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Author Topic: They say Space is a vaccumm?  (Read 409 times)
Bitcoin Magazine (OP)
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April 07, 2014, 06:24:06 PM
 #1

so where's all the dark matter?

i am here.
Kiki112
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April 07, 2014, 08:12:48 PM
 #2

know you're joking

but still

:facepalm:

just the large proportions of space is vacuum, not all of it Cheesy

yntro
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April 07, 2014, 08:19:11 PM
 #3

vacuum means not EMPTY.. it means no air n shit like that Cheesy It's deffinetly not empty...

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Kiki112
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April 07, 2014, 08:32:30 PM
 #4

exacly Cheesy

for example, most of planets have lots of gasses so they aren't vacuum, but most of the interplanetary space is vacuum, as yntro said vacuum is the space without air, not empty space!

d2dtk
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April 08, 2014, 03:35:43 AM
 #5

No air. No sound. No Problems!

john641
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April 08, 2014, 03:41:38 AM
 #6

Space is not totally void. There are small air particles that exist per square inch. And we don't know for sure if there is a sub atomic particles that we don't discovered yet that is present in space.

zolace
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April 08, 2014, 08:47:33 AM
 #7

A vacuum is a volume of low density (few matter particles per unit volume) and, as a result, a volume of low pressure.
Pressure is just the opposite, being a volume of high density (many matter particles per unit volume) and high pressure.
In the vacuum of space for example, there's stars and galaxies (matter) but there's unimaginable great distances of almost "nothingness" between them, where there's nothing but a few hydrogen atoms every cubic meter, and very cold.

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notbatman
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April 08, 2014, 09:30:50 AM
 #8

One cubic centimetre of "empty space" contains enough energy to boil all the world's oceans according to John Archibald Wheeler.

The best terminology is aether IMO as space or vacuum implies there's nothing when there's a veritable soup of particles.

Dark energy and matter arise from the scientists who are still in the dark in regards to plasma cosmology IMO.
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April 08, 2014, 09:38:01 AM
 #9

Dark matter is everywhere.

We can only see it with IR light.
notbatman
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April 08, 2014, 09:44:41 AM
 #10

Dark matter is everywhere.

We can only see it with IR light.

I suspect you're thinking of black body radiation. Dark matter is a whole different ball of yarn.
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