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10 answers

You brain works at a specific rate. Your eyes function at between twenty-five and fifty frames per second - slower than is your brain.
The Earth has a fundamental frequency, which is many orders of magnitude higher than your brain's. The Sun has a fundamental frequency (Note: the portion of the Sun which is in our Universe), which is many orders of magnitude above the Earth's. The core of the Sun is made of antimatter, which is in a separate Universe (commonly called the Imaginary Universe, with Imaginary Time). IT has a fundamental frequency which, for all Significant Moments must permit the movement of all the contained antimatter to be faster than light.
Without going out of our solar system, I have shown that your eyes function in a realm working faster then are they, that your brain functions in a realm moving far faster (Earth), and that the Sun is changing far faster than is the Earth, and the antimatter core of the Sun is making our Universe's portion of the Sun look like it is standing still. Therein lie four nested 'movings' while you read this answer, without even leaving the neighborhood. When you consider that the antimatter core of our Sun is connected to every other singularity in the universe via Imaginary Universe & Time, the 'moving' THEN becomes dynamic.

2007-07-09 12:36:10 · answer #1 · answered by science_joe_2000 4 · 0 0

The universe seems to be moving "outward." Everything seems to be moving away from everything else.

That is the affect of an explosion. The explosion that is theorized to have started the universe's expansion is called "the big bang."

How do we know the big bang occurred? We don't, but, if everything is moving outward, logically it is moving outward from some central location. If you think backwards in time, the universe must have been closer to that "central location." The further back in time, the smaller the glob of stuff we call the universe was. If you go far enough back in time, logically there was a point in time before the universe was a small, dense, glob of stuff. For some reason that dense glob began to expand, There must have been a lot of energy released to get all the stuff in the universe expand so far and to keep expanding. That release of energy was called the "big bang."

But planets also move in relation to themselves and central stars. The stars move in relation to themselves and the galaxies in which they are located.

The galaxies are moving, as has been said, "outward" in relation to each other.

The Earth is just a speck of space dust revolving around a rather uninteresting star which is located close to the trailing edge of one of the arms, and almost at the edge of a spiral galaxy we call "the Milky Way."

2007-07-09 08:03:13 · answer #2 · answered by gugliamo00 7 · 0 0

Both. The planets are moving in eleptical orbits around the sun and the sun along with all the planets is moving around the center of the galaxy. The galaxy is moving along with the other galaxies in the local group about it's (the local group's) center and the local group along with billions and billions of other groups are all expanding with the universe.

2007-07-09 07:44:27 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

some people think the world revolves around them, but in actual fact we are moving within a galaxy which is moving in the universe

2007-07-09 07:40:47 · answer #4 · answered by ogopogo 4 · 0 0

It is moving very slightly . I have used a star chart that was made in the late 1800 and I could not detect any movement. That is because we are so far apart.

2007-07-09 09:19:05 · answer #5 · answered by JOHNNIE B 7 · 0 0

All points in the universe are at its exact center. All 4(pi) steradians exactly point towrad the Big Bag. Since acceleration is an absolute measurement, merely erect three orthogonal laser ring gyroscopes and read off your total acceleration in all possible directions.

2007-07-09 07:40:47 · answer #6 · answered by Uncle Al 5 · 1 1

I'm the one standing still...the universe revolves around me.

2007-07-09 10:36:17 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

the only way to answer that is to pick a "observsation post" above our milky way and watch for hundreds of million years.
wanna play god? or how about a nice game of chess?

2007-07-09 07:40:15 · answer #8 · answered by adam s 2 · 0 1

The answer is yes -- yes to both.

2007-07-09 07:51:27 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Yes and yes.

2007-07-09 07:40:59 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 1 1

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