Off Topic Awaiting a thread name

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Any life smarter than us somewhere in the universe may have decided to leave us alone because it would be detrimental to our existence to show us our inadequacies.

We do know when time started – the big bang was 4.57 billion years ago, our Sun is about 40 million years old. My dad had a Vauxhall Viva back in the 70s with the original date-stamped log book – and it had not been clocked.

I think the Sun is a tad older than that
 
We do know when time started – the big bang was 4.57 billion years ago.
It would be interesting to know how that can be proved. That is the latest theory - until it is disproven and advance science comes up with another theory
 
Hasn't the discovery of Gravitational Waves not just proved this?
It's a mind blowing discovery but they keep discovering new things and believe they prove something, until they discover something else that proves something else. I'm sure more and more fascinating discoveries will be forthcoming over the next thousand years. Even then they can't be convinced there won't be more. Just a thought; who's to say it can't happen again, or that it hadn't happened before? I think this is one mystery that will never be proved beyond doubt. The more research we do, the more intelligent we get and the more advanced technology we can use, the more we will discover which may prove or disprove what has previously been believed. Where will it end?
 
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I'm absolutely fascinated by space, here we are on this massive planet filled with billions of people and an uncountable number of animals and other life forms yet we're are just a spec of dust in one tiny tiny part of our universe. It completely boggles my mind what could be out there and how vast space actually is. If it is infinite and doesn't have an 'end' then thats almost too much to get your head round. There has to be something else out there, if we're here then surely someone or something (and i don't mean little green men) else is out there too somewhere in the abyss. I don't think we'll ever discover anything, well not beyond bacteria or micro organisms (i'm hopeful of that) anyway.
 
At the moment we could well be alone. But we don't even know when time started. We are a mere dot in time. Advanced life could have existed on a planet in another Galaxy billions of years ago. What do you reckon they would have done long before their planet expired?
Ron we are a scientific accident unlikely to be repeated again. There is no one else just us.
 
The Earth will be destroyed when our Sun becomes a Red Giant because it will have already boiled our planet dry (therefore, ending all life) as it expands – a form of global warming that no amount of wind turbines will prevent – and will swallow it up even though scientists predict that the Earth may be pushed away from the Sun as it loses mass and energy.

The habitable Earth only has about a billion years left but we will probably have become extinct by then. Or we could have developed plans to move to one of the outer planets by then if we find that as they warm up they have oceans of water and solid surfaces in the new model of the solar system.

Thanks mate. I never knew <ok>
 
I'm absolutely fascinated by space, here we are on this massive planet filled with billions of people and an uncountable number of animals and other life forms yet we're are just a spec of dust in one tiny tiny part of our universe. It completely boggles my mind what could be out there and how vast space actually is. If it is infinite and doesn't have an 'end' then thats almost too much to get your head round. There has to be something else out there, if we're here then surely someone or something (and i don't mean little green men) else is out there too somewhere in the abyss. I don't think we'll ever discover anything, well not beyond bacteria or micro organisms (i'm hopeful of that) anyway.
Smokey, roll up a fat one and pass it around. It'll all become clearer.
 
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Thanks, floridaspearl, I feel better now. First class product, mine was.

What a lot of fuss. Just chunks of rock flying around to infinity. No need to get a headache about it. Of course, I do think about Aliens, Star Trek, and Dr. Who at times, but not often thank goodness. It's bad enough worrying about QPR.
 
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I am a fantastic husband, for today I helped the wonderful woman hang out the washing. As we bathed in the warmth of Winter's sun, the tall trees, in their full majesty, stood like silent sentinels in the stillness of the air. And I wondered at the nature of the world in which we live. I couldn't help but smile when I noticed how the wet washing, in it's abject misery, hung limply along the line, as Mother Earth blasted us through the solar system at a hectic 67,000 miles per hour. I love this big blue place.
 
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I am a fantastic husband, for today I helped the wonderful woman hang out the washing. As we bathed in the warmth of Winter's sun, the tall trees, in their full majesty, stood like silent sentinels in the stillness of the air. And I wondered at the nature of the world in which we live. I couldn't help but smile when I noticed how the wet washing, in it's abject misery, hung limply along the line, as Mother Earth blasted us through the solar system at a hectic 67,000 miles per hour. I love this big blue place.

Oh, very poetic, Cyc. Funny, I'm doing ours right now, earlier the better on this beautiful sunny late-Summer Saturday morning, get it done with. There's only the two of us, so it's just every 7 to 10 days, no sweat. Only hang-out things like bedding, as we are fully mechanized. God, I'm a good husband too. As Ron already mentioned, wish I could rotate and give myself a bloody good pat on the back sometimes................:D
 
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One of the things I read that struck me, was about what could possibly happen if we had a friendly meeting with aliens. If they came to Earth, and after asking if they could join us, we agreed, would the **** really **** the fan? Even if they settled with the best of intentions, the chances are that we would suffer the same fate the Indian Nations did after the arrival of Columbus. Imagine the debate we'd have about whether we should let them stay. Would our cultures be swept to the side as the North American Indians were? And could they be trusted to take a fearful no from us? I used to think it would be cool to meet an alien ... not any more. Just leave me alone in my own little, blue world, and I'll happily live out my live in ignorance.
 
One of the things I read that struck me, was about what could possibly happen if we had a friendly meeting with aliens. If they came to Earth............................

Well, the first thing they would say would be similar to that experienced by the late Robin Williams on a visit to Ireland, when he bumped into a Leprechaun for the first time. Seeing his startled face, the little bearded man looked up at him and said "Don't be afraid".
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Theory only, but pretty well accepted. Hawking on time and how we trace it back to the big bang. Time as we know it began with the BB nearly 15 billion years ago.

"As we look out at the universe, we are looking back in time, because light had to leave distant objects a long time ago, to reach us at the present time. This means that the events we observe lie on what is called our past light cone. The point of the cone is at our position, at the present time. As one goes back in time on the diagram, the light cone spreads out to greater distances, and its area increases. However, if there is sufficient matter on our past light cone, it will bend the rays of light towards each other. This will mean that, as one goes back into the past, the area of our past light cone will reach a maximum, and then start to decrease. It is this focussing of our past light cone, by the gravitational effect of the matter in the universe, that is the signal that the universe is within its horizon, like the time reverse of a black hole. If one can determine that there is enough matter in the universe, to focus our past light cone, one can then apply the singularity theorems, to show that time must have a beginning."
 
A recommended read, Bill brysons history of nearly everything. I know he's a travel writer but stick with it and also the quantum physics, once your past that it gets easier.