, what happens to the gravitational magnitude during the event of losing mass? What other events occur, simultaneously resulting in, other, several other events.
The sun has been used as an example, you are right. However imagine if the sun had more mass, the engine that drives the sun is the force of gravity compressing the lighter elements into fusing into heavier elements. During this process a great deal of energy is released and the immense gravity is all that keeps the star from blowing itself apart.
So hypothetically if there was more mass there would be more gravity, could there be such a large mass that its own gravity compresses everything past the states of matter we know into super dense matter with incredibly low KE, yet incredibly high density.
Could this super dense state of matter be what the singularity is?
“infinity = zero”....the 1+1=1 equation leaves infinity = to one.
For example, from hydrogen comes every other element.
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UndergroundRisingUnited
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What happens to matter that isn't vibrating?
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Reply #62 on:
24/05/2010 19:49:27 »
yup infinity will never = 0
"I'm not sure these equations do either, since there isn't a scientifically demonstrated relationship between this density you're talking about and energy."
?
The c in that equation is the speed of light. The proper form of that equation is
E2=mc2-p2c2,
where p is the momentum of the matter.
the equations been modified alot. the relation to energy and density is easy to see.
how hard you throw vs. what you throw.
c= the constant speed of light, the faster you throw something the more energy it has.
c= matter condensed, the mass of what you throw determines its energy.
what has more energy moving at light speed a diamond or a cotton ball.(why?)
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