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Record For Hottest Temp On Earth: 2,000,000,000 K

#31 {lang:macro__useroffline}   Spikeout {lang:icon}

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Posted 15 March 2006 - 01:13 AM

rawk on i call Millenium Falcon



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#32 {lang:macro__useroffline}   Cspace {lang:icon}

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Posted 15 March 2006 - 01:15 AM

QUOTE(Spikeout @ Mar 14 2006, 08:13 PM)
rawk on i call Millenium Falcon
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I've got dibs on Lando's Sorosuub Yacht thumb.gif
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#33 {lang:macro__useroffline}   The Man with the Golden Gun {lang:icon}

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Posted 15 March 2006 - 01:26 AM

QUOTE(Cspace @ Mar 14 2006, 04:15 PM)
QUOTE(Spikeout @ Mar 14 2006, 08:13 PM)
rawk on i call Millenium Falcon
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I've got dibs on Lando's Sorosuub Yacht thumb.gif
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Shotgun bluetongue.gif
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#34 {lang:macro__useroffline}   Ferret Overlord {lang:icon}

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Posted 15 March 2006 - 01:39 AM

I'm sticking with the good ole Mustang.


Second, how did we measure 2 billion degrees?

And third, nerve impulses move a hella lot faster than my eye twitchin' skills, which are UBER FAST.

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#35 {lang:macro__useroffline}   The Man with the Golden Gun {lang:icon}

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Posted 15 March 2006 - 01:42 AM

I don't know...Eye lids are said to be the fastest moving part of the body
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#36 {lang:macro__useroffline}   Ferret Overlord {lang:icon}

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Posted 15 March 2006 - 01:45 AM

Electronic shocks running through the nervous system aren't parts of the body as far as I'm concerned. And nerves don't move.
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#37 {lang:macro__useroffline}   The Man with the Golden Gun {lang:icon}

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Posted 15 March 2006 - 01:49 AM

exactly...nerves are what makes you move though when the body feels like you are in danger
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#38 {lang:macro__useroffline}   Ferret Overlord {lang:icon}

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Posted 15 March 2006 - 01:52 AM

So you're essentially agreeing with me, which proves you wrong?

-.-
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#39 {lang:macro__useroffline}   The Man with the Golden Gun {lang:icon}

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Posted 15 March 2006 - 01:55 AM

I shall agree that you are correct

you outsmarted me. For a second though, i lost track off what you had said. But now that i re read it...i see that you are correct
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#40 {lang:macro__useroffline}   Cspace {lang:icon}

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Posted 15 March 2006 - 01:59 AM

QUOTE
Second, how did we measure 2 billion degrees?

Probably by measuring the wavelength of the radiation it emitted.
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#41 {lang:macro__useroffline}   Bespetna {lang:icon}

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Posted 15 March 2006 - 03:11 AM

QUOTE(bespetna @ Mar 14 2006, 05:47 PM)
I know why it got so hot over there!! It is becouse I was there TheSmile.gif. bluetongue.gif
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Hottest SeeD!!!! TheSmile.gif

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#42 {lang:macro__useroffline}   Ferret Overlord {lang:icon}

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Posted 15 March 2006 - 11:50 AM

Stop doing that.
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#43 {lang:macro__useroffline}   Ratty {lang:icon}

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Posted 15 March 2006 - 12:50 PM

QUOTE(Cspace @ Mar 15 2006, 12:59 PM)
QUOTE
Second, how did we measure 2 billion degrees?

Probably by measuring the wavelength of the radiation it emitted.
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I'm not entirely positive about this, but they could have measured the wavelength of the radiation emitted. That's how they measure the temperatures of distant stars, and it's fairly uniform. We all produce heat and glow in infrared. When you get hotter stuff though, it'll creep up the spectrum from visible, to ultraviolet, to x-rays, to gamma rays, and then to 'cosmic rays' (basically anything with more energy than gamma rays). To put it into perspective, our sun peaks in the yellow end of the spectrum and 'visible light' (which is why that is what we can see; wouldn't be much use to see what the sun doesn't emit). Neutron stars and stars getting sucked into black holes emit a bit of x-rays. These wavelengths correspond to the energy (heat) which produced them, and that is my guess for how they measured this.

Yay. I feel smart.
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#44 {lang:macro__useroffline}   Spikeout {lang:icon}

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Posted 15 March 2006 - 01:01 PM

bask in the glory



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#45 {lang:macro__useroffline}   Ratty {lang:icon}

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Posted 15 March 2006 - 01:03 PM

*basks in non-existant glory which is really cspaces*

Ya know what i think is really weird..? Dunno if its been answered anywhere though.

They said that they had that thing submerged in water and oil, ya? Why didnt it all just like... Instantly evaporate because of that insanely high temperature..?
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