Dublin ohio
Elite Member
- Joined
- Mar 20, 2008
- Professional Status
- Licensed Appraiser
- State
- Ohio
Too unstable to last long enough and in sufficient quantitiesDoesn't monoatomic hydrogen absorb light which could account for some of that redshifting?
Too unstable to last long enough and in sufficient quantitiesDoesn't monoatomic hydrogen absorb light which could account for some of that redshifting?
I thought it was the most prevalent element in the cosmos?Too unstable to last long enough and in sufficient quantities
Hydrogen is in its molecular form. Monoatomic hydrogen will almost instantly bond with another hydrogen atom to form a molecule. Normal atomic forces at playI thought it was the most prevalent element in the cosmos?
I remember reading it absorbs light to a high degree.Hydrogen is in its molecular form. Monoatomic hydrogen will almost instantly bond with another hydrogen atom to form a molecule. Normal atomic forces at play
Not if you lived at or near the north or south poles. People near the equator would certainly be screwed; 1,000 mph to zero would be tough on the human body.Well, actually we'd all be dead within a fraction of a second...
Maybe Hoyle was right after all.And subsequent science basically is questioning the existence of the Big Bang leaving us to rethink the "Steady State" universe that was once a competitive theory with the Big Bang. The truth is that the origin of the universe is far too complex for Occam's Razor.