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Michael Coslo wrote:
Richard Clark wrote: Isn't amazing how these academic idylls of civil discourse (populated by gentlemany of infinite wisdom) crumble into viper's nests when you arrive? The term correlation comes to mind, but I don't know what word it would be in your vocabulary so as to make the concept meaningful to you. For others who haven't read that comic strip, Arthur has proven Einstein was wrong! Well, proven in the sense that Arthur proves anything. Which is to say "he said so." After all, there is nothing mentioned about anything specific from Einstein (special theory? general theory? the photon theory? the cosmological constant?). That is best left to our imagination as Arthur has dismissed it all with a wave of the hand, whiting out Einstein's name on the Nobel prize to pencil in Art. http://www.space.com/adastra/adastra...st_060223.html Is a nice little understandable and believable bit on moon dust. Created in a massively electrically charged environment by a constant rain of micreometeorites. http://faculty.rmwc.edu/tmichalik/moon8.htm http://rds.yahoo.com/_ylt=A9...... and with shapes that have both microspheres and Ack! sorry - I pasted that too long url and accidentally sent the message instead of undoing what I did. mea maxima culpa! Point is, that the source and composition of the lunar dust is well known. We can even duplicate it here on earth. There isn't anything magic about dust that consists of a combination of microspheres and hook ended fractured rocks. Put that in a highly charged environment, and no strange and incomprehensible theories are needed to explain why it sticks to things. It's shape, size, and static...... And now for Art. Art, the dust in not specifically something that is roaming around the universe in packs. The dust or lunar soil is composed of fractured and spheroidal minerals mixed in with meteoriodal material from the little buggers that hit the moon and formed those fragements. The reason that there is a lot of that stuff on the moon as compared to the earth is because metoroids hit the moon with regularity, and once formed, tend to stay there. On earth only the larger meteoroids make it to the surface (yeah, I know a meteoroid is one that makes it to the surface) and once there, they become assimilated, and are hard to find. Occam's razor isn't always correct, but in this case..... - 73 de Mike KB3EIA - |
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