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Originally posted by incrediblelousminds
Do you people read the article ever before commenting? Ever?
Originally posted by princeofpeace
Ummmm that would have to be one huge planet to cause all of that water if the article is correct in stating that it containns 140 trillion times the amount of water on Earth. I doubt a "huge planet of water" is where it came from. Just my 2 cents.
IF I'm reading the article correctly, it is sayng the black whole is actualy 'creating' the water from water vapor already present in space.
"The environment around this quasar is very unique in that it's producing this huge mass of water,"
Originally posted by Johnze
reply to post by wildtimes
Thats exactly how it is, and it kinda infuriates me a lot when NASA do say stuff like this because they never really put a disclaimer in that says
*please be aware, what we are seeing is 10 billion years old and chances are the planet is not Earth like anymore, infact it is more than likely the universe is now shaped like a triangle and everything we know about the universe is guess work. Apart from the super engineers who get guys into space, were actualy just a bunch of really really over qualified archaeologists, with unlimited funding, who occasionaly spy on people for the government, toodles!
You mean how in the very first paragraph it mentions this is 12 billion light years away? You mean like that?
Originally posted by Extralien
One thing is for sure... All that water out there (and there has to be more) totally finishes any ideas about any alien race coming here to our little spit ball in order to take all the water...
Hollywood are going to have to come up with some other ideas for films now.. Like giant space whales that swallow star cruisers whole..
Originally posted by ParAvion
I wonder where all that water actually came from - was it a huge planet made up of water that got sucked in? In any event it is nice to see the main precursor to life in such abundance and hopefully this bodes well for the possibility of life elsewhere in the universe.
Originally posted by neo96
considering the amount of water on this planet
it would have to have been pounded time and time aigan by extremely large comets that all didsnt burn up during atmospheric entry,
so i have a problem with water from earth came from comets
Originally posted by neo96
but considering how hot atmospheric entry is seems to me both the hydrogen and oxygen would simply burn up.
Originally posted by neo96
i dont argue that but considering the extreme temperatures is it still the same?
over 6000 degrees kelvin?