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There's late night sci-fi talk shows? WTF I'm missing out!!! Originally Posted by LovingKayla
Actually its very interesting they talk about black holes or space and time portals can be achieved, recent extra terrestrial phenomena. It is mostly speculation but it some interesting stuff to drive to when you need something stimulating to keep you awake. Plus they have info that I consider great convo enhancers.
CJ7's Avatar
  • CJ7
  • 04-02-2012, 02:38 PM
Actually its very interesting they talk about black holes or space and time portals can be achieved, recent extra terrestrial phenomena. It is mostly speculation but it some interesting stuff to drive to when you need something stimulating to keep you awake. Plus they have info that I consider great convo enhancers. Originally Posted by SkylarCruzWantsYou


Indeed !

watch this next time you have 50 minutes.. its incredible

http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/space/m...milky-way.html
Coast to Coast With George Noory; he replaced Art Bell.......the show is very off grid guests; and ocassionally they break news with info on the Federal Reserve and other topics. It appeals to survivalists, anti govenment conspirators, aliens, and wierd science fiends....probably the largest distriubted daily radio show in the US.....maybe bigger than Rush !

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TyLI970it0I


There's late night sci-fi talk shows? WTF I'm missing out!!! Originally Posted by LovingKayla
Af-Freakin's Avatar
Actually its very interesting they talk about black holes or space and time portals can be achieved, recent extra terrestrial phenomena. It is mostly speculation but it some interesting stuff to drive to when you need something stimulating to keep you awake. Plus they have info that I consider great convo enhancers. Originally Posted by SkylarCruzWantsYou
i always find black holes stimulating. always keep me up. LOL!
CJ7, I got to ask a bona fide Astronaut, who just happened to be a physicist, a question that has always bugged me.

Any time we look up into the heavens, we are looking at the past. If a star is 1 million light years away, it took that light 1 million years to reach us.

He was on the subject of objects that were at the far reaches of the Universe, he was talking in terms of billions of light years.

So I asked him. If what we see happenned billions of years ago, what is going on there now, at this very minute. That object certainly is not the same, and for all we know, might not even exist anymore. And if it doesn't exist, what is there now in it's place.

He had no answer. And he thought hard about it too.

Some of this stuff they come up with is simply mind boggling.
CJ7's Avatar
  • CJ7
  • 04-02-2012, 05:06 PM
CJ7, I got to ask a bona fide Astronaut, who just happened to be a physicist, a question that has always bugged me.

Any time we look up into the heavens, we are looking at the past. If a star is 1 million light years away, it took that light 1 million years to reach us.

He was on the subject of objects that were at the far reaches of the Universe, he was talking in terms of billions of light years.

So I asked him. If what we see happenned billions of years ago, what is going on there now, at this very minute. That object certainly is not the same, and for all we know, might not even exist anymore. And if it doesn't exist, what is there now in it's place.

He had no answer. And he thought hard about it too.

Some of this stuff they come up with is simply mind boggling. Originally Posted by Jackie S

pretty sure I read/saw that there are only 130 people in the world capable of answering questions like you posed ... space jocks dont make that cut.

having seen stars vanish in Hubble pics we wont notice them being gone with the naked eye for millions or billions of years ..

boggling for sure.

I love that stuff.
CJ7's Avatar
  • CJ7
  • 04-02-2012, 05:27 PM
CJ7, I got to ask a bona fide Astronaut, who just happened to be a physicist, a question that has always bugged me.

Any time we look up into the heavens, we are looking at the past. If a star is 1 million light years away, it took that light 1 million years to reach us.

He was on the subject of objects that were at the far reaches of the Universe, he was talking in terms of billions of light years.

So I asked him. If what we see happenned billions of years ago, what is going on there now, at this very minute. That object certainly is not the same, and for all we know, might not even exist anymore. And if it doesn't exist, what is there now in it's place.

He had no answer. And he thought hard about it too.

Some of this stuff they come up with is simply mind boggling. Originally Posted by Jackie S


here ya go Jackie, ask the experts

http://imagine.gsfc.nasa.gov/docs/as...stronomer.html
I suppose the only way we know of anythings existence is either through what we see, (visual astronomy), what we hear, (radio astronomy), or how something else is affected by what ever is out there.

I will post the question. They say it takes about two weeks.

Thanks for the link.
dearhunter's Avatar
They have to pray about it