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Science > Physics |
| User: |
"G=EMC^2 Glazier" |
| Date: |
03 Jun 2007 08:04:52 AM |
| Object: |
How Common Are Black holes?? |
Lets go with every galaxy has one for its core. Right now that would
make 150 billion. Lets add in those x-ray binaries. We see an invisible
companion that only a BH can explain. I'll estimate that at another 150
billion. Lets now take in quasars,and they are so far out that I'm sure
99% of their light has not reached us yet. So I'll stay with just
another 150 billion My very conservative figure that I can live with
is. "there are 700 billion BH in our universe" Give or take 150 billion
Bert
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| User: "=?UTF-8?Q?Jeff=E2=80=A6Relf?=" |
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| Title: A " black hole " looks like the Milky Way on a cold arctic night. |
14 Jun 2007 05:04:39 AM |
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A " black hole " looks like the Milky Way on a cold arctic night.
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| User: "Sam Wormley" |
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| Title: Re: How Common Are Black holes?? |
03 Jun 2007 08:21:17 AM |
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G=EMC^2 Glazier wrote:
Lets go with every galaxy has one for its core. Right now that would
make 150 billion. Lets add in those x-ray binaries. We see an invisible
companion that only a BH can explain. I'll estimate that at another 150
billion. Lets now take in quasars,and they are so far out that I'm sure
99% of their light has not reached us yet. So I'll stay with just
another 150 billion My very conservative figure that I can live with
is. "there are 700 billion BH in our universe" Give or take 150 billion
Bert
Most likely a few orders of magnitude more, Herb.
Monster of the Milky Way 58:30
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/blackhole/program.html
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/transcripts/3314_blackhol.html
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| User: "malibu" |
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| Title: Re: How Common Are Black holes?? |
03 Jun 2007 09:00:53 AM |
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On Jun 3, 7:21 am, Sam Wormley <sworml...@mchsi.com> wrote:
G=EMC^2 Glazier wrote:
Lets go with every galaxy has one for its core. Right now that would
make 150 billion. Lets add in those x-ray binaries. We see an invisible
companion that only a BH can explain. I'll estimate that at another 150
billion. Lets now take in quasars,and they are so far out that I'm sure
99% of their light has not reached us yet. So I'll stay with just
another 150 billion My very conservative figure that I can live with
is. "there are 700 billion BH in our universe" Give or take 150 billion
Bert
Most likely a few orders of magnitude more, Herb.
Monster of the Milky Way 58:30
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/blackhole/program.html
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/transcripts/3314_blackhol.html
Every proton and nucleus of atoms and galaxies
is extremely gravitationally dense. They are not "Black Holes"
that represent some kind of snake-eating-tail gravitational
collapse (currently eliciting great merriment around the
Universe), but rather 3 dimensional standing wave vortices
that chase their own tails and remain the same forever,
barring some kind of fusion/fission environment.
Other intra-galactic 'black holes', I doubt. The star arms
are a result of the central vortex, which supplies plasma
from whatever falls in by spinning it so fast, its constituent parts
repel each other and become plasma, and
shooting it out the magnetic jets
at right-angles to the center of the disk. This plasma then
collects into matter, which coalesces into planets, which gradually
grow into stars, which ignite and radiate the spin energy away
until they become neutron stars and, no longer repelled electrically
from the central vortex, they fall back into it and are shredded back
into plasma. Repeat.
John
Galaxy Model for the Atom
http://users.accesscomm.ca/john
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| User: "Phineas T Puddleduck" |
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| Title: Re: How Common Are Black holes?? |
03 Jun 2007 01:39:18 PM |
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In article <1180879253.645047.323390@r19g2000prf.googlegroups.com>,
malibu <vegan16@accesscomm.ca> wrote:
Other intra-galactic 'black holes', I doubt. The star arms
are a result of the central vortex, which supplies plasma
from whatever falls in by spinning it so fast, its constituent parts
repel each other and become plasma, and
shooting it out the magnetic jets
at right-angles to the center of the disk. This plasma then
collects into matter, which coalesces into planets, which gradually
grow into stars, which ignite and radiate the spin energy away
until they become neutron stars and, no longer repelled electrically
from the central vortex, they fall back into it and are shredded back
into plasma. Repeat.
Still repeating your tired old alien nonsense John?
--
COOSN-174-07-82116: Official Science Team mascot and alt.astronomy's favourite
poster (from a survey taken of the saucerhead high command).
Official maintainer of the supra-cosmic space fluid pump (Mon and Tues only).
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| User: "Autymn D. C." |
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| Title: Re: How Common Are Black holes?? |
03 Jun 2007 01:25:59 PM |
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I'm sorry, but there are no black holes.
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| User: "G=EMC^2 Glazier" |
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| Title: Re: How Common Are Black holes?? |
03 Jun 2007 03:30:32 PM |
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DC You would be more sorry if you fell into one. bert
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| User: "Phineas T Puddleduck" |
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| Title: Re: How Common Are Black holes?? |
03 Jun 2007 01:37:46 PM |
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In article <1180895159.594503.183310@x35g2000prf.googlegroups.com>,
"Autymn D. C." <lysdexia@sbcglobal.net> wrote:
I'm sorry, but there are no black holes.
There's one between your ears.
--
COOSN-174-07-82116: Official Science Team mascot and alt.astronomy's favourite
poster (from a survey taken of the saucerhead high command).
Official maintainer of the supra-cosmic space fluid pump (Mon and Tues only).
.
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