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Astronomy & Space - September 2007

[Selected]: All categories Science & Mathematics Astronomy & Space

2007-09-09 03:09:40 · 1 answers · asked by mw 2

I was bought 2 acres as a gift in 2005, with deeds & certifcates.

2007-09-09 01:44:27 · 12 answers · asked by Anonymous

2007-09-09 01:43:12 · 2 answers · asked by Anonymous

2007-09-08 23:18:31 · 2 answers · asked by Anonymous

i just see the black hole of the evil eye galaxy and it makes me feel scared like i think about like what if i entered one, would i be sucked in so fast i would just disappear? would i enter it and stay there for the rest o' my life? would i finally know the answer of the age old question of the totsie pop? the world may never know!!!

so are u afraid of black holes too? share it with the whole entire world

2007-09-08 21:34:19 · 9 answers · asked by Luigisf 3

In a discussion with my fiance we were discussing the stars and how everything is constantly moving he says that one day the milky way will collide and the two will become one. Is this even remotely possible?

2007-09-08 18:58:10 · 13 answers · asked by fierce.tigress 2

Sure it would be nice to know for curtain if there is other life out there, intelligent or other wise. But this mathamatical equation shouldn't used as proof that life exists out there, sure i like to keep a open mind but it's hard not to be a " seeing is believeing " kind of person.

2007-09-08 18:20:25 · 9 answers · asked by Anonymous

details please

2007-09-08 17:56:00 · 5 answers · asked by justask23 5

or Is It Random.

Just Wonderin As Some Sattelites Have Round Orbits, While Others Have Elliptical.
So The Space Has A Curvature Defined By Exactly What?

2007-09-08 17:34:16 · 4 answers · asked by engelfeurs 2

2007-09-08 17:15:28 · 10 answers · asked by Caysie101 5

Does it burn up in the atmosphere, land in the ocean, or does the government cover up the destruction of the poor house it landed on?

2007-09-08 16:10:17 · 10 answers · asked by Anonymous

I'm thinking about ways to terraform the moon. If we could set it rotating on an axis perpendicular to the surface of the Earth (it would spin the same way the hands of a clock turn, which means it would remain tidally locked to Earth as it is now), could we possibly spin it fast enough to produce synthetic gravity in order to help it sustain both human life and a noticable atmosphere?

2007-09-08 16:00:47 · 6 answers · asked by uncleclover 5

How long does it take the moon to move through an angle equal to its own angular diameter (1/2 a degree) against the background of stars? Is this based on the synodic or sidereal month? Why?

2007-09-08 15:31:59 · 3 answers · asked by ChEMIsTrY ChICkiE 1

Suppose an observer finds that Aries is the constellation just above the horizon as the stars fade at sunrise. What constellation would be seen just above the horizon at sunrise 1 month later? How about 1 month later still?

2007-09-08 15:04:18 · 2 answers · asked by New Mommy 1

IM JUST WONDERING

2007-09-08 13:25:51 · 4 answers · asked by Joel 2

He claims that there's some element found in large quantities on our moon that is scarce on earth and in poor quality. He said he seen it on the Discovery channel or some other science channel like that. I did a search and come up with nothing. From what he claims a chunk the size of a 1 liter soda bottle could power the average home for a year. I asked him if it was radioactive and he says no. I can think of no element that would provide power like he claims other than uranium, but that's radioactive. I know in school that we dropped the metal potassium into water in science class and it exploded. But I don't think potassium is rare on earth. Can someone help me find if this is true or if it is a myth?

2007-09-08 12:57:40 · 8 answers · asked by Andy 2

Just wondering, I think it could be a asteroid or maybe global warming

I knwo the sun won't die for another billion years or somethinglike tht..

2007-09-08 11:48:03 · 12 answers · asked by Alan 3

lose 100 million tons of material during the few months that its orbit brings it close to the sun. With an orbital period of 76 years, what is the maximum remaining life span of Halley's comet?

Help!! Please =)

2007-09-08 10:59:18 · 5 answers · asked by CrazyOne 1

The equatorial system is very similar to the terrestrial coordinate system. Which terrestrial coordinate is the counterpart of right ascension? Which terrestrial coordinate is the counterpart of declination?

2007-09-08 10:57:23 · 2 answers · asked by New Mommy 1

I am taking astronomy this semester and am finding it rather fascinating. I would like to know if anyone has any recommendations for a good telescope or binoculars (suitable for stargazing)...at a budget price. Thanks...

2007-09-08 10:46:07 · 3 answers · asked by higherlovetx 5

2007-09-08 10:32:36 · 6 answers · asked by elger57 1

2007-09-08 09:10:36 · 13 answers · asked by Anonymous

Chinese Mid- Autumn Festival

2007-09-08 08:51:28 · 3 answers · asked by karina 1

If you could hypathetically visit another planet, Mars for example, would you still be in the year 2007, since every planet has its own days and years?

2007-09-08 08:34:08 · 7 answers · asked by brewer37 1

2007-09-08 08:33:50 · 24 answers · asked by Stitch 4

- large gas giants like Jupiter have immense magnetic fields and are relatively warm
- the moon is relatively close the to earth given the rate of recession
- the mix of supernova seen?
- the high magnetic field of the earth given the rate of drop

which view is the more successful predictively?
what are the predictive successes or failures of both?

2007-09-08 08:31:48 · 13 answers · asked by Anonymous

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