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Groups > alt.fan.rush-limbaugh > #2863123

Re: destination mars

From The Starmaker <starmaker@ix.netcom.com>
Newsgroups alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, sci.physics, sci.physics.relativity
Subject Re: destination mars
Date 2024-11-10 15:24 -0800
Organization The Starmaker Organization
Message-ID <673140AE.1B67@ix.netcom.com> (permalink)
References <a6d96673-0eef-1592-af53-dff66dc5eca5@ichigo.kinoko.kuri> <672CDD18.366D@ix.netcom.com> <lpb4odFe87dU3@mid.individual.net>

Cross-posted to 3 groups.

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Thomas Heger wrote:
> 
> Am Donnerstag000007, 07.11.2024 um 16:30 schrieb The Starmaker:
> > kazu wrote:
> >>
> >> finally.
> >
> > Mars is a dead planet.
> >
> > Mars has been a dead planet since it's very beginnings.
> >
> > Mars is Red and Red is Dead!
> >
> > All Red planets are Dead planets.
> >
> > Red is Dead.
> 
> All wrong, because the read color stems from Iron-oxide and that would
> need water in liquid form to build.
> 
> So Mars should have had an atmosphere and lots of water in a very remote
> past.
> 
> The water and the atmosphere are long gone, but the red color remained.
> 
> Now: how could this happen?
> 
> Well, I'm actually a proponent of 'Growing Earth' theory and that is
> also valid for other celestial bodies than the Earth.
> 
> This theory assumes, that all stars, planets and moons grow over long
> periods of time.
> 
> This growth is caused by local structures in the local realm of spacetime.
> 
> This causes matter to form, where already matter is.
> 
> This applies to stars as well as for planets.
> 
> In the course of planetary growth the mass of the planet grows, hence
> also the diameter of its orbit around the central star of its solar system.
> 
> The would beginn ín a region, which is too hot for water and ends up in
> a region too cold.
> 
> Now in the middle is kind of 'habitable zone', where liquid water does
> exist.
> 
> That water created iron oxide and that is, what made Mars red.
> 
> Then the orbit expands and the planet reaches a reagion, where all water
> is frozen.
> 
> Then the water gets into a light gas form by sublimation and is finally
> blown away and left to the darkness of the universe.
> 
> What remains is red colour.
> ...
> 
> TH

wat are you sayin? All the red stars are dead stars because they ran out
of water????



-- 
The Starmaker -- To question the unquestionable, ask the unaskable,
to think the unthinkable, mention the unmentionable, say the unsayable, 
and challenge the unchallengeable.

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Re: destination mars Thomas Heger <ttt_heg@web.de> - 2024-11-10 08:13 +0100
  Re: destination mars The Starmaker <starmaker@ix.netcom.com> - 2024-11-10 15:24 -0800
    Re: destination mars The Starmaker <starmaker@ix.netcom.com> - 2024-11-10 21:41 -0800
    Re: destination mars Gronk <invalide@invalid.invalid> - 2024-11-10 22:46 -0700
    Re: destination mars Thomas Heger <ttt_heg@web.de> - 2024-11-11 08:33 +0100
  Re: destination mars Gronk <invalide@invalid.invalid> - 2024-11-10 22:47 -0700

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