Posted on 02/28/2015 10:32:14 AM PST by Ernest_at_the_Beach
There goes the neighborhood.
I thought is was pretty funny that this article was listed right next to the thread entitled “Scientists are wrong all the time, and thats fantastic.”
:-)
fyi
Unless their fundamental understanding of the Universe is very, very wrong. In a Recycling Universe, where things move, twist, and bend instead of inflate or contract... These things are entirely possible and easily explained.
It's only when you go looking for a "beginning" or an "end" that you need fabrications like "dark matter" and "dark energy" to balance your equations.
“The new object, named SDSS J0100+2802”
What a clever name! That must have taken a lot of thought.
Yup. Science needs a major re-think. They have anomalies which obviate the standard thinking. But they don’t know what to do about it, other than to decide that 16 dimensions of theorizing can explain it all away.
Brian Williams said it was a real cute kind little black hole and was just turning its live around when he firts reported on it
Named by people you wouldn’t invite to a party.
Can we send 2 astronauts named Barack & Hillary towards that black hole?
They have to keep coming up with new crap to fill #2 rather than just admit that maybe stealing underpants isn't a winning enterprise.
The suck from those 2 would swallow it.
One answer. GOD.
More things scientists cannot explain, but there shall be theories.
That name just rolls off tongue
A black hole that big should be named Lucifer
I think I saw that, it was called “Oprah does Dallas”
Dr Fuyan Bian, from the Australian National University, a member of the international team, said: Forming such a large black hole so quickly is hard to interpret with current theories ...
Maybe it’s the “drain” of our universe, and someone’s pulled the plug...
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It had a redshift - a measurement of the stretching of light to the red end of the spectrum by the expansion of the universe - of 6.30, marking it out as a very distant and old object.
Only 40 known quasars have a redshift higher than six, the yardstick used to define the early universe boundary.
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There are a few scientists that question the red-shift as a valid measurement,
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