Author Topic: You don't even know what BIG is.....  (Read 8573 times)

That's a joke, right?

 He's in his own world.

Ontopic: Earth isn't even in the center of the Galaxy, its impossible to be located in the direct center of the Universe.
« Last Edit: April 12, 2010, 03:27:44 PM by Riot »

Big?

If you want big, zoom out so you can see the entire universe.

Now zoom out further so you can see ten universes.

Now zoom out further so you can see 100,000 universes.

Now zoom out further so you can see the celestial sphere (the "big" bathtub that contains centillions of universes).

Now blow it up.  :cookieMonster:


I showed this to my dad. He's like, "Holy stuff.."

Big?

If you want big, zoom out so you can see the entire universe.

Now zoom out further so you can see ten universes.

Now zoom out further so you can see 100,000 universes.

Now zoom out further so you can see the celestial sphere (the "big" bathtub that contains centillions of universes).

Now blow it up.  :cookieMonster:
It's called a universe for  reason. There only be one, unless you want to get into the multiverse theory and alternate dimensions/time lines. :o

Bump because you people have to see this.
Quote
When VY Canis Majoris dies, it will die as a core-collapse supernova or even a hyper-nova depending on it's mass and composition. It's huge size does not necessarily mean it will explode as a hyper-nova and give rise to a gamma ray burst when some or all of the star becomes a black hole. Even so, it's much more likely to explode as a core-collapse supernova that will produce a neutron star or a black hole depending on what happens when it's core is converted into iron. When that happens, the outer layers will initially be ejected back into space at speeds of 5,000 miles per second or more, and the wreckage will outshine the entire galaxy for weeks or months. If VY Canis Majoris had any planets, they would be at the minimum ejected into space due to the sudden loss of 90 percent or more of the star's mass back to space. Their atmospheres and surface water if present would be flash boiled away into space, and likely their surfaces would melt from being hit with billions of times more energy than they received before. It's indeed possible they would simply be vaporized in the explosion. If there are any life bearing planets within a few light years of VY Canis Majoris when it blows, all life would be destroyed. Any inhabited planets within 30 or 50 light years of the explosion will either be sterilized or suffer severe mass extinctions due to the massive blast of gamma and x-rays disrupting the ozone layer. Dangerous, even deadly doses of radiation will kill or injure any complex, multi-cellular life forms but single cell microbes can withstand radiation fields that would instantly kill humans and most other higher forms of life. Star systems farther away would be exposed to much more ionizing radiation and cosmic rays, which would induce mutations and leave traces in the soil, ice sheets and oceans, but would not trigger wide spread die offs of species wholesale. From several hundred light years away, VY Canis Majoris' demise would be no threat to a habitable planet, but a bonanza for astronomers interested in the lives and deaths of stars and how they made our own existence possible. If however, VY Canis Majoris is massive enough and has the right composition to explode as a hyper-nova, the resulting gamma ray burst will destroy life on planets caught in the jets spat out by the newly born black hole thousands of light years away. These jets form along the doomed star's axis of rotation, and are highly focused like laser beams. If an inhabited planet is not in the way, it would survive unharmed
unless it was in close proximity to the supernova. A planet or life on that planet caught in the jet is doomed. Planets within a 100 light years would melt or vaporize from the jet's onslaught, which are composed of high energy plasma moving at nearly the speed of light.They are nature's ultimate death ray, much like the Death Star out of the Star Wars movies.
This is what would happen if VY Canis Majoris died, holy stuff.

We're 3200 light years from the big CM. We're not in any danger. (I hope.)