Electric Uranus
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Re: Uranus explosion
I for one, marvel our differences.
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Re: Uranus explosion
Its pretty fascinating to think we could already be inside infinite mass, maybe just picture looking at it through an electron microscope and binoculars, matter has a lot of space between the atoms, and the forces of time and magnetricity - electricity slowing the speed of it to create what we see in the Universe.
Go past the speed of light and step up a dimension, might want to be careful where you put you cigarette out if you want to go back home.
Go past the speed of light and step up a dimension, might want to be careful where you put you cigarette out if you want to go back home.
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Re: Uranus explosion
I like it when everyone Else is hard at work, ha ha
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Re: Uranus explosion
Speed has nothing to do with mass, only acceleration. If you accelerate at 1G you have 1G of mass, yet your speed will increase forever as long as you accelerate. Theoretically you could attain light speed at 1G of acceleration with enough fuel without ever weighing more than you would at 1G of thrust. 1G of acceleration would provide you with a speed increase of 9.8 seconds per meter per second. Since we are traveling through space with the Earth and with the Sun and with the galaxy, we already have an initial velocity of non-zero. Having infinite mass at the speed of c would only apply if one was accelerating at the speed of c, not traveling at a velocity of c. Besides, I have yet to see a proton accelerated to a fraction of c in a particle accelerator suddenly gain enough mass to suck in everything around it.
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Re: Uranus explosion
If we are traveling above C through the larger cosmos as infinite mass, into a stronger magnetic field that may slow mass isn't that condensation, where the local bubble is hotter and denser than our solar system?- how does that work, probably turn you into a light being, myself I got used to being a Sith Master ha ha
Must be a real charge, this one
http://www.bibliotecapleyades.net/archi ... cfield.pdf
Must be a real charge, this one
http://www.bibliotecapleyades.net/archi ... cfield.pdf
Last edited by onthehook on Fri Dec 02, 2011 8:09 am, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Uranus explosion
Personally I don't think there is such a thing as infinite mass due to speed. at 1G of acceleration with enough fuel one could attain the speed of c and never weigh more than one would on earth. besides which I have yet to see any particle accelerated to a fraction of c in a particle accelerator gain enough mass to suck up everything.
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Re: Uranus explosion
But does it gain mass as accelerated?
It gets difficult imagining INFINITE in all directions including in.
It gets difficult imagining INFINITE in all directions including in.
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Re: Uranus explosion
Might be a tad difficult on the math part, but I have Faith
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Re: Uranus explosion
We have title this thread, "URANUS Explosion" in "Indian mystic" dept. pretty soon. ha ha, while Cern is looking for God particles to fill their little shaker, they are standing in god soup. I will proudly say in Norwegian, the yokes on them this time.
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Re: Uranus explosion
I don't think it does, I think it is simply resistance to being moved that appears as a mass gain. If you stop acceleration you instantly go back to your previous pre-acceleration mass without an explosion of released energy from all that supposedly extra mass just dissipating. It is an illusion of extra mass from being accelerated, not a true gain in mass. If I accelerate at 9G then reduce acceleration to 1G, where does that 8G of gained mass go instantly?onthehook wrote:But does it gain mass as accelerated?
It gets difficult imagining INFINITE in all directions including in.
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Re: Uranus explosion
I have to think about it, in the meanwhile (waiting for my book) A THUNDERCLAP for a site that promotes this life.
If the gravity spirals coming out of the sun Slow infinite mass, you would have a constant steady flow/Like a low pressure zone creating clouds - as far as the waves go, charged plasma, but its only a time difference from what exists as everything in the past against everything to come. We are passing through a larger charged cloud/galaxy doing the same thing to our solar system.
we are already where we are going and came from, (hows that for a Zeppelin song)
Infinitely - we got time to figure it out, ha ha.
What I mean by "gravity wave" is time difference density, Hell I don't even know what I mean now.
I would guess we all have the same heart? Same one as the Sun, and choice to be where you like in it.
Me? A tired old fisherman with nothing I want and everything I am. Same as everyone else. Ready for a warm beach and a beer? ha ha
If the gravity spirals coming out of the sun Slow infinite mass, you would have a constant steady flow/Like a low pressure zone creating clouds - as far as the waves go, charged plasma, but its only a time difference from what exists as everything in the past against everything to come. We are passing through a larger charged cloud/galaxy doing the same thing to our solar system.
we are already where we are going and came from, (hows that for a Zeppelin song)
Infinitely - we got time to figure it out, ha ha.
What I mean by "gravity wave" is time difference density, Hell I don't even know what I mean now.
I would guess we all have the same heart? Same one as the Sun, and choice to be where you like in it.
Me? A tired old fisherman with nothing I want and everything I am. Same as everyone else. Ready for a warm beach and a beer? ha ha
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Re: Uranus explosion
Remember, we got to end this thread on a number divisible by three (kidding)
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Re: Uranus explosion
To bad Cern doesn't have a web cam, I would love to watch those guys mess with the magnets in the accelerator for the next couple years. Those puppies can really pinch.
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Re: Uranus explosion
Perhaps something hit the planet
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Re: Uranus explosion
we will see in a few days, eighth to twelfth of Dec. maybe more spots after that?
our universe sorta looks like a charged plasma field from a little different perspective, hard to imagine - infinite.
our universe sorta looks like a charged plasma field from a little different perspective, hard to imagine - infinite.
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