Forgot about the parliament stuff going on
Hoping getting to our flat is not going to be some kind of adventure with all
the road closures.
Date: Thu, 11 Feb 2016 15:46:59 +0200
Subject: Re: SAFGC - 2016, the fall of the ilitirits
From: nicmuir@xxxxxxxxx
To: cpt-fgc@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Lol.
Yoda was on to this shit ages ago.
On 11 Feb 2016 15:37, "Ilitirit Sama" <ilitirit@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Lol. I actually screen capped that and posted it on Facebook
On Thu, Feb 11, 2016 at 3:34 PM, Nicholas Robertson-Muir <nicmuir@xxxxxxxxx>
wrote:
LB logic - oxymoron
On 11 Feb 2016 15:26, "lindsey kiviets" <lindseyak@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
so nobody has actually seen a black hole before because if they did there eyes
would pop out and would be sucked in automatically?
From: cpt-fgc-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx <cpt-fgc-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> on behalf of
Ilitirit Sama <ilitirit@xxxxxxxxx>
Sent: 11 February 2016 01:23 PM
To: cpt-fgc@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: Re: SAFGC - 2016, the fall of the ilitirits
If it has gravity it's bending spacetime. That's pretty much everything on a
macro scale. The Earth, Sun, Moon, you, me, your toothbrush. The only
difference is by how much it bends it.
And no time would not "stand still" if the sun didn't exist. It would just
mean Eskom would need more money than previously thought.
On Thu, Feb 11, 2016 at 3:17 PM, lindsey kiviets
<lindseyak@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
the sun is bending space too?
so if the sun didn't exist time would stand still?
From:
cpt-fgc-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx <cpt-fgc-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> on behalf of
Ilitirit Sama <ilitirit@xxxxxxxxx>
Sent: 11 February 2016 01:14 PM
To: cpt-fgc@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: Re: SAFGC - 2016, the fall of the ilitirits
That's a model of how gravity works. The more massive the object, the more it
bends spacetime. Our Earth is bending spacetime just by existing.
If it gets so massive that it not only bends light towards it but actually
sucks it in, it's called a black hole.
On Thu, Feb 11, 2016 at 3:11 PM, lindsey kiviets
<lindseyak@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
so something so heavy can exist that it bends space and time will draw
everything into it?
From:
cpt-fgc-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx <cpt-fgc-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> on behalf of
Ilitirit Sama <ilitirit@xxxxxxxxx>
Sent: 11 February 2016 12:59 PM
To: cpt-fgc@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: Re: SAFGC - 2016, the fall of the ilitirits
Lol.
You know how light is a wave? Well, light is a form of electromagnetic
radiation, and all forms of electromagnetic radiation are waves. Heat waves,
radiowaves, X-Rays etc. All the same as light.
But noone could prove that gravity was the same. It should exist in theory,
but noone has ever been able to detect gravity waves. We know that gravity
exists, but does it have an associate wave? It seems like they managed to do
just that.
As for black holes... imagine large trampoline. It's flat, right? Now put a
heavy object in the middle. What happens? It sinks in and the trampoline
surfaces warps downwards.. If you put a marble on the edge of the trampoline,
it rolls towards towards
the object. The heavier the object, the more the trampoline curves in, and
the fast the marble rolls towards it.
The trampoline is space-time. The heavy object in the middle is an object
(like a planet) that warps spacetime and causes gravity (this is what causes
the marble to roll towards it). A black hole is what happens when you put an
object so heavy on the trampone
that middle sinks down to a level we cannot determine. Maybe it breaks, maybe
it stretches infinitely. We don't know.
On Thu, Feb 11, 2016 at 2:35 PM, lindsey kiviets
<lindseyak@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
so they found proof of a black hole?
eish man , black holes are inescapable. GG
I wonder if you can go through time if you go into one?