There's Christian Ready and there's 1080 interlaced Christian but, for the best experience, there's Full Christian.
ElDoRado1239
There's two kind of people. 1: Maybe they'll just shut off the light and… 2: …decide to catch another big bang or different dimension.
Paublus Americanus AMERICANUS
this speculation is very unpredicatable, and not necessary for life. Blue dwarfs would not be very productive because the incident radiation form would be antithetical to life itself. The frequency change would be ultra-violet in nature due to quantum spectrum characteristics, and show many symptoms breaking life molecules
Dennis Nicholson
In the April 2019 Sky & Telescope, an article by Ken Croswell, entitled, "Spendthrift Spirals", delves into, among other things, how spiral galaxies use their allotment of molecular hydrogen gas to form stars of whatever sort. Presently, our Galaxy, the Milky Way, can but muster one or two new stars per year. Yet, in it's hey day, it made a great deal more. The idea is put forth that, to one degree or another, such events as galactic mergers (quite rare) or gas in- falling from the galactic halo serve to replenish this heavier molecular form of hydrogen because it's… Read more »
Event Horizon
Christian's full episode. The Universe's Endgame with Christian Ready
There's Christian Ready and there's 1080 interlaced Christian but, for the best experience, there's Full Christian.
There's two kind of people.
1: Maybe they'll just shut off the light and…
2: …decide to catch another big bang or different dimension.
this speculation is very unpredicatable, and not necessary for life. Blue dwarfs would not be very productive because the incident radiation form would be antithetical to life itself. The frequency change would be ultra-violet in nature due to quantum spectrum characteristics, and show many symptoms breaking life molecules
In the April 2019 Sky & Telescope, an article by Ken Croswell, entitled, "Spendthrift Spirals", delves into, among other things, how spiral galaxies use their allotment of molecular hydrogen gas to form stars of whatever sort. Presently, our Galaxy, the Milky Way, can but muster one or two new stars per year. Yet, in it's hey day, it made a great deal more. The idea is put forth that, to one degree or another, such events as galactic mergers (quite rare) or gas in- falling from the galactic halo serve to replenish this heavier molecular form of hydrogen because it's… Read more »
Christian's full episode. The Universe's Endgame with Christian Ready
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