Thursday, July 25, 2024

I

 "Universe Breakers": Unexplainable Bright Red Dots Found In The Early Universe


really have no problem with the whole

"It's a Hologram" argument.

You'll see why here in a minute.

The question I've been asking is?


When Does the physical reality stop?

And if that is true?

Then when does

the holographic representation of that reality start?

Thats what I've been wondering.

Follow along.


"We’ve been informally calling these objects ‘universe breakers’ – 

and they have been living up to their name so far.”




"The JWST (James Webb Space Telescope) has allowed astronomers to peer back further into the past than any other infrared or optical telescope, seeing infrared light that was emitted by distant galaxies just 300 million years after the Big Bang."

"With the infrared telescope, we were hoping to learn more about the formation of galaxies, as well as clear up mysteries about how supermassive black holes became so large. But we have been thrown a few surprises as we look further back into the past."

(That has been 100% truth for a while now.
The father we look back?
The more things aren't like scientist had thought they should be.

Ecclesiastes 3:11

"He has made everything beautiful in its time. He has also set eternity (infinity) in the human heart; yet[a] no one can fathom what God has done from beginning to end.

The programmer reserves the right to change the code anytime at his discretion.)


"One such surprise is the tiny, bright red dots of light that appear to be dotted throughout the early universe, around 600-800 million years after its birth. When they were first detected and analyzed, astronomers believed they could be massive galaxies. But this was at odds with how cosmological models

(Man made presuppositions.)

expect galaxies to form – as small clouds of dust and stars that grow larger over long periods of time."

“The revelation that massive galaxy formation began extremely early in the history of the universe upends what many of us had thought was settled science,” 

(Programmer changed the code yo...)

"Joel Leja, assistant professor of astronomy and astrophysics at Penn State, said in a statement following early observations. “We’ve been informally calling these objects ‘universe breakers’ – and they have been living up to their name so far.”

"Of course, seeing objects that could upend our models of galaxy formation, the team: 

wanted to be sure of what they were seeing, 

and aimed to take spectrum images of these galaxies to get a better idea of the distance of the galaxies, 

what the galaxies are made of, 

and how massive they truly are. 
Following that analysis, they have found these objects are indeed pretty weird, and in several ways."

"First off, despite being only 600-800 million years old, the galaxies appear to be packed with ancient stars, aged hundreds of millions of years old. As well as the oddity of their formation, this means the team was looking at the earliest signatures of old starlight ever found."

On Holograms:

"it's not in the space domain 
it's in the frequency domain"

"you discover it acts like a window into a three-dimensional space that was in front of it when this thing was formed and it has some very unusual properties..."


“These early galaxies would be so dense with stars 
– stars that must have formed:

in a way we've never seen, 
under conditions we would never expect 
during a period in which 
we’d never expect to see them,” 

(Programmer changed the code he does it all the time just to mess with yawl. Where do you think your sense of humor came from?

"Leja said in a statement following the latest work. “And for whatever reason, the universe stopped making objects like these after just a couple of billion years. They are unique to the early universe.”


"But there are more mysteries to solve. 

("More yet!", Love it lol.)

"The team estimates that the galaxies have surprisingly large supermassive black holes at their centers, between 100 and 1,000 times larger than Sagittarius A* at the center of the Milky Way. That's far too big for the galaxy surrounding it. If the galaxy were compressed to the size of the Milky Way, the team says that the nearest star would be just outside our Solar System, and the supermassive black hole at the center would be just 26 light-years away from Earth, visible as a huge pillar of light."


(He really likes fuckin with yawl he really does, I'm telling ya he laughing at yawl for not accepting him and all your "man made presuppositions" are only going to continue to just get blown out of the water:

Ecclesiastes 3:11

"He has made everything beautiful in its time. He has also set eternity (infinity) in the human heart; yet[a] no one can fathom what God has done from beginning to end.)


“Normally supermassive black holes are paired with galaxies,” Leja added. “They grow up together and go through all their major life experiences together. But here, we have a fully formed adult black hole living inside of what should be a baby galaxy. That doesn't really make sense, because these things should grow together, or at least that’s what we thought."

(So much for man made presuppositions)


"Supermassive black holes we see in the nearer (more recent) universe are, as the name would suggest, pretty big. Cosmologists would like to know how these supermassive black holes, which are found at the center of most (but not all) galaxies, came to be such a large size." 


"There have been a number of theories, including mergers of black holes, and that the black holes grew through feeding. These early black holes, and others discovered by the JWST, appear to be too large to be explained by these ideas, and much larger than cosmologists had been expecting in comparison to the galaxies surrounding them."


(Man made presuppositions don't really bother infinite wisdom that much TBH. They just really dont.)


“It’s very confusing,” Leja added. 


(...no one can fathom what God has done from beginning to end.)


“You can make this uncomfortably fit 

in our current model 

(man made presuppositions) 

of the universe, 

but only if we evoke some exotic, 

insanely rapid formation 

at the beginning of time. 

This is, without a doubt, 

the most peculiar 

and interesting set of objects 

I've seen in my career.”


Remember?

When Does the physical reality stop?

And if that is true?

Then when does

the holographic representation

of that reality start?


Thats what I've been wondering.


Oort Cloud: Facts


The Oort Cloud: What is It?

In the silence and darkness between the stars, where our Sun appears as just a particularly bright star, a theorized group of icy objects collectively called the Oort Cloud coast along their orbits like lazy moths around a porch light.


Scale and Distance

The Oort Cloud is the most distant region in our solar system, and it's jaw-droppingly far away, extending perhaps one-quarter to halfway from our Sun to the next star.


To appreciate the distance to the Oort Cloud, it’s helpful to set aside miles and kilometers and instead use the astronomical unit, or AU — a unit defined as the distance between Earth and the Sun, with 1 AU being roughly 93 million miles or 150 million kilometers.


For comparison, Pluto’s more elliptical orbit carries it between about 30 and 50 astronomical units from the Sun. The inner edge of the Oort Cloud, however, is thought to be located between 2,000 and 5,000 AU from the Sun, with the outer edge being located somewhere between 10,000 and 100,000 AU from the Sun.


"If those distances are difficult to visualize, you can instead use time as your ruler. At its current speed of about a million miles a day, NASA's Voyager 1 spacecraft won't enter the Oort Cloud for about 300 years. And it won’t exit the outer edge for maybe 30,000 years."


(In other words?

Whoever tries to get something through it to the other side?

Or come through it?

 To us?

Aint gonna make it.

30,000 years is along time for a cryogenic chamber to operate

on infinite energy

yet another blow to the Alien Hypothesis.

Aint simply aint gonna get out or make it in.)

"Even if you could travel at the speed of light (about 671 million miles per hour, or 1 billion kilometers per hour), a trip to the Oort Cloud would require that you pack for a lengthy expedition.


"When light leaves the Sun, 

(Gods first word were?)

"it takes a little over eight minutes to reach Earth, and about 4.5 hours to reach Neptune’s orbit. Just under three hours after passing Neptune’s orbit, the Sun’s light passes beyond the outer edge of the Kuiper Belt."


"After another 12 hours the sunlight reaches the heliopause, where the solar wind — a torrent of charged particles flowing away from the Sun at about a million miles per hour (400 kilometers per second) — smooshes up against the interstellar medium. Beyond this boundary is interstellar space, where the Sun’s magnetic field holds no sway. The sunlight has now been traveling away from the Sun for about 17 hours."


"Less than one Earth day after leaving the Sun, the sunlight has already traveled farther from the Sun than any human-made spacecraft. Yet somehow it will be another 10 to 28 days before that same sunlight reaches the inner edge of the Oort Cloud, and perhaps as much as a year and a half before the sunlight passes beyond the Oort Cloud’s outer edge."


(Article at this point goes on to talk about formation etc...)


"Orbit and Rotation

Unlike the planets, the main asteroid belt and many objects in the Kuiper Belt, objects in Oort Cloud do not necessarily travel in the same direction in a shared orbital plane around the Sun. Instead, they can travel under, over and at various inclinations, around the Sun as a thick bubble of distant, icy debris. Hence, they’re called the Oort Cloud rather than the Oort Belt."


Dutch astronomer Jan Oort proposed the existence of the cloud to explain (among other things) where long-period comets come from, and why they seem to come from all directions rather than along the orbital plane shared by the planets, asteroids and the Kuiper Belt.'


And here is a visual representation:



Ive always wondered, 
if we can see back to almost the begining of the univers?

And we see solar systems alot closer that that?

Why have I never heard anybody talking about another solar systems "Ort Cloud"?

Surely we could see them if they were there right?
So are they just not there 
and therefore only in our solar system then?

Interesting
goes to fine tuning
its a protective shell 
so to speak.

Nothing is going to get in or out.
No craft etc.
30,000 years to get out into interstellar space.
Nobody's going to be monitoring 
any kind of probe 
(trying to get out)
that kinda duration etc.


DREW, 

DUDE,

WHAT ARE YOU GETTING AT?


Beyond the Ort Cloud 

is the Pink Floyd holographic light show 

to end all Pink Floyd holographic light shows,

created by none other 

than infinite wisdom:


Psalm 19:1

The heavens declare the glory of God; 

and the firmament sheweth his handywork.


Now just gotta figure out where the elements came from lol.


I guess the main point is?

However he does it?


"no one can fathom what God has done 

from beginning to end."


Is ALWAYS

going to be your end result.


Remember:

Revelation 10:7


But in the days 

when the seventh angel 

is about to sound his trumpet, 

the mystery of God 

will be accomplished, 

just as he announced 

to his servants the prophets.”



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