Re: A colossal star with a mass around 265 times that of our Sun.
Subject: Re: A colossal star with a mass around 265 times that of our Sun.
From: Brad Guth
Date: 23/07/2010, 05:40
Newsgroups: alt.alien.research,alt.alien.visitors,alt.astronomy,alt.ufo.reports,alt.paranet.ufo

On Jul 22, 6:17 pm, Sir Gilligan Horry <G...@ga7rm5er.com> wrote:
On Thu, 22 Jul 2010 15:32:39 -0700 (PDT), Brad Guth



<bradg...@gmail.com> wrote:
On Jul 21, 11:39 pm, Sir Gilligan Horry <G...@ga7rm5er.com> wrote:
"A colossal star with a mass around 265 times that of our Sun has been
detected some 22,000 light years away. Known as R136a1."

http://www.coasttocoastam.com/article/monster-star

Nice photo archives here too...

http://apod.nasa.gov/apod/archivepix.html

"Astronomy Picture of the Day Archive".
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Perhaps the smallest planets around that big sucker are Jupiter class,
and otherwise 10x or even <100x Mj w/moons easily the size and mass of
Earth.  The monster star R136a1 (<320 Ms) sounds great, and at that
mass it can't possibly be very old.  Perhaps just a few million years
old?

~ BG.

Well, with all those Suns out there.
I'm surprised we Humans don't have three Suns and Earth's.

One to screw-up with Oil ...

http://www.dougsuttles.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/06/bp-gulf-oil-spi...

Another to screw-up with Mind-Control ...

http://2.bp.blogspot.com/_qzUO62a2vH8/SUyX5CqbAQI/AAAAAAAAAdk/EwnjoVm...

And a Third planet for 'Nightcrawler' to Nuke !

http://husaria.files.wordpress.com/2008/10/obama-nuke1.jpg

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Would anyone like a ...

http://www.avenuefbeerstop.com/images/Logos/Miller_Coors/beer-ale/Fos...

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There's actually a small but technically possible chance that our sun
was Sirius(C), so that too is where at least some of us may have
evolved from.

When that other galaxy supposedly merged with the Milky Way, who knows
what sorts of orbital dynamics and/or weird stellar motions (including
star swapping) took place.

 ~ BG