Space in relative relation to Pi

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  • Spenner
    Forum User
    • Nov 2006
    • 2403

    #16
    Re: Space in relative relation to Pi

    Originally posted by GuidoHunter
    Even if you were arguing that somewhere down the line it might start repeating, I'm pretty sure that's still a mathematical impossibility.

    Possibilities of life, which is propably the most of anything that could be predicted (if anything) , are impossible to state 100% correct in various ways, such as the environment of the life form, or its place in the planetary spectrum (far from sun-close from sun), etc. Its really not a mathimatical impossibility, because somewhere there is a way that things can be proven the same in only a mathematical sense-- but even with this being not a mathematical impossibility it is still a impossible feat (judging by all that can impact the change of the properties of the life form/around the life form).

    (wow, I never expected this topic to get many replies and debates inside of it )
    Last edited by Spenner; 07-7-2007, 04:06 PM.

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    • 9_ki_kid
      FFR Player
      • Jun 2007
      • 43

      #17
      Re: Space in relative relation to Pi

      But even when the sun burns out, there will still be gravity, what if stuff starts orbiting around Jupiter?

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      • Spenner
        Forum User
        • Nov 2006
        • 2403

        #18
        Re: Space in relative relation to Pi

        or maybe from the supernova (or whatever shall occur with our sun) the earth may be sent out of orbit and possibly drift for millions of years until possibly reaching orbit of another solar system

        you never know

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        • 9_ki_kid
          FFR Player
          • Jun 2007
          • 43

          #19
          Re: Space in relative relation to Pi

          The matter doesn't get destroyed, it just breaks apart and changes form. But it will still have it's gravitational pull.

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          • Spenner
            Forum User
            • Nov 2006
            • 2403

            #20
            Re: Space in relative relation to Pi

            oh yeah, your right-- and theres also the possibility of a black hole.

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            • 9_ki_kid
              FFR Player
              • Jun 2007
              • 43

              #21
              Re: Space in relative relation to Pi

              Well it does do something after being a red giant. It turns into a black dwarf.

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              • Spenner
                Forum User
                • Nov 2006
                • 2403

                #22
                Re: Space in relative relation to Pi

                yeah, so indeed it wouldn't drift away, unless the black dwarf fell into a larger planet's orbit (or larger black dwarf)

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                • Sh4d0wRe4p3r666
                  FFR Player
                  • May 2007
                  • 1441

                  #23
                  Re: Space in relative relation to Pi

                  Originally posted by 9_ki_kid
                  But even when the sun burns out, there will still be gravity, what if stuff starts orbiting around Jupiter?
                  We need the sun to live. It's possible that when the sun dies, another sun will automatically develop to take its place. It's possible if it was forming during this time period.

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                  • 9_ki_kid
                    FFR Player
                    • Jun 2007
                    • 43

                    #24
                    Re: Space in relative relation to Pi

                    Just because we die it doesn't mean the end of the universe.

                    And anyways, what some bacteria evolves and survives.
                    Last edited by 9_ki_kid; 07-7-2007, 04:52 PM.

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                    • Calcium Deposit
                      I am the liquor
                      FFR Music Producer
                      • May 2007
                      • 706

                      #25
                      Re: Space in relative relation to Pi

                      Originally posted by Spenner
                      yeah, so indeed it wouldn't drift away, unless the black dwarf fell into a larger planet's orbit (or larger black dwarf)
                      Why would a black dwarf enter into the orbit of a planet? No matter how large the planet is, the black dwarf still has almost all of mass it did as a star. Things would simply proceed as they normally would, minus the nuclear reaction.


                      Well it does do something after being a red giant. It turns into a black dwarf
                      Wrong, it turns into a white dwarf star, black dwarf stars are theoretically what white dwarf stars turn into, once they cool down.

                      By the way, the sun isn't even close to being big enough to form a black hole.

                      Originally posted by Sh4d0wRe4p3r666
                      We need the sun to live. It's possible that when the sun dies, another sun will automatically develop to take its place. It's possible if it was forming during this time period.
                      Did you fail astronomy? The only thing correct with that is the statement "we need the sun to live". Then again, you do seem to have the reputation of postwhoring, so I probably shouldn't take anything you post seriously.

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                      • jewpinthethird
                        (The Fat's Sabobah)
                        FFR Music Producer
                        • Nov 2002
                        • 11711

                        #26
                        Re: Space in relative relation to Pi

                        I don't even know what you guys are talking about anymore. Nonetheless, this isn't CT material.

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