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Maxleod wrote:Not strike, he's the only one with a functioning brain.

Maxleod wrote:Not strike, he's the only one with a functioning brain.
strike wolf wrote:On top of that, haven't they discovered black holes that are larger than our solar system?

InkL0sed wrote:Black holes don't have size; they're just a point.
They have mass, and their event horizons vary in size, but the hole itself is always simply a point.
And a red giant may be big, but a neutron star, which is sometimes no larger than New York City, can be denser than a red giant.
riskllama wrote:Koolbak wins this thread.
joe cool 360 wrote:It really is amazing, but consider that that's just one star. Imagine a couple trillion of those things all inside a galaxy. Now think of ten thousand of those galaxies composing a galactic cluster. Now think of several thousand of those clusters all are part of superclusters. Next try to think how there are about 10 million of those galactic supercluster in our universe. If your brain isn't fried yet, try considering that there is a possibility that our universe isn't the only one and that there could be infinitely many other universes all inside of one giant "multiverse" and what we have is the definition of mind-blowing.
InkL0sed wrote:Black holes don't have size; they're just a point.
They have mass, and their event horizons vary in size, but the hole itself is always simply a point.
And a red giant may be big, but a neutron star, which is sometimes no larger than New York City, can be denser than a red giant.
Juan_Bottom wrote:The size of any star, while amazing because you can SEE it, is easily dwarved by so many things that you can't see. For instance, the amount of Dark Matter holding any part of the universe together...
Or the posablity of life....
And overlapping dimensions....*goosebumps*....
And so much more....
Juan_Bottom wrote:The dimensions are part of the same space, but seperate, like layers of an onion or something. So time is equal, and infinite in all of them. The same planets and life would exist in each, but again; They are seperate. Because of this seperation; You may have made a different life choice in another dimension. Maybe in one you're rich, and another you're poor.
Different, but recognizably same.
InkL0sed wrote:Black holes don't have size; they're just a point.
They have mass, and their event horizons vary in size, but the hole itself is always simply a point.
And a red giant may be big, but a neutron star, which is sometimes no larger than New York City, can be denser than a red giant.
Napoleon Ier wrote:You people need to grow up to be honest.
El Capitan X wrote:The people in flame wars just seem to get dimmer and dimmer. Seriously though, I love your style, always a good read.
wrestler1ump wrote:The point itself must have a size though. This "point" is where mass is so great that it sucks in all light or something like that. I'm not that good at this black hole stuff.
saxitoxin wrote:Your position is more complex than the federal tax code. As soon as I think I understand it, I find another index of cross-references, exceptions and amendments I have to apply.
Timminz wrote:Yo mama is so classless, she could be a Marxist utopia.

joe cool 360 wrote:It really is amazing, but consider that that's just one star. Imagine a couple trillion of those things all inside a galaxy. Now think of ten thousand of those galaxies composing a galactic cluster. Now think of several thousand of those clusters all are part of superclusters. Next try to think how there are about 10 million of those galactic supercluster in our universe. If your brain isn't fried yet, try considering that there is a possibility that our universe isn't the only one and that there could be infinitely many other universes all inside of one giant "multiverse" and what we have is the definition of mind-blowing.