'Primordial' gas ring gives birth to baby galaxies
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mnemeth1
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'Primordial' gas ring gives birth to baby galaxies
More problems for the gravity gurus.
http://sites.google.com/site/cosmologyq ... y-galaxies
“In a cosmic case of delayed development, dwarf galaxies have been found growing in a ring of gas that seems to be left over from the early universe. Strangely, the new galaxies appear to lack dark matter, suggesting a fraction of the universe's first galaxies might have been born from gas alone.”
http://sites.google.com/site/cosmologyq ... y-galaxies
“In a cosmic case of delayed development, dwarf galaxies have been found growing in a ring of gas that seems to be left over from the early universe. Strangely, the new galaxies appear to lack dark matter, suggesting a fraction of the universe's first galaxies might have been born from gas alone.”
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earls
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Re: 'Primordial' gas ring gives birth to baby galaxies
I question what leads them to believe that the "gas" (lawl) is primordial besides the fact it is composed of only hydrogen and helium.
As we all know, after the big bang we were left with a finite set of building blocks and no more hydrogen/helium can be manufactured.
As we all know, after the big bang we were left with a finite set of building blocks and no more hydrogen/helium can be manufactured.
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Grey Cloud
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Re: 'Primordial' gas ring gives birth to baby galaxies
Hi mnemeth1,
Let me see if I've got this right. Big Bang theory was found to have holes in it, so they filled them with dark matter. Now dark Matter theory has holes in it too. So what are they going to fill these holes with? Darker Matter?
A few random sellections from the New Scientist article:
Let me see if I've got this right. Big Bang theory was found to have holes in it, so they filled them with dark matter. Now dark Matter theory has holes in it too. So what are they going to fill these holes with? Darker Matter?
A few random sellections from the New Scientist article:
But unlike other dwarf galaxies, which can boast 10,000 times more dark matter than ordinary matter, the Leo Ring dwarfs do not seem to contain much of the mysterious stuff.
"It's a kind of laboratory to study galaxy formation," comments Frederic Bournaud of the Commission for Atomic Energy in Saclay, France.
'I thought I saw a puddy cat' said Professor Tweet E. Pye of the Warner Brothers Institute.To clinch the case, the team is planning follow-up observations using the Great Canary Telescope...
300,00 lights years away is almost as far as these guys are from reality or common sense.It is not clear what is triggering the new star formation. The culprit could be gravitational tugs from a spiral galaxy that sits some 300,000 light years away from the star clusters.
If I have the least bit of knowledge
I will follow the great Way alone
and fear nothing but being sidetracked.
The great Way is simple
but people delight in complexity.
Tao Te Ching, 53.
I will follow the great Way alone
and fear nothing but being sidetracked.
The great Way is simple
but people delight in complexity.
Tao Te Ching, 53.
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seasmith
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Re: 'Primordial' gas ring gives birth to baby galaxies
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Earls wrote:
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Earls wrote:
Errngh ??As we all know, after the big bang we were left with a finite set of building blocks and no more hydrogen/helium can be manufactured.
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- StevenO
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- Joined: Tue Apr 01, 2008 11:08 pm
Re: 'Primordial' gas ring gives birth to baby galaxies
Nice thing is that the article refers to the Electric Universe as the solution to the enigma.
First, God decided he was lonely. Then it got out of hand. Now we have this mess called life...
The past is out of date. Start living your future. Align with your dreams. Now execute.
The past is out of date. Start living your future. Align with your dreams. Now execute.
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saturnine
- Guest
Re: 'Primordial' gas ring gives birth to baby galaxies
The actual article in New Scientist doesn't mention the EU.StevenO wrote:Nice thing is that the article refers to the Electric Universe as the solution to the enigma.
http://www.newscientist.com/article/dn1 ... axies.html
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