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Of course, silly! It's got rings!Saturn is light enough to float on water. Float! Water!
Nevermind --
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Of course, silly! It's got rings!Saturn is light enough to float on water. Float! Water!
Can they not?Surprised me. Specific Gravity of 0.7. It would float pretty well (except that saturn and water cannot exist in contact).
I dunno. Wouldn't most of Saturn evaporate in an environment where water can remain liquid?
I don't think you need the "liberal Democrat" qualifier Or "in America", for that matter.True Fact! If you could build a rocket capable of carrying a payload consisting of every liberal Democrat politician in America, and loaded it with said payload, and fired the rocket so that it left the solar system and never returned...it would be a very fine thing.
Kent Hovind calls himself 'Dr' because of ....this. If anyone can read page by page to beyond page 30, I'll be impressed. That's all I managed before giving up in despair and running out into the street screaming.
Did you know that in their native environments Polar Bears did not eat Penguins
But not as long as one might think.It would require a very long journey for a polar bear to be able to eat a penguin.
The Sun is powered by gravity. If gravity doesn't power the Sun, what does? Dark matter 'ruts' wouldn't, as you describe them, create the necessary pressures.
And there's the question of black holes, n-ary stars, the fact that objects behave as if they're attracted to each other proportional to maoss and distance - and not following arbitrary grooves in space
I failed. I couldn't make it past page 11.
My brain. It has broken.
Gravitational pressure alone will generate heat, but it wasn't known that that heat can trigger thermonuclear fusion. The Sun's fuel is primarily Hydrogen, which it fuses under high temperatures and pressures, which are generated by *drum-roll please* high gravity. That's why Jupiter-type planets are considered 'failed stars': their gravity is insufficient to generate the heat and pressure needed to fuse Hydrogen. Further, gravity is what stops a star from blowing itself apart: they're in a state of equilibrium, with their hot, outward-pushing internal pressures balanced by its heavy, inward-pushing gravity.You mean there might be a flaw in my theory!?
The sun is powered by nuclear fusion. Hydrogen is converted to helium resulting in energy and heat. The idea that gravitational pressure powers the sun would mean that the life of the sun could only be about 30 million years. It was the fact that the sun couldn't be powered long enough by the kinetic force of gravity, that lead to the idea that it might be nuclear.
The point is that these phenomena are caused by gravity. No gravity, no black holes. No gravity, and n-ary star systems. If gravity doesn't exist, why are there black holes?There is obviously much we don't know about black holes and n-ary stars,
You did: "There is no such thing as Gravity. The planets follow Dark Matter ruts around the solar system... You could use a Dark Matter "Plow" to change the orbit of small asteroids, ..."and who said the grooves were arbitrary?