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Off topic & small talk: Chatterbox (Page 617)

Topic created on 14th Jan. 2019 | Page: 617 of 1347 | Answers: 13,461 | Views: 1,751,611
Anonym
Images from the James Webb Telescope are about to be released. Here you can follow the whole thing live:

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Anonym
Unfortunately, really somewhat lame presented by President Biden, but I find the 1st image really cool. You can lose yourself in it. And tomorrow come even more, already very excited.

Let's see if this works here with the image:

A****m

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MisterL
Expert
Anonym

Rainmann wrote on 13.07.2022 at 09:51: They should rather first go to the "Corona test stalls", it's not about a paltry 100 euros. Where have we come to in Germany. Good old Germany that was once 😟

Nothing worth mentioning is likely to happen. Even in the so-called mask affair were yesterday all accused acquitted...

https://www.tagesschau.de/inland/maskengeschaefte-provisionen-113.html

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Anonym
@Royal777

Well, that was probably foreseeable, would not be the 1st time that politicians eigtl. should have gotten one on and still go unpunished.
But Malganes has it eigtl. already well 2 pages before said. Let's try to spare the forum as much as possible from such negative stuff. Bring this constant Echauffieren also mostly nix.

Unfortunately I can't think of a great transition, but the pictures of the JWT were really great. I link directly to the Nasa page, so you can see it in best quality. Click on it again with the magnifying glass. Really way too awesome how that looks. Am ultra hyped on the next images / findings.

Carinanebel:

https://www.nasa.gov/sites/default/files/thumbnails/image/main_image_star-forming_region_carina_nircam_final-5mb.jpg

My current favorite, the Stephans Quintet. How razor sharp it all is:

https://www.nasa.gov/sites/default/files/thumbnails/image/main_image_galaxies_stephans_quintet_sq_nircam_miri_final-5mb.jpg

Every single mini dot in the background is a galaxy with an average of 100 billion stars, you can't really understand how many you can see on one picture.

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Anonym
SlottiKarotti wrote on 07/13/2022 at 10:37 AM: @Royal777

Carinanebel:

https://www.nasa.gov/sites/default/files/thumbnails/image/main_image_star-forming_region_carina_nircam_final-5mb.jpg

My current favorite, the Stephans Quintet. How razor sharp it all is:

https://www.nasa.gov/sites/default/files/thumbnails/image/main_image_galaxies_stephans_quintet_sq_nircam_miri_final-5mb.jpg

Every single mini dot in the background is a galaxy with an average of 100 billion stars, you can't really understand how many you can see on one picture.

So I am especially interested in the 'reddish' galaxies, they are more clearly visible on the previous photos than at Hubble. Possibly there will soon be new findings about the not visible area of the universe...

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RiverSong
Legend

SlottiKarotti wrote on 07/13/2022 at 10:37 AM: Carinanebel:
https://www.nasa.gov/sites/default/files/thumbnails/image/main_image_star-forming_region_carina_nircam_final-5mb.jpg

My current favorite, the Stephans quintet. How pin sharp it all is:

https://www.nasa.gov/sites/default/files/thumbnails/image/main_image_galaxies_stephans_quintet_sq_nircam_miri_final-5mb.jpg

Every single mini dot in the background is a galaxy with an average of 100 billion stars, you can't really understand how many you can see on one picture.

the enterprise still has a lot to explore

haven't dealt with it yet --> what distances are we talking about here?

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Anonym

Iseedeadpeople wrote on 07/13/2022 at 11:21 am

enterprise still has a lot to explore

haven't looked into it yet --> what distances are we talking about here?

The Carinanebel is quasi directly in our cosmic neighborhood, only 6500-10000 lightyears away. You can see it in the normal night sky in the southern hemisphere (without light pollution). The other image, where you can see colliding galaxies, I think is 300 million light years away. And on the very first picture, you can actually see light, which was sent to us 13 billion light years ago. One makes in such a way seen always a time journey, if one looks at this. How it looks there exactly now, one will be able to observe here again only in zig billion years.


I am occupied with it, however, also only incidentally, however, I find it more and more interesting. The theory of white holes is e.g. super exciting. So that one could be sucked in by a black hole, and is spat out again from a white hole, possibly even in another universe. Where also completely different laws of nature could rule....

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Anonym
SlottiKarotti wrote on 07/13/2022 at 11:51 AM:
The theory of white holes is super exciting, for example. So that one could be sucked in by a black hole, and spit out of a white hole again, possibly even in another universe. Where also completely different laws of nature could rule....

The probability that there is a counterpart to the Black Hole is quite given, at least there are hypotheses that are not yet proven / disproven...

Possibly we cannot see white holes at all, as it is also the case with the dark energy. Maybe the so-called white holes even emit dark energy

The James Webb telescope will also be able to better study the habitable exoplanets we know about, also highly interesting....

Edit by Caro: font color adjusted

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Anonym

Royal777 wrote on 13.07.2022 at 12:05 pm
The probability that there is a counterpart to the Black Hole is certainly given, at least there are hypotheses that are not yet proven/disproven...

Possibly we cannot see white holes at all, as it is also the case with the dark energy. Maybe the so-called white holes even emit dark energy

The James Webb telescope will also be able to better study the habitable exoplanets we know about, also highly interesting....

Edit by Caro: Font color adjusted

Yep, there is also the theory that our universe is inside a black hole. It could be so that the matter condenses up to a certain point, and thereupon there is an explosion (the big bang) and so our universe has originated. That could mean then also that universes are built possibly fractally. We also see black holes in our universe. These would be then so to speak daughter universes, while our universe itself would be embedded in a mother universe. In order to get to this mother universe, we would have to break through only the edge of our universe (black hole), what should be impossible, however. OK, my skull hums, and is probably eh only kappes. ^^


Who is interested in astronomy, can look into the YT channels LPindie or Astro-Tim, both very sympathetic.

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