Scientists also recently discovered that a few of Saturn's moons have breathable atomosphere.
Hmm, interesting. I wasn't aware of that. It sucks how humans can't survive with the insanely freezing temperatures out there though.
What I'm really interested in is Jupiter's sixth moon: Europa. It is believed that under its icy surface, there is a vast ocean, and that it could be the home of some kind of underwater extraterrestrial life. Supposedly, there is a mission to check it out (along with some other moons around Jupiter) set for the year 2020.
What I'm really interested in is Jupiter's sixth moon: Europa. It is believed that under its icy surface, there is a vast ocean, and that it could be the home of some kind of underwater extraterrestrial life. Supposedly, there is a mission to check it out (along with some other moons around Jupiter) set for the year 2020.
Actually, the Universe isn't infinite.
Really?? I've always been taught that it is, but it's not a subject I follow real closely, to be honest with you. So if it's not infinite, that means there's an end to it. Where do they propose the end is? And what's on the other side of the end? (I'm not trying to be a smart ass, it's a legit question)
Really?? I've always been taught that it is, but it's not a subject I follow real closely, to be honest with you. So if it's not infinite, that means there's an end to it. Where do they propose the end is? And what's on the other side of the end? (I'm not trying to be a smart ass, it's a legit question)
The universe is unfathomably massive, but lots of research shows that the universe is slowly collapsing in on itself. Big, but ever shrinking.
Space might be endless but the universe most certainly is not.
Actually, the Universe isn't infinite.
What I'm really interested in is Jupiter's sixth moon: Europa. It is believed that under its icy surface, there is a vast ocean, and that it could be the home of some kind of underwater extraterrestrial life. Supposedly, there is a mission to check it out (along with some other moons around Jupiter) set for the year 2020.
Like how one teaspoon (5 milliliters) of Neutron Star weighs over 5.5×1012 kg, about 900 times the mass of the Great Pyramid of Giza. And how strong it's gravity is, essentially making a lens that makes us see the edge behind the very star:
Neutron Stars are crazy. 10 kilometres diametre, but more gravity than the sun.
Crazy.
That is but one theory. As I said in my post, that is the first thing they believed. But nowadays it also seems quite possible that the Universe will just keep on expanding, faster and faster. We just don't know...Eventually, the Edges of the Universe (that sounds so badass) will stop expanding due to the Big Bang, and gravity will take effectn and pull it all back in to a ball compiled of all the atoms in the universe squeezed into a nearly infinitely dense dot smaller thatn your thumb, and will stay like that until it expands again due to aother Big Bang.
THAT is mind blowing.