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By (user no longer on site) OP   
over a year ago

...that for The Earth to become a Black Hole it would have to be compressed into a space no bigger than 3mm.

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By *ornyHorwichCpl aka HHCCouple
over a year ago

horwich

that would take a bloody big steamroller

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By *iamondsmiles.Woman
over a year ago

little house on the praire


"...that for The Earth to become a Black Hole it would have to be compressed into a space no bigger than 3mm. "

Fit just nicely inside your head then wishy

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By *etillanteWoman
over a year ago

.


"...that for The Earth to become a Black Hole it would have to be compressed into a space no bigger than 3mm. "

Hell where do I put all me shoes?

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By (user no longer on site) OP   
over a year ago

...and for The Sun to become a Black Hole it would have to be compressed to a size of 3 kilometers!

What a mind fuck!

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By *mumaWoman
over a year ago

Livingston

I knew that!!

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By (user no longer on site) OP   
over a year ago

..only one thing in the Universe doesn't have an Event Horizon, and that's the Universe itself.

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By *entadreadMan
over a year ago

Essex


"..only one thing in the Universe doesn't have an Event Horizon, and that's the Universe itself."

Sexy and brainy, I am finding my element.

A few of you are on here...

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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago

I think my fanny could take a compressed mercury... I quite fancied Freddie in his day

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By *etillanteWoman
over a year ago

.


"I think my fanny could take a compressed mercury... I quite fancied Freddie in his day "

Now him and David Bowie mmmmmmmmmmmmmmm

Sorry Wishy going off topic, but what a topic

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By (user no longer on site) OP   
over a year ago


"I think my fanny could take a compressed mercury... I quite fancied Freddie in his day "

Well he's fookin compressed now, they cremated him and he's in a jar somewhere.

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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago

The Earth cannot become a black hole, only stars can (I think).

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By *andy muncherMan
over a year ago

Nottingham

the universe came from nothing and will go back to nothing and again again and again

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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago


"The Earth cannot become a black hole, only stars can (I think). "

think you are right, but I guess we could be sucked by one.

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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago


"I think my fanny could take a compressed mercury... I quite fancied Freddie in his day "

Yeah well talkin about black holes .....xxxx

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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago


"...and for The Sun to become a Black Hole it would have to be compressed to a size of 3 kilometers!

What a mind fuck! "

How big a Black Hole would we need to get rid of the whole of News Group Newspapers Ltd?

I think we should be told.

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By (user no longer on site) OP   
over a year ago


"The Earth cannot become a black hole, only stars can (I think). "

You're quite right, the Earth doesn't have enough mass, neither does our Sun come to that, the figures were for demonstrative purposes only. Our Sun would need to be three times it's size to have enough mass to compress down to a Black Hole.

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By (user no longer on site) OP   
over a year ago


"the universe came from nothing and will go back to nothing and again again and again "

You're saying that the entire Universe and everything in it must have all been contained within a single point in time before exploding so violently that it is still expanding now, some 9 billion years later, and to believe that is to believe that at another point in time it must start contracting again, which means that if we take today as the Universe's Event Horizon then the Universe in this lifespan has at the very least another 9 billion years before it vanishes into nothing again.

I don't buy that.

I think the answer is much more simple - I think it's always been here, it always will be here, and that it is infinite in size as well as in time.

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By *ittlemorespiceCouple
over a year ago

North Cornwall


"The Earth cannot become a black hole, only stars can (I think). "

I think you are right. Stars explode/implode. We are all made of stardust.

Mistress x

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By *ushroom7Man
over a year ago

Bradford


"the universe came from nothing and will go back to nothing and again again and again

You're saying that the entire Universe and everything in it must have all been contained within a single point in time before exploding so violently that it is still expanding now, some 9 billion years later, and to believe that is to believe that at another point in time it must start contracting again, which means that if we take today as the Universe's Event Horizon then the Universe in this lifespan has at the very least another 9 billion years before it vanishes into nothing again.

I don't buy that.

I think the answer is much more simple - I think it's always been here, it always will be here, and that it is infinite in size as well as in time."

Why 9 billion? Aren't they finding light that's now 13 billion years old?

That is some tape measure.

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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago


"

Aren't they finding light that's now 13 billion years old?

"

Christ bet thats well dusty xx

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By *ushroom7Man
over a year ago

Bradford


"

Aren't they finding light that's now 13 billion years old?

Christ bet thats well dusty xx "

That's 3..2..1..

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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago


"

Aren't they finding light that's now 13 billion years old?

Christ bet thats well dusty xx

That's 3..2..1.."

That joke has bin done before

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By *ushroom7Man
over a year ago

Bradford


"

Aren't they finding light that's now 13 billion years old?

Christ bet thats well dusty xx

That's 3..2..1..

That joke has bin done before "

And to death.

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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago


"

Aren't they finding light that's now 13 billion years old?

Christ bet thats well dusty xx

That's 3..2..1..

That joke has bin done before

And to death. "

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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago

As stars burn up their fuel reserves they collapse under their own gravity & generally, dependant upon their size/mass form either blackholes (the larger stars) or neutron stars (the smaller ones). Both are essentially super-condensed star cores, of the two, our own sun is far more likely to become a neutron star. Our sun will, in time, eventually run out of fuel, swell massively (destroying all life on earth- then the planet itself) & collapse down to a condensed metallic core. Imagine a solid rock the size of Hampden stadium being super-condensed down to the size of a grain of sand (like a mini neutron star)... it would still weigh 4 million tonnes!

Mr.Classy

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