From: BradGuth on
On Feb 8, 6:50 am, jmfbahciv <jmfbahciv(a)aol> wrote:
> Sanny wrote:
> >> Ask your computer this;  In this entire expanding universe, how many
> >> all-inclusive photons (gravity to Planck) per atom do we have by now?
>
> > infinite, if infinite exists.
>
> > Bye
> > Sanny
>
> > Chat with Computer:http://www.GetClub.com/Version 2.0
>
> Your computer program gave that output?
>
> /BAH

Sanny is half AI, or vise versa.

Why don't you suggest how many all-inclusive photons exist within our
known universe?

~ BG
From: Sanny on
> In addition to those “4.3e136 photons and counting”, there’s
> antimatter and the gamma that’s usually associated as yet another
> whole realm of photons that (sort of speak) slip through our fingers.

Ok tell me how many electrons/ protons and nutrons are there in this
Universe?

Bye
Sanny

Chat with Computer: http://www.GetClub.com/ Version 2.0

From: HVAC on

"Sanny" <softtanks22(a)hotmail.com> wrote in message
news:5fc2b308-173a-4683-b439-8d7b8328061c(a)o16g2000prh.googlegroups.com...
> In addition to those �4.3e136 photons and counting�, there�s
> antimatter and the gamma that�s usually associated as yet another
> whole realm of photons that (sort of speak) slip through our fingers.

Ok tell me how many electrons/ protons and nutrons are there in this
Universe?




Well, there's one of each... We know that much.


From: BradGuth on
On Feb 8, 10:24 am, Sanny <softtank...(a)hotmail.com> wrote:
> > In addition to those “4.3e136 photons and counting”, there’s
> > antimatter and the gamma that’s usually associated as yet another
> > whole realm of photons that (sort of speak) slip through our fingers.
>
> Ok tell me how many electrons/ protons and nutrons are there in this
> Universe?
>
> Bye
> Sanny
>
> Chat with Computer:http://www.GetClub.com/Version 2.0

Electrons and their protons are supposedly a fixed amount of mass
<1.6e60 kg (I believe includes dark matter) and perhaps <1e82 atoms
(not sure if that includes dark matter).

So, perhaps there's <2e82 electrons, and otherwise only <5e81 protons
and <5e81 neutrons.

~ BG
From: BradGuth on
On Feb 8, 11:26 am, John Stafford <n...(a)droffats.net> wrote:
> In article
> <d399e91e-cef6-4d43-93bb-0ecbef097...(a)t34g2000prm.googlegroups.com>,
>
>  BradGuth <bradg...(a)gmail.com> wrote:
> > Sanny is half AI, or vise versa.
>
> > Why don't you suggest how many all-inclusive photons exist within our
> > known universe?
>
> 0.03 Googol
>
> Next question?

..03e100 is at least within the ballpark. Thanks, and feel free to
update that swag.

Don't solids contain their own photons?

Such as; How many photons are at any one given second being created,
held/trapped or severely retarded within our sun, or that of
Sirius(B)?

~ BG