Our Sun is banging away everyday.  A CME is a billion tons of vacuum bang
in my warped(space) model.


On Tue, Feb 4, 2014 at 9:24 AM, Jones Beene <[email protected]> wrote:

> In a few million years, that is.
>
>
> http://thespacereporter.com/2014/01/stunning-astronomers-discover-first-ultr
> amassive-black-hole-photo/
>
> Cosmology is not off-topic for LENR, since it can open up an avenue of
> understanding. We occasionally go further with personal viewpoints on such
> things as the reality of a "big bang" as being the formative stage of our
> Universe.
>
> An alternative view is a "succession of little bangs" in a steady state
> Universe.
>
> Under this little-bang viewpoint, the Universe has existed forever, has no
> distinct beginning and no predictable end. Galaxies which exist in a local
> group (blue shifted to each other) expand and contract like miniature big
> bangs over longer cycles than even the big bang.  A local group can consist
> of 50-100 galaxies. Ours has 54.
>
> The evidence has been slight for this alternative view - and it is not
> clear
> who to attribute it to since it has evolved over time, but now we may have
> found a "little bang" which is poised to happen, relatively soon ...
>
>
> http://thespacereporter.com/2014/01/stunning-astronomers-discover-first-ultr
> amassive-black-hole-photo/
>
> Not in our lifetime, of course. It could take a while. But a little bang,
> if
> not too far away, could light up the sky in a strange way. This one is too
> far away for that.
>
> ...'scuse me while I kiss the sky...
>
>

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