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When someone tells you that X is wrong because John Doe says,
is that a refutation worth responding to?
So you are saying that gas is not affected by gravity???
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As I said early on, gravity is a weak force, not a strong one.
It is not enough to overcome the kinetic energy that forces
gas to disperse.
Your suggesting that gas never collects into large masses, which our own gas giants refute.
Why would he consider a volume of gas with only one solar mass? Every model of stellar formation I've ever seen has started with a much larger cloud. Larger clouds mean stronger gravity.The fairly simple formula for Jeans' Length (Sir James Jeans) shows what is necessary for stellar formation. A gas cloud must be within a critical radius in order to collapse by gravity (Jeans' Length). Jeans' Length (JL) is equal to the Gravitational constant (G) times the mass (M) of the cloud squared, divided by two times the number of moles of gas, times the Gas Constant (R), times the Temperature (T) in kelvins (see Table below). {5} There are other ways to calculate the physical parameters for star formation, but similar problems develop. Leo Blitz says that about 99 percent of the mass of a Giant Molecular Cloud (where stars are thought to form) is molecular hydrogen, H2. {6} I used this fact to calculate the minimum number of moles (n) of hydrogen that would have formed the core of the sun and solved for T. The temperature that the sun's equivalent cloud mass would have to be in order for it to contract under the force of gravity, considering the mass of the Sun, expanding its radius to the distance of one light year, and plugging in the values for the constants. The result was 1.69 degrees K (- 456.68 degrees F. Absolute Zero, 0 degrees K = - 459.67 degrees F), one degree less than the temperature of the 2.726 degrees K cosmic background radiation, according to the latest COBE satellite measurements. {7} The universe is too hot for star formation!
5. DeYoung, Donald B. and John C. Whitcomb, "The Origin of the Universe," Design and Origins in Astronomy, George Mulfinger editor, Creation Research Society, 1983. p. 17
6. Blitz, Leo, "Giant Molecular-Cloud Complexes in the Galaxy," Scientific American, Apr. 1982, p. 86
7. Cown, Ron, "COBE: A Match Made in Heaven," Science News, 143 (1993), p. 43.
http://www.ldolphin.org/stars.html
5. DeYoung, Donald B. and John C. Whitcomb, "The Origin of the Universe," Design and Origins in Astronomy, George Mulfinger editor, Creation Research Society, 1983. p. 17
6. Blitz, Leo, "Giant Molecular-Cloud Complexes in the Galaxy," Scientific American, Apr. 1982, p. 86
7. Cown, Ron, "COBE: A Match Made in Heaven," Science News, 143 (1993), p. 43.
Why would he consider a volume of gas with only one solar mass? Every model of stellar formation I've ever seen has started with a much larger cloud. Larger clouds mean stronger gravity.
Two things.
The densities of gas on earth are many times that of space.
Why don't stars form in our atmosphere?
Jupiter and Saturn have even denser atmospheres.
Why aren't they stars?
You know that nebula have a much, much higher mass then even the biggest of planets, right?Two things.
The densities of gas on earth are many times that of space.
Why don't stars form in our atmosphere?
Jupiter and Saturn have even denser atmospheres.
Why aren't they stars?
The point at which a gas collapses into a star is theoretical.
It has never been observed.
Why do you accept it as fact with no proof it
ever happened?
or could happen?
Even your side's scientists are saying current theories
are probably wrong.
http://www.space.com/12788-impossible-star-defies-theory.html
Why would he consider a volume of gas with only one solar mass? Every model of stellar formation I've ever seen has started with a much larger cloud. Larger clouds mean stronger gravity.
It is easy enough to calculate the Jeans mass for the Earth's atmosphere; it is 3.3×10^22 kg, about 6600 times the mass of the atmosphere. Thus the Earth's atmosphere is not massive enough to contract under its own weight.The densities of gas on earth are many times that of space. Why don't stars form in our atmosphere?
Jupiter and Saturn have even denser atmospheres.
Why aren't they stars?
The point at which a gas collapses into a star is theoretical.
It has never been observed.
Why do you accept it as fact with no proof it
ever happened?
or could happen?
The fairly simple formula for Jeans' Length (Sir James Jeans) shows what is necessary for stellar formation. A gas cloud must be within a critical radius in order to collapse by gravity (Jeans' Length). Jeans' Length (JL) is equal to the Gravitational constant (G) times the mass (M) of the cloud squared, divided by two times the number of moles of gas, times the Gas Constant (R), times the Temperature (T) in kelvins (see Table below). {5} There are other ways to calculate the physical parameters for star formation, but similar problems develop. Leo Blitz says that about 99 percent of the mass of a Giant Molecular Cloud (where stars are thought to form) is molecular hydrogen, H2. {6} I used this fact to calculate the minimum number of moles (n) of hydrogen that would have formed the core of the sun and solved for T. The temperature that the sun's equivalent cloud mass would have to be in order for it to contract under the force of gravity, considering the mass of the Sun, expanding its radius to the distance of one light year, and plugging in the values for the constants. The result was 1.69 degrees K (- 456.68 degrees F. Absolute Zero, 0 degrees K = - 459.67 degrees F), one degree less than the temperature of the 2.726 degrees K cosmic background radiation, according to the latest COBE satellite measurements. {7} The universe is too hot for star formation!
5. DeYoung, Donald B. and John C. Whitcomb, "The Origin of the Universe," Design and Origins in Astronomy, George Mulfinger editor, Creation Research Society, 1983. p. 17
6. Blitz, Leo, "Giant Molecular-Cloud Complexes in the Galaxy," Scientific American, Apr. 1982, p. 86
7. Cown, Ron, "COBE: A Match Made in Heaven," Science News, 143 (1993), p. 43.
http://www.ldolphin.org/stars.html