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From: Archimedes Plutonium on 7 May 2010 03:54 Now here is an interesting brainstorming thoughts. I went to see what the frequency of having a Supernova in the Cosmos was. I found a figure of 1 supernova in a average galaxy every 50 years. A rough estimate of the number of galaxies in the Cosmos is 10^11 and the number of stars on average in a galaxy is 10^11. So that would mean that on average we should witness 10^11/50 supernova every 50 years, and on average witness10^11 / 50 / 360 or about 6 million supernova every day. Now I went to look up about how many quasars are known to exist. Wikipedia's entry says there are more than 200,000 in the Sloan Digital Sky Survey. So let us say there are 300,000 quasars in existence. Now if the Cosmos has 6,000,000 supernova going off every day and if the astronomers know of 300,000 quasars that exist. And suppose the edge of the Cosmos is really that of 400 million light years distant and is the RING structure in Jarrett's mapping of galaxies in the 3rd layer. So now, let me entertain the idea that what the quasars really are, are just Supernova going off on the Cosmic horizon, the edge of the Cosmos, and because there are 6,000,000 of these supernova going off on that edge every day, we think they are something special of intense power and energy. The redshift of the quasars is due to the Refraction Shift of the experiment. Now that may sound preposterous to think that the quasars are nothing but supernova on the Cosmic horizon. But has anyone noted that quasar sightings are rather fleeting? That the quasars seem to jump or move in place like Mexican jumping beans we played with as a child. Has anyone actually seen quasars that are "fixed in place"? Or do quasars have a tendency to be fleeting objects-- one day you see it, next day it is gone? Also, the Great Wall and Sloan Great Wall are better explained not as some vast superstructure of galaxies, but more like the idea that the edge of the Cosmos has alot of light, similar to coming up to a distant city with all the scattering of light from the city. Archimedes Plutonium http://www.iw.net/~a_plutonium/ whole entire Universe is just one big atom where dots of the electron-dot-cloud are galaxies |