2020-01-19 at 4:49 PM UTC
Obbe
Alan What?
[annoy my right-angled speediness]
Originally posted by Fox
Lol not to brag but I remember one time you told me you actually, legitimately hate me. You wrote like a whole paragraph about it. I’d have to dig around for it :o
Sure, dig it up let's examine why you're a piece of shit.
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2020-01-19 at 4:59 PM UTC
-SpectraL
coward
[the spuriously bluish-lilac bushman]
There's some black holes out there the size of an entire universe. Just imagine the level of power they wield. The energies involved would be next to immeasurable. And then there's neutron stars, where just a single teaspoon of its matter weighs as much as the The Great Pyramid of Giza, and its gravity well could compact our entire solar system down to the head of a pin.
2020-01-19 at 5:05 PM UTC
The stars that make palladium are relatively rare and very very MASSIVE. Know this Helium is 2 in Atomic Number . 4 in atomic weight while palladium is 46 om atomic number, 106.42.
The stars that can Palladium is many orders of magnitude greater than our sun.
The Noble Elements are chemically intert or inactive especially toward oxygen. Platinum is the most noble of the metals. That is only part of the story, of these rare metals, it takes massive transfers of energy to make such high numbered (Atomic Number and Atomic Weight) elements Energy transfers far beyond anything we know
The Energy to create the elements of the Platinum metal Group is so far beyond our technology. Fusion and Fission all we can do in Fusion which creates Heavier Elements is Hydrogen to Helium - the Energies required for lets say Platinum is beyond our imagination.
2020-01-19 at 5:06 PM UTC
Obbe
Alan What?
[annoy my right-angled speediness]
Science sent the Hubble telescope out into space, so it could capture light and the absence thereof, from the very beginning of time. And the telescope really did that. So now we know that there was once absolutely nothing, such a perfect nothing that there wasn't even nothing or once.
2020-01-19 at 5:06 PM UTC
Empty space isn't nothing.
2020-01-19 at 5:09 PM UTC
-SpectraL
coward
[the spuriously bluish-lilac bushman]
Most of the gold on Earth came from space, from neutron star collisions, and also from asteroids. Just one asteroid recently discovered is estimated to contain $700 quintillion in gold and precious metals, enough to hand every person on the planet $92 billion.
2020-01-19 at 5:10 PM UTC
If there was that much gold it would be worthless
2020-01-19 at 5:14 PM UTC
-SpectraL
coward
[the spuriously bluish-lilac bushman]
Some planets rain real diamonds, and have liquid diamond rivers and lakes.
2020-01-19 at 5:15 PM UTC
Obbe
Alan What?
[annoy my right-angled speediness]
Originally posted by -SpectraL
Some planets rain real diamonds, and have liquid diamond rivers and lakes.
Lol
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2020-01-19 at 5:18 PM UTC
Sometimes i wish I was SpectraL but then i think better of it
2020-01-19 at 5:24 PM UTC
-SpectraL
coward
[the spuriously bluish-lilac bushman]
Yeah, you don't want to talk on a bulletin board system.
The following users say it would be alright if the author of this
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