• The accretion disc solution to the universe

    From mitchrae3323@gmail.com@21:1/5 to All on Fri Nov 3 12:48:43 2023
    how did an original singularity become an accretion disc?

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  • From Alan Folmsbee@21:1/5 to mitchr...@gmail.com on Sat Nov 4 06:35:21 2023
    On Friday, November 3, 2023 at 3:48:46 PM UTC-4, mitchr...@gmail.com wrote:
    how did an original singularity become an accretion disc?

    The universe is eternal, so there is not single point in time for an
    original event. However, long ago, say 100 trillion years ago, all matter
    was in a clump 10 light years across. Expansion occurs because
    protons emit a dimension that can feed a neutron or be released to
    expand the universe. Today, neutrinos are seen from places where
    neutrons are freed from protons. Fast neutrinos make the universe
    expand, but also, slow neutrinos exist that are not yet detected, which are the
    dimension that I mentioned. Expansion is from invisible slow neutrinos
    and visible fast neutrinos. Accreation discs are now possible, after
    half an eternity of expansion.

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  • From Jim Pennino@21:1/5 to mitchr...@gmail.com on Fri Nov 3 16:34:22 2023
    mitchr...@gmail.com <mitchrae3323@gmail.com> wrote:
    how did an original singularity become an accretion disc?

    Random motion, just like all your posts are a collection of random words
    strung together with no intrinsic meaning, moron.

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  • From mitchrae3323@gmail.com@21:1/5 to Alan Folmsbee on Sat Nov 4 10:01:26 2023
    On Saturday, November 4, 2023 at 6:35:26 AM UTC-7, Alan Folmsbee wrote:
    On Friday, November 3, 2023 at 3:48:46 PM UTC-4, mitchr...@gmail.com wrote:
    how did an original singularity become an accretion disc?
    The universe is eternal, so there is not single point in time for an original event. However, long ago, say 100 trillion years ago, all matter

    The universe has not always existed.
    Why would the stars be young?

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  • From Jim Pennino@21:1/5 to mitchr...@gmail.com on Sat Nov 4 10:19:01 2023
    mitchr...@gmail.com <mitchrae3323@gmail.com> wrote:
    On Saturday, November 4, 2023 at 6:35:26 AM UTC-7, Alan Folmsbee wrote:
    On Friday, November 3, 2023 at 3:48:46 PM UTC-4, mitchr...@gmail.com wrote:
    how did an original singularity become an accretion disc?
    The universe is eternal, so there is not single point in time for an
    original event. However, long ago, say 100 trillion years ago, all matter

    The universe has not always existed.

    OK.

    Why would the stars be young?

    Because of your first sentence, moron, but it is not "the stars" it is
    "some stars".

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  • From mitchrae3323@gmail.com@21:1/5 to Jim Pennino on Sun Nov 5 10:36:23 2023
    On Saturday, November 4, 2023 at 10:31:14 AM UTC-7, Jim Pennino wrote:
    mitchr...@gmail.com <mitchr...@gmail.com> wrote:
    On Saturday, November 4, 2023 at 6:35:26 AM UTC-7, Alan Folmsbee wrote:
    On Friday, November 3, 2023 at 3:48:46 PM UTC-4, mitchr...@gmail.com wrote:
    how did an original singularity become an accretion disc?
    The universe is eternal, so there is not single point in time for an
    original event. However, long ago, say 100 trillion years ago, all matter

    The universe has not always existed.
    OK.
    Why would the stars be young?
    Because of your first sentence, moron, but it is not "the stars" it is
    "some stars".

    So why aren't the stars dead by lifetime if there was no absolute beginning?

    Mitchell Raemsch

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  • From Jim Pennino@21:1/5 to mitchr...@gmail.com on Sun Nov 5 11:04:13 2023
    mitchr...@gmail.com <mitchrae3323@gmail.com> wrote:
    On Saturday, November 4, 2023 at 10:31:14 AM UTC-7, Jim Pennino wrote:
    mitchr...@gmail.com <mitchr...@gmail.com> wrote:
    On Saturday, November 4, 2023 at 6:35:26 AM UTC-7, Alan Folmsbee wrote: >> >> On Friday, November 3, 2023 at 3:48:46 PM UTC-4, mitchr...@gmail.com wrote:
    how did an original singularity become an accretion disc?
    The universe is eternal, so there is not single point in time for an
    original event. However, long ago, say 100 trillion years ago, all matter >> >
    The universe has not always existed.
    OK.
    Why would the stars be young?
    Because of your first sentence, moron, but it is not "the stars" it is
    "some stars".

    So why aren't the stars dead by lifetime if there was no absolute beginning?


    Try asking your question in English instead of babbling, word salad
    gibberish.

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