| Topic: |
Religions > Atheism |
| User: |
"Budikka666" |
| Date: |
21 Dec 2007 09:25:21 AM |
| Object: |
Gamma Ray Burst From Deep in the Heart of Nowhere? |
http://tinyurl.com/2c8tzo
www.nasa.gov reports;
"A team of astronomers has discovered a cosmic explosion that seems to
have come from the middle of nowhere -- thousands of light-years from
the nearest galaxy-sized collection of stars, gas, and dust. This
"shot in the dark" is surprising because the type of explosion, a long-
duration gamma-ray burst (GRB), is thought to be powered by the death
of a massive star."
"The nearest galaxy is more than 88,000 light-years away, and there's
almost no gas lying between the burst and Earth."
Perhaps we found the Death Star at work?
Budikka
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| User: "Denis Loubet" |
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| Title: Re: Gamma Ray Burst From Deep in the Heart of Nowhere? |
21 Dec 2007 11:19:17 AM |
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"Budikka666" <budikka1@netscape.net> wrote in message
news:b83a361b-ba18-41ae-8f59-1b3779567e41@n20g2000hsh.googlegroups.com...
http://tinyurl.com/2c8tzo
www.nasa.gov reports;
"A team of astronomers has discovered a cosmic explosion that seems to
have come from the middle of nowhere -- thousands of light-years from
the nearest galaxy-sized collection of stars, gas, and dust. This
"shot in the dark" is surprising because the type of explosion, a long-
duration gamma-ray burst (GRB), is thought to be powered by the death
of a massive star."
"The nearest galaxy is more than 88,000 light-years away, and there's
almost no gas lying between the burst and Earth."
Perhaps we found the Death Star at work?
But blowing up what? The place is empty!
--
Denis Loubet
dloubet@io.com
http//www.io.com/~dloubet
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| User: "Geoff" |
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| Title: Re: Gamma Ray Burst From Deep in the Heart of Nowhere? |
26 Dec 2007 11:10:40 AM |
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Denis Loubet wrote:
"Budikka666" <budikka1@netscape.net> wrote in message
news:b83a361b-ba18-41ae-8f59-1b3779567e41@n20g2000hsh.googlegroups.com...
http://tinyurl.com/2c8tzo
www.nasa.gov reports;
"A team of astronomers has discovered a cosmic explosion that seems
to have come from the middle of nowhere -- thousands of light-years
from the nearest galaxy-sized collection of stars, gas, and dust.
This "shot in the dark" is surprising because the type of explosion,
a long- duration gamma-ray burst (GRB), is thought to be powered by
the death of a massive star."
"The nearest galaxy is more than 88,000 light-years away, and there's
almost no gas lying between the burst and Earth."
Perhaps we found the Death Star at work?
But blowing up what? The place is empty!
Well it is now. ;-)
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| User: "phillip brown" |
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| Title: Re: Gamma Ray Burst From Deep in the Heart of Nowhere? |
22 Dec 2007 12:28:34 AM |
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On Dec 22, 4:19 am, "Denis Loubet" <dlou...@io.com> wrote:
"Budikka666" <budik...@netscape.net> wrote in message
news:b83a361b-ba18-41ae-8f59-1b3779567e41@n20g2000hsh.googlegroups.com...
http://tinyurl.com/2c8tzo
www.nasa.govreports;
"A team of astronomers has discovered a cosmic explosion that seems to
have come from the middle of nowhere -- thousands of light-years from
the nearest galaxy-sized collection of stars, gas, and dust. This
"shot in the dark" is surprising because the type of explosion, a long-
duration gamma-ray burst (GRB), is thought to be powered by the death
of a massive star."
"The nearest galaxy is more than 88,000 light-years away, and there's
almost no gas lying between the burst and Earth."
Perhaps we found the Death Star at work?
But blowing up what? The place is empty!
--
Denis Loubet
dlou...@io.com
http//www.io.com/~dloubet
Range practice?
phillip brown
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| User: "" |
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| Title: Re: Gamma Ray Burst From Deep in the Heart of Nowhere? |
22 Dec 2007 08:35:27 PM |
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On Dec 21, 10:25=A0am, Budikka666 <budik...@netscape.net> wrote:
http://tinyurl.com/2c8tzowww.nasa.govreports;
"A team of astronomers has discovered a cosmic explosion that seems to
have come from the middle of nowhere -- thousands of light-years from
the nearest galaxy-sized collection of stars, gas, and dust. This
"shot in the dark" is surprising because the type of explosion, a long-
duration gamma-ray burst (GRB), is thought to be powered by the death
of a massive star."
"The nearest galaxy is more than 88,000 light-years away, and there's
almost no gas lying between the burst and Earth."
Perhaps we found the Death Star at work?
Budikka
I think Krikkit's sun went nova before the Krikkiteers discovered
spaceflight. First one Doug's missed, innit? <g>
-Panama Floyd, Atlanta.
aa#2015/KoBAAWA!
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| User: "Michael Gray" |
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| Title: Re: Gamma Ray Burst From Deep in the Heart of Nowhere? |
22 Dec 2007 09:23:23 PM |
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On Sat, 22 Dec 2007 18:35:27 -0800 (PST),
wrote:
On Dec 21, 10:25 am, Budikka666 <budik...@netscape.net> wrote:
http://tinyurl.com/2c8tzowww.nasa.govreports;
"A team of astronomers has discovered a cosmic explosion that seems to
have come from the middle of nowhere -- thousands of light-years from
the nearest galaxy-sized collection of stars, gas, and dust. This
"shot in the dark" is surprising because the type of explosion, a long-
duration gamma-ray burst (GRB), is thought to be powered by the death
of a massive star."
"The nearest galaxy is more than 88,000 light-years away, and there's
almost no gas lying between the burst and Earth."
Perhaps we found the Death Star at work?
Budikka
I think Krikkit's sun went nova before the Krikkiteers discovered
spaceflight. First one Doug's missed, innit? <g>
It may not have been Krikkit.
It may have been the planet Bayesbull.
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| User: "" |
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| Title: Re: Gamma Ray Burst From Deep in the Heart of Nowhere? |
23 Dec 2007 12:28:54 PM |
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On Dec 22, 10:23=A0pm, Michael Gray <mikeg...@newsguy.com> wrote:
On Sat, 22 Dec 2007 18:35:27 -0800 (PST),
wrote:
On Dec 21, 10:25=A0am, Budikka666 <budik...@netscape.net> wrote:
http://tinyurl.com/2c8tzowww.nasa.govreports;
"A team of astronomers has discovered a cosmic explosion that seems to
have come from the middle of nowhere -- thousands of light-years from
the nearest galaxy-sized collection of stars, gas, and dust. This
"shot in the dark" is surprising because the type of explosion, a long-=
duration gamma-ray burst (GRB), is thought to be powered by the death
of a massive star."
"The nearest galaxy is more than 88,000 light-years away, and there's
almost no gas lying between the burst and Earth."
Perhaps we found the Death Star at work?
Budikka
I think Krikkit's sun went nova before the Krikkiteers discovered
spaceflight. First one Doug's missed, innit? <g>
It may not have been Krikkit.
It may have been the planet Bayesbull.
Which would explain the lack of Rounders players in the books. A
plausible explination, I suppose...<g>
-PF
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| User: "Michael Gray" |
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| Title: Re: Gamma Ray Burst From Deep in the Heart of Nowhere? |
22 Dec 2007 05:16:19 PM |
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On Fri, 21 Dec 2007 07:25:21 -0800 (PST), Budikka666
<budikka1@netscape.net> wrote:
http://tinyurl.com/2c8tzo
www.nasa.gov reports;
"A team of astronomers has discovered a cosmic explosion that seems to
have come from the middle of nowhere -- thousands of light-years from
the nearest galaxy-sized collection of stars, gas, and dust. This
"shot in the dark" is surprising because the type of explosion, a long-
duration gamma-ray burst (GRB), is thought to be powered by the death
of a massive star."
"The nearest galaxy is more than 88,000 light-years away, and there's
almost no gas lying between the burst and Earth."
Perhaps we found the Death Star at work?
Join the Dark Matter side of the force, Luke.
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