English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

Will be anything to discover? how advanced we're on it? will God be find in the innerest?

2006-09-10 10:34:19 · 10 answers · asked by Anonymous in Science & Mathematics Other - Science

10 answers

god will be find innerest ourselfs

2006-09-10 10:40:50 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Beyond the nucleus there are protons and neutrons. Beyond you find up and down quarks. We haven't been able to detect anything beyond quarks yet.

Will we find god along the way? I don't know, but when I look at the complexity of the universe, when I look at how everything fits together, and when I look and see just how different the universe would be if some things were slightly different, I find it hard to imagine how such a universe could be without the intervention of some super being or god. To me this is as close to proving that a god(s) exist as science can ever come.

2006-09-10 11:20:52 · answer #2 · answered by sparrowhawk 4 · 0 0

There are already many particles discovered past the atomic nucleus. Guess what? We didn't find God. We did find some interesting things, though. Did you know that Gravity may be an illusion? Some scientist have used a mathematical model of Gravity being a "projection" or "shadow" of 4th dimensional space, and not generated in our dimension at all. The math works, so it may be possible. See what you can learn by reading past the high school textbooks?

2006-09-10 10:42:25 · answer #3 · answered by wizard8100@sbcglobal.net 5 · 0 0

No. What happens with regards to a neutron massive call is that the electrons and protons are overwhelmed mutually, equalizing their rates, and starting to be a mass of no longer something yet neurtrons. An atom is frequently empty area, this is length is defined by way of the orbit of the electrons. In a neutron massive call, there *is* no empty area - a tablespoon of that cloth will weigh as much as Mt. Everest. there may well be a pair of protons left over, or there may well be a pair of electrons left over after the tremendous call's center is compacted, yet they had be very uncommon. Incidently - this is our universes lack of ability to maintain the mass in a single of those small quantity that consequences in the black hollow - this is not the mass itself.

2016-12-15 05:45:07 · answer #4 · answered by wexler 4 · 0 0

Beyond the atomic nucleus we have sub atomic particles namely proton, neutron and electrons. nowadays these particles are also not single. they are made up of 3 quarks U,D,S .These quarks are also finally separated in the year 2000. Probably we will have more and more in the future. There will be no end to the discoveries. I hope you remember what einstein spoke during his final days. "I proved newton wrong and if someone in the future did not prove me wrong then there is a mistake in the future generation." Bye!!!!

2006-09-11 00:55:14 · answer #5 · answered by arun 1 · 0 0

If you have the intelligence that God is almighty and nothing happens without God and you are existing because of God , you see the God in the internet also . Bucasue God is everything .If God is omnipresent , that God is in the every part of your computer , the monitor , thee key board and the brain that framed the question and the question you framed .
One interesting thing , I would like to point out here is even those religous texts which decry idolators and propogate that God is form less call God as "HE" .Thier scriptures and sacred books refer to God as "HE" only .What does that "HE" means ?. That HE is formless or what ? Where is the "SHE" of that "HE". That "HE" must also be very fond of "SHEES" as that "HE" is keeping a large number of damsels with swelling breasts ( accoding to his own description) in heaven ready as a reward for each of the believers.
Whatever one says about his God everybody who criticizes others of using any form for God is calling God as "HE" . Perhaps that he does not have any organs of the humans.
All that was made by nature is part of nature and is as great ot as mean as nature and is never independent of nature and can never sustain itself wihout nature ,all unatural things and are made of the same natural and nothing is without "nature" what makes the unatural things is also part of nature and is subject to the powers of nature . And it never dies . It is as intelligent as animals and as foolish as the humans too. It kills and and is killed. .It kills itself and does not die. It sees and is seen. It ias light and darkness .
There is no end to it . What we know about it is like a speck of microscopic dust on our threshold and what remains to be seen is greater than the galaxy. Before we can get any glimpse of a grain of it , we would be into the blackhole and go into the process of atomic fussion for reycycling after an eon at Brahma's day break. We shall have a restart from the unicellular organism again and create all sorts of the same nonsense we have creared in this existence , once again, without even a trace of the ememory of this idiocy.
The world order changeth and the creation and destrution goes on in cycles in Brahma's cosmic realm.We might already be a part of a recycled universe or recycled earth.
Those at the top would descend and those at the bottom would ascend .

Now you see it in the Internet!

2006-09-10 12:27:50 · answer #6 · answered by Infinity 7 · 0 0

The infinity of the small. The concept of infinity could be interesting when you consider that this can have limit and is still infinity. Consider the number 1 and 2. That is a limit between them, but you always can divide them by an infinity way.
So, beyond nucleus, and its power, and GWBush, lasts life!

2006-09-10 13:26:30 · answer #7 · answered by seahorse 1 · 0 0

u know that a quark particle can pass through earth without even colliding whih an atom.

2006-09-11 00:25:51 · answer #8 · answered by mahesh 2 · 0 0

protons and neutrons

2006-09-10 11:10:33 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

much more

2006-09-10 17:07:11 · answer #10 · answered by doctor asho 5 · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers