However, if we find radio - quiet quasars which are lensed
by galaxies in front of them, we can use the increased brightness to be able to study them with today's radio telescopes.»
Not exact matches
If you multiply that
by the estimated number of
galaxies in the observable universe (10 trillion is a modest guess) you get a number that is 1 with 24 zeroes after it: 1 septillion.
By mapping out the location, brightness, and details of the stars
in our
galaxy, Gaia helps us understand where and how our solar system fits into the greater whole.
Discussing the complacency and complicity of traditional economic models, as taught
in universities and adopted
by central banks, Michael and Steve take us on a journey from a solar system to a
galaxy of thought, taking
in the history of economics to solutions for the ongoing global depression.
A newly released image from NASA Hubble telescope reveals that a huge cluster of
galaxies called Abell 370, has an array of
galaxies guarding it and is useful
in studying far - flung
galaxies by its gravitational lensing property.
We can see this
by looking into space at the 100s of billions of
galaxies which allow us to see back
in time.
What i mean
by this is that if u read the creation story
in the bible, there is no mention that god created the solar system with the sun
in the center, with the other planets, with us
in the milky way
galaxy, and all the other billions of
galaxies.
«Things» were «moving»
in this early stage of the universe, and this motion
by different «objects» produced angluar motion
in different directions, causing the first stars and
galaxies to rotate
in different directions.
Everything single
galaxy, star (sun) and planet,
in the universe have been formed
by gravity over billions of years, NO god needed.
This «hole
in space» is a 300 million light year gap
in the distribution of
galaxies, has taken cosmologists
by surprise, not because it exists, but because it is so big.
It would be otiose to give examples: a distant thunder is
in the past as much as a distant star; but no matter how far
in time - space a star or
galaxy is, it is always faintly immanent
in my Here - Now even when its action is below the threshold of human perception; its action can be made visible
by a combination of lenses or a prolonged photographic exposure.
You'll almost certainly dodge that question
by claiming he has always existed, so if that's the case, what suddenly prompted God to create a universe filled with over 100 billion
galaxies containing a trillion trillion stars after spending an eternity extending into the past existing alone
in an absolute void of nothingness?
@Vic: For the sake of argument, let's suppose the universe was created
by an all powerful being who had existed for an eternity extending into the past
in emptiness of the nothingness that was before he got bored and created the universe with its 170 billion or more
galaxies and trillion trillion stars.
It is virtually impossible that all the physical laws would just happen to be tightly constrained
by chance
in order for stars and
galaxies to exist.
In addition, if the ratio of the electromagnetic force constant to the gravitational constant were greater by more than 1 part in 10 to the 40th power, then electromagnetism would dominate gravity, preventing the formation of stars and galaxie
In addition, if the ratio of the electromagnetic force constant to the gravitational constant were greater
by more than 1 part
in 10 to the 40th power, then electromagnetism would dominate gravity, preventing the formation of stars and galaxie
in 10 to the 40th power, then electromagnetism would dominate gravity, preventing the formation of stars and
galaxies.
In addition, if the ratio of the electromagnetic force constant to the gravitational constant were greater by more than 1 part in 1040, then electromagnetism would dominate gravity, preventing the formation of stars and galaxie
In addition, if the ratio of the electromagnetic force constant to the gravitational constant were greater
by more than 1 part
in 1040, then electromagnetism would dominate gravity, preventing the formation of stars and galaxie
in 1040, then electromagnetism would dominate gravity, preventing the formation of stars and
galaxies.
If any of those constants was off
by even one part
in a million, or
in some cases,
by one part
in a million million, the universe could not have been able to coalesce, there would have been no
galaxy, stars, planets or people.»
Topher, the universe and everything
in it was created
by a pink leprechaun with yellow polkadots that lives
in the Andromeda
galaxy.
And now, out of that
galaxy of institutions founded
by believers so that faith could house and nurture learning, there are few — very few — that
in any effective and outright way are confessional.
However, with a more realistic model
in which the mass is smeared throughout the
galaxy, Whitehead's prediction is altered
by a factor of 100, greatly diminishing the divergence between his prediction and Will's experimental limit.
Yet the collisions or near misses dictated
by these theories are inherently very improbable, perhaps only ten for the entire life of our
galaxy during the past five billion years.32 With so few planets
in existence, we could hardly assume that there would be much life elsewhere, at least not
in our
galaxy.
Recently, an attempt has been made to tackle quantum gravity
in the first moments after the Big Bang [cf New Scientist (online): «
Galaxies could give a glimpse of the instant time began», 31 October 2012
by Stephen Battersby].
If what you interpret Paul as saying is that before creating all the myriad
galaxies and star systems God decided that They would put some humans on the third planet from an insignificant star on a little arm of a middling
galaxy and that the first hominids chosen role would be to perform pretty much to spec and do something silly and rebellious (arguably without sufficient information as to consequences for themselves and their off spring, oh, and for serpents) and cause affront to the tripartite godhead warranting separation of Gods grace from all their offspring; then we are left with people being chosen from way back before the Big Bang to do some terrible things like killing babies or betraying Jesus who was chosen on the same non date (time didn't exist before creation) to die
in a fairly nasty fashion and thereby appease the righteous wrath of himself and his fellow Trinitarians
by paying a penalty as a substitute for all future sins (of believers?)
I was off on the max size of the largest black hole
by just a wee bit:) the supermassive black hole
in galaxy NGC 1277 from space.com
One insignificant planet orbiting one insignificant star out of billions,
in one insignificant
galaxy out of billions of other
galaxies, and we are somehow the sole focus of a greater being that
by all accounts has not had any provable direct communication with mankind, ever?
As I sit at the shot - at tree The rough wound opens and grows strange and deep Within the wood, till suddenly I see A
galaxy aswirl with flame, I do not sleep And yet I see a trillion stars speed light
In ever - singing dance within the hole Surrounded
by the tree.
We accomplished this
by commencing with purposive and conscious actions of humans (e.g.,
in the construction of a building structure), which required the sustenance of other entities (plants, animals, planets,
galaxies, etc.) within the spatial and temporal framework of an evolving universe.
> Easily disproved
by stratification of layers of earth, laid down yearly, with far more than 5000 layers, radiometric dating, Pangeae, and the speed of light through the vast distances of space, a
galaxy (ours) that is about 100,000 light years
in diameter.
by calculating the estimation of how many
galaxies are
in the universe, times how many planets
in each, times how many likely have the conditions that support life, times the probability of elements combining and creating life... the result is something like there could be 10 million planets that have life on them, aka aliens
[25] Lemaitre's famous differential equation for cosmic expansion is: R [2] = C / R + 1 / 3AR [2]- k where R is the scale factor for cosmic expansion which is proportional to the radius of the universe when that radius has meaning; C > 0 and proportional to the average present - day density of non-relativistic matter
in the universe; cosmological constant, - C [0] < A < C [0], which serves to create a cosmic repulsion that keeps
galaxies from being drawn together
by gravity when it is positive and adds to the attractive force of gravity when it is negative; and spatial curvature, k = -1,0, +1.
You can't suppose that this world just happened
by accident and somehow came together
in such perfect order from atoms up to
galaxies by accident, right?
The [
galaxy] they're most excited about is three times as luminous as any other
galaxy of a similar age, making it «
by far the brightest
galaxy ever observed at this stage
in the universe,» the ESO said.
Robot lions which could combine into a giant robot dude to fight space monster - robots
in a
galaxy run
by an evil empire of purple guys.
If she comes to you at 8 p.m. to tell you her science fair project is due tomorrow, you will kiss her goodnight and tuck her
in so you can start painting styrofoam balls to create an entire
galaxy full of colorful planets for her to turn
in at school
by 8 a.m.
Nate Wright, a detention - riddled sixth grader — and drummer for the greatest garage band
in the history of the
galaxy, Enslave the Mollusk — hopes to woo beautiful Jenny away from her boyfriend Artur
by winning first prize
in his school's Battle of the Bands.
Well, let me start
by saying Starbucks sells the best hot cocoa mix
in the
galaxy.
Chemical calculations show that helium hydride should be visible
in clouds around distant
galaxies and supernovas, or even
in modern planetary nebulas (shells of gas expelled
by aged, sunlike stars).
The Dark Energy Survey, for example, has charted 26 million
galaxies using the Victor M. Blanco Telescope
in Chile, measuring how the light from those
galaxies is distorted
by the intervening matter on the journey to Earth.
But the picture is dominated
by the
galaxy's core, which
in infrared outshines the rest of the
galaxy's light combined.
In typical galaxies, normal matter is swamped by dark matter, an unidentified invisible substance that makes up most of the matter in the.
In typical
galaxies, normal matter is swamped
by dark matter, an unidentified invisible substance that makes up most of the matter
in the.
in the...
The supernova, known as SN1987A, was first seen
by observers
in the Southern Hemisphere
in 1987 when a giant star suddenly exploded at the edge of a nearby dwarf
galaxy called the Large Magellanic Cloud.
MAGNIFYING THE COSMOS The light from a distant
galaxy (lower right) is warped
by the gravity of a closer, massive
galaxy (bright blur
in center).
It combines visible light images from Hubble and the Very Large telescope (shown
in blue, green, and red)- which show gas and stars - with X-ray images from Chandra (shown
in pink) which picks out extremely hot gas
in between the
galaxies, heated
by the collision.
Yet, bizarrely, the galactic titan is rendered profoundly dim
by its wispy spiral arms, spaced 10 times farther apart than
in conventional spiral
galaxies.
Researchers from the Dark Energy Survey used the Victor Blanco telescope
in Chile to survey 26 million
galaxies in a section of the southern sky for subtle distortions caused
by the gravitational heft of both dark and normal matter.
The Planck data strongly suggest that dust
in the Milky Way
galaxy might account for the entire signal interpreted as gravitational waves
by researchers using BICEP2, the Antarctic telescope responsible for the initial...
The observatory will also measure patterns
in the distribution of
galaxies left
by acoustic waves
in the early universe.
Supernova 2016gkg (indicated
by red bars)
in the
galaxy NGC 613, located about 40 million light years from Earth
in the constellation Sculptor.
Taken with the orbiting Chandra Observatory, it shows the hottest, most violent objects
in the
galaxy: black holes gobbling down matter, gas heated to millions of degrees
by dense, whirling neutron stars, and the high - energy radiation from stars that have exploded, sending out vast amounts of material that slam into surrounding gas, creating shock waves that heat the gas tremendously, generating X-rays.
Decades passed before astronomical technology verified that idea: It wasn't until 1979 that astronomers detected a real - life example of a gravitational lens
in the double image of a quasar — side -
by - side glimpses of a
galaxy's blazing heart, resembling a pair of oncoming headlights.