Flying Fokker
Well-Known Member

What is a light-year? - NASA Science
Light-year is the distance light travels in one year. Light zips through interstellar space at 186,000 miles (300,000 kilometers) per second and 5.88 trillion

Here's something else , alot of the stars you see In the sky you are seeing in the past ,or are no longer there![]()
What is a light-year? - NASA Science
Light-year is the distance light travels in one year. Light zips through interstellar space at 186,000 miles (300,000 kilometers) per second and 5.88 trillionexoplanets.nasa.gov
That actually makes sense. Think g about it. By the time we see things, they’re history. We interpret them as being real time.
So essentially time travel.Here's something else , alot of the stars you see In the sky you are seeing in the past ,or are no longer there
That actually makes sense. Think g about it. By the time we see things, they’re history. We interpret them as being real time.
I've always thought about if you were millions of light years away with an incredibly powerful telescope you'd be able to see dinosaurs roaming about.Here's something else , alot of the stars you see In the sky you are seeing in the past ,or are no longer there
And also this is the only period in history that the Earth has had TWO polar ice-caps. In fact, except during a so-called "Ice Epoch" like the one we're experiencing now, it doesn't even have one polar ice cap.I tell you what I did find out and found interesting the other week. The artic and Antarctic circles aren’t fixed, they are constantly moving. Reason being that the earth’s axis isn’t fixed.
How would the dinosaurs be able to tell you the answers?I've always thought about if you were millions of light years away with an incredibly powerful telescope you'd be able to see dinosaurs roaming about.
Think of the mysteries we could solve if we could do that. Who was Jack the Ripper? Did Jesus actually exist? Where the fuck did I put my keys?