So far we've detected only
huge planets in other solar systems, most orbiting very close to their suns.
Not exact matches
Finding such large
planets located so close to their stars will be a
huge step
in solving this.
Finally: You're experiencing a cold snowy scene
in Greenland beneath a piercing blue sky, gazing up warily as
huge chunks of glacier plunge down, right
in front of you, into a raging river of ice floes which could have sunk another Titantic, but now,
in the modern day, are emblematic of what is sinking
Planet Earth.
All universes (plural) may well have been formed
in one swelling swoop thusly becoming a uniformed dimension so ginormous our universe could well be a part of combined universes forming say a giant seahorse living within a sea so vast all being a part of a ginormous
planet so
huge we may never know such a thought of plausible revelation.
And as Jesus told them, his seed, people believing him then, the 12 apostles, that would grow like a mustard seed
in to a
huge tree... which it did, 33 % of the 7 billion people on the
planet believe Jesus was born of the Holy Spirit, performed miracles using the Holy Spirit, and later sent the Holy Spirit to the followers after dying on the cross and raising again on the 3rd day of being
in the hands of sinful men.
The idea that a
huge portion of the world that believes
in things that can not be proven nor seen nor understood by reason, is affecting the life and death of the rest of the world that doesn't find those things based
in truth or reality... IS WRONG, AND IS RUINING LIVES AND DESTROYING OUR
PLANET...
This
huge, blue
planet is
in existance just so we can be born, live, make a living, have a baby, then die... no connection, no spirit, no soul, no more appreciating the beauty around us, no more being astounded at the improbabilities, no more being amazed at the wonders of life... because none of that has any meaning any more, it's just a bunch of junk that happened accidently... who cares, we're just all going to fade away into nothingness... become one with the dirt, because we are actually no better than the dirt... I don't know about you, but I'm depressed now... but then that's what's great about our country, you can choose to believe or... not...
in this... country... that has... no particular meaning...
in the grand scheme of thngs... oh, yeah, that's right there is no «grand scheme of things»... so never mind.
This is such a
huge subject that I must beg indulgence, therefore, if I give my space to but a small fraction of the historic faith — namely its main emphases on God, Christ, the Church, and eternal life — and consider only these
in our modem context,
in the effort to discover what values they may have for men and women who are tossed about
in an unsettled world, with an uncertain future, and doomed — almost certainly it seems — to a doubtful truce of arms, at worst to a war which threatens to annihilate man as we have known him and
in any event to leave us a bare existence such as we can eke out on a totally devastated
planet.
In those words, and the words of many others, I think we can see the outline of an ethic that avoids self - indulgence yet does not deny the physical facts of a
planet with 6 billion people who may soon nearly double their numbers — a
planet that grows hotter, stormier and less stable by the day, a
planet where
huge swaths of God's creation are being wiped out by the one species told to tend this particular garden.
So it is possible that most the mass
in the universe is just black holes, dark stars, big
planets, and
huge asteriods.
The
planet itself seemed less impressive,
in its old - fashioned, deliberate, annual or daily revolution, than this
huge wheel, revolving within arm's length at some vertiginous speed, and barely murmuring, — scarcely humming an audible warning to stand a hair's - breadth further for respect of power, — while it would not wake the baby lying close against its frame.
Residents of this beautiful city will be joining people around the world
in making a
huge difference for the better and setting a new pattern for the future of this
planet.»
This marks a
huge leap
in innovation for humanity and will allow consumers to bite into a future that is better for their health and the health of our
planet.
I'm sure that nobody on the
planet appreciates Ronda's new gig more than Travis... because let's face it, Ronda was going to get
huge without a reason to stay
in shape, and she looks as good as I've seen her look
in her wrestling shape.
Keeping Arsene Wenger
in place is unambitious and reeks of weak leadership at the highest levels of Arsenal F.C. I've been a
huge admirer of Wenger since the early weeks of his tenure at the helm of the greatest football club on this
planet, and I'm eternally grateful for the initial years of beautiful football he delivered.
I think we will win tonight by a couple go goals but you never know... and if we do lose then wenger has no option but to go he has staked his managerial acumen and reputation on getting
in to cl... this has nothing to do with loss of giroud... We are amongst the richest half dozen clubs on
planet besiktas survive on a wing and a prayer and I have no idea the salary gap between wenger and bilic but obviously
huge... So no excuses wenger win or resign and take the yank with you too
As well as having a
huge range of gift ideas for you to browse, Uncommongoods support and believe
in some really important and worthwhile causes such as paid parental leave, preventing sexual violence and saving the
planet.
Sure I cared somewhat about being green but saving the
planet was not a
huge motivator for change
in my life.
Anything approaching «a certain inevitability» would mean millions or even billions of humanoid life - forms
in the universe, simply because the number of available
planets is so
huge.
In 2001, Charbonneau and astronomer Tim Brown of the High Altitude Observatory in Boulder, Colorado, used this technique to «sniff» the atmosphere of a huge, broiling planet called HD 209458b, even though it is 150 light - years away — 4 billion times as distant as the moo
In 2001, Charbonneau and astronomer Tim Brown of the High Altitude Observatory
in Boulder, Colorado, used this technique to «sniff» the atmosphere of a huge, broiling planet called HD 209458b, even though it is 150 light - years away — 4 billion times as distant as the moo
in Boulder, Colorado, used this technique to «sniff» the atmosphere of a
huge, broiling
planet called HD 209458b, even though it is 150 light - years away — 4 billion times as distant as the moon.
Do you want to throw away an opportunity to find a
huge number of
planets in the galaxy because you didn't come up with the money?
Solar wind creates a
huge magnetic bubble, known as the heliosphere, that protects Earth and the other
planets from energetic subatomic particles that constantly zip around
in deep space.
Huge swirls at the edge of Mercury's magnetosphere — where the
planet's magnetic field meets the energetic charged particles of the solar wind — help shower the
planet in solar plasma.
The moon's host
planet, a gas giant about the size of Uranus, hangs
huge in the sky as always, its churning storms a constant sight for the inhabitants below.
The sheer harshness of the environment that begins a few hundred miles above our heads, and the
huge distances involved
in traveling to other
planets, bode poorly for any of us who might dream of establishing human outposts much beyond Mars.
Even without trillion - dollar funding, you are all making
huge advances
in our understanding of
planets around other stars.
Generally, science says that our solar system's
planets ultimately formed from a
huge, ancient cloud of interstellar dust (the solar nebula)
in space.
«If it were possible to grind up the entire
planet Earth to dust
in a
huge mortar and pestle, we would get dust with on average a similar chemical composition as chondritic meteorites,» says Kramers.
Early science results from NASA's Juno mission portray the largest
planet in our solar system as a turbulent world, with an intriguingly complex interior structure, energetic polar aurora, and
huge polar cyclones.
The
huge increase of radiation and the strong stellar winds that will accompany the process of stellar inflation will destroy all life on Earth and evaporate the water
in the oceans, before the entire
planet is finally melted.
Ultimately, this means that while M - dwarf stars, like TRAPPIST - 1, are the most common stars
in the universe (and while it's likely that there are
planets orbiting these stars), the
huge amount of water they are likely to have makes them unfavorable for life to exist, especially enough life to create a detectable signal
in the atmosphere that can be observed.
What little rocky material occurs
in today's ring system probably is the debris of collisions between icy ring particles and asteroids and comets swept up by the
planet's
huge gravitational field, says Canup.
This new generation of telescopes will allow
huge advances
in studies of the early universe, of Earth - like
planets around other stars, and of the mysterious dark matter and dark energy that influence the structure and expansion of the universe.
This has
huge interest for researchers because comets, which form and live most of their lives
in the outer reaches of the solar system, are pristine relics of the stuff
planets were originally made of.
The Very Large Telescope reveals that a
huge planet formed within a star's dusty disk
in a few million years.
«Much like someone doing a cannonball
in a swimming pool, the
planet drove
huge changes
in the debris disk once it reached its present orbit.»
Without that detail, astronomers can't tell whether a star's back - and - forth motions come from a
huge planet moving
in a nearly face - on orbit from our viewpoint, like the minute hand on a clock, or from a smaller
planet in an edge - on orbit.
Professor Jan Zalasiewicz from the University of Leicester's School of Geography, Geology and the Environment, said: «The ancient world of the Ordovician, some 450 million years ago, was one of a
huge expansion of life
in the seas of our
planet.
That was a
huge clue pointing to a potential culprit
in the interplanetary mystery — Comet Shoemaker - Levy 9 hit Jupiter
in July 1994, bombarding the
planet in a large, well - documented impact.
He comments: «Until now we have struggled to explain how pebbles can come together to form
planets, and yet we've now discovered
huge numbers of
planets in orbit around other stars.
In the recent science fiction film Passengers, a
huge spaceship flies at half the speed of light on a 120 - year - long journey toward the distant
planet Homestead II, where its 5000 passengers are to set up a new home.
«We all assume that we Earthlings are so superior because we have a
huge biodiversity, but we have to keep
in mind, we are a water - rich
planet,» says Schulze - Makuch.
Given the
huge number of very low - mass stars and
planets, this could mean that the conditions suitable for life are common
in the Universe.
«It's going to be a
huge step forward,» says Steve Squyres at Cornell University
in Ithaca, New York, lead scientist for the Mars Exploration Rovers Spirit and Opportunity, which landed on different sides of the
planet in 2004.
That finding led to speculation the perhaps Mercury was once much larger, but had its outer layers removed — either fried away by the nearby Sun or perhaps blasted away be a
huge impact early
in the
planet's history.
It has several tiny moons either very close
in or far away from the
planet — most of which orbit
in the direction of the
planet's spin — and one
huge one, Triton, orbiting
in the opposite direction.
This newly discovered
huge structure around the system may have implications for what this yet - unseen planetary system looks like around the 8 - million - year - old star, which is
in its formative years of
planet construction.
These early images, which show giant
planets in cool orbits far from the glow of their stars, represent a
huge technological leap.
If it is not tied to a vortex, the system may be a
huge convective cloud, similar to those seen occasionally on other
planets like the
huge storm on Saturn that was detected
in 2010.
Another
huge release of data came
in May 2016, with 1,284 new
planets announced.