On Sunday, May 11, 2014 1:17:39 AM UTC+1, [email protected] wrote: > > > On Friday, May 9, 2014 5:06:11 PM UTC+1, John Ross wrote: > > Good questions. > > > > The Black Holes gravity is very constant because the destruction of each > proton first requires the creation of an anti-proton. Anti-proton are > created by the combination of a neutrino entron and a positron to produce > a very massive positron (having an energy-mass almost equal the mass of an > anti-proton) then the massive positron captures two electrons to produce > the anti-proton. Then the anti-proton must combine with a proton which > combination results in the release of a the two neutrino entrons some of > which make their way to the surface of the Black Hole and escape as a > neutrino photon to provide the gravity of the galaxy. The Black Hole is so > huge (maybe a quarter or half as massive as the rest of the galaxy) that > the month-to-month consumption of moons , planets and stars don’t change > the rate of production of neutrino photons too much over periods of > millions of years > > > Wha? This is ripe old fruity fried bollocks meld mucker. The SM black hole > ain't half the size, or weight, or half any sense as the galaxy. It isn't > feeding at the moment, nor. Might not feed again till Auntie > Andromeda arrives sometime around later on sometime after afternoon tea. > She's got a huge black hole, t she has. > > John, I'm disappointed in your failure to stand tall and faced straight to > John Clarke's falsification of the 3 photon component of your theory. He > has prcovided you empirical measurements, cross referenced at the point in > in question. > > Don't be small. Confront what he has said - quite brilliant too I should > say, for levels of detail such as that to readily be available, in working > memory not half way through a cursory appraising what, going by you so far, > merit your theory. > > > > > But this process can continue for billions of years and Black Holes can > get bigger and bigger with more and more gravity. Ultimately, after about > 50 billion years one Monster Black Hole will have developed near the center > of our Universe and its gravity will become so great as to begin attracting > galaxies from the outer regions of our Universe. By these far out galaxies > reach the region of the Monster Black Hole, they will be traveling at > speeds of many thousand times the speed of light (having been accelerating > faster and faster for 50 billion years). The Big Bang explosion of the > Monster Black Hole will occur before all of the far out galaxies have > arrived. Some parts, maybe all, of these galaxies will then pass right > through the region of the Big Bang and expand out in all directions at > speeds many thousand times the speed of light to provide the inflation > period of our successor Universe. > >
> > > John R. > > > > *From:* [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] *On > Behalf Of *LizR > *Sent:* Thursday, May 08, 2014 6:44 PM > *To:* [email protected] > *Subject:* Re: TRONNIES > > > > The gravity of the Monster Black Hole will never catch up with the galaxies.....they are causally isolated. The won't be any galaxies anyway. I'm about ready to draw a line. Yeah...I'm ducking out from here. Good luck and God bless, once again compliments for the hard work. -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Everything List" group. To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to [email protected]. To post to this group, send email to [email protected]. Visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/everything-list. For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

