Back | Reverse | Quick Reply | Post Reply |

Fascinated by Dark Stuff
Link | by kirima on 2005-08-13 23:08:09
I LOVE the idea of dark matter, or anti matter. It seems only natural that there's something huge out in the universe that we haven't discovered, because the Universe is so vast. Consiquently, I also like thinking about black holes. I KNOW the two things are very different - for one thing, there's more evidence of black holes than of dark matter. But, could the two be related?

Re: Fascinated by Dark Stuff
Link | by EricSoLazy on 2005-08-14 12:24:45
dark matter is only matter invivible to us because it doesnt reflect enough light back to our planet, it could be things like asteriods, browndwarfs to baryonic matter (protons). we can see the effets of black holes, but not the hole itself, so techincally it is "dark".

WHOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO

Re: Fascinated by Dark Stuff
Link | by jeh_ik on 2005-09-17 04:18:29
YEAAS they are related. they are dark. either dark hole or dark area is dark. as..... user"EricSoLazy" said those black colors are lack of visible lights, which our eyes allow.

you know that, black works well with any other colors.

but, don't be black. white is good for society and it's what we need.
because you need white board to draw some your picture of dream whether crayon is black or not.

eh... tag. life is hairy.

Re: Fascinated by Dark Stuff
Link | by junkergt on 2005-10-02 05:54:59
they dun consider it as dark stuff..as it is called as dark energy since it is not a matter at all

Re: Fascinated by Dark Stuff
Link | by oldcrow on 2005-10-11 10:18:48
Dark matter is supposed to make up the majority of the mass of the universe, but doesn't interact with normal matter or energy in any way...except gravitationally and then only slightly.

Black holes are made of normal matter. They are superdense remains of stars. It is their incredible density which gives them their strong gravity.

Image hosted by Photobucket.com

Back | Reverse | Quick Reply | Post Reply |

Copyright 2000-2025 Gendou | Terms of Use | Page loaded in 0.0024 seconds at 2025-02-18 13:54:07