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Vita Kulas

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3y ago

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What will most matter that exists in the universe go through?

Star cycle


Most of the matter that exists in the universe will go through the?

star cycle


Is dark matter like a black hole?

well, they both invisible and they got gravity. However Black Holes sucks everything into it and dark matter go through things and it holds up the universe together.


How do you get off avant gardens in Lego universe?

go through the maze and talk to the lady, then go to nimbus station


How do you get to a different universe?

The word "universe" means "everything", so basicly, there's only one universe that includes everything everywhere. You can't "get to a different universe", because no matter where you "go" -may your target be a point in space, in time or a different dimension- you are always within the "collection" of everything, the universe.


Is it possible that the other 50 percent of missing antimatter comprises the matter inside the black holes at the center of a galaxy?

One of the unsolved questions about our Universe is why it is composed almost entirely of matter. In our understanding of our Universe, the ratio of matter to anti-matter should be about 50-50. Saying, "All the anti-matter went into the super-massive black holes (smbh) at the center of galaxies" doesn't solve very much. It just leads to the question, "Why did only anti-matter go into smbh, and not matter?" There is SOMETHING about our Universe that favors matter over anti-matter. We just don't yet know what that something is. Simply saying that it is something that makes anti-matter, but not matter, go into smbh doesn't really solve much.


What is the difference between dark energy and dark matter?

The two are quite unrelated. It would be harder to find similarities than differences. More exactly, the two are only related by the fact that (as of 2013) we don't understand either -- thus the name "dark." Dark matter is the type of matter that exists throughout our Universe, which interacts with baryonic matter (ie, the stuff we understand) only through gravity. This stuff (whatever it happens to be) warps space and prevents galaxies from flying apart as they spin; but does not interact via the electromagnetic force, the strong force, or the weak force. Its mass density in our Universe, as best we can tell, is about six times greater than that of bayronic matter. Dark energy is whatever is causing the space within our Universe to increase the rate of expansion. Gravity SHOULD be slowing down that expansion over billions of years, but SOMETHING is causing the rate to go higher. What is causing this? -- we have no idea!!


Is history ever complete?

No. As long as the universe still exists, things will be happening. Recorded history may end when humans go extinct, but events will still happen.


Can dark matter enter a humans body?

The whole point of dark matter is that it doesn't interact via the electromagnetic force (that's what makes it "dark"). It's therefore largely unaffected by normal matter (except through gravity), and could go straight through your body... or a lead wall, or the Earth... without you even noticing. In fact, if dark matter really exists, that pretty much has to be happening all the time.


Can a human being go through ghosts?

yes a human can go through a ghost no matter what u wont feel anything


Can dark matter kill you?

The whole point of dark matter ... the thing that makes it "dark" ... is that it doesn't interact with normal matter except through the gravitational force (and, possibly, for some potential types of dark matter ... remember that nobody really knows what it actually is yet ... the weak force).One type of dark matter that we know about for sure is neutrinos. Around 65 billion neutrinos per second pass through every square centimeter of your body perpendicular to the direction of the Sun. They have been since you were born ... since before you were born, in fact. Even at night, because they go straight through the Earth too and come up through the ground on the side facing away from the Sun. The kajillion that have already done so haven't killed you yet, it's not all that likely that the kajillion and first is going to kill you.About the only reasonably possible way to die from dark matter would be if there were a lot of it concentrated in one smallish area, in which case you could be pulled apart by tidal forces if you were in a spaceship that went too close to it. This also isn't likely to happen.


What is the universe out of?

The definition of "universe" is something like: All of space, all of time,and everything that occupies them. So anything that can be namedor described is, by definition, in the universe.There's nothing like Truman crashing his sailboat into the wall at theboundary of everything he had ever known.A different view:The best way to answer this is to describe what is in it.All Matter, space, and time are in it. So therefore outside of it is no matter, no space, or time.Btw since the universe is expanding, such places where there is no space, matter, or time, do exist.Another Perspective:It is generally believed that there is no "outside" to the universe. The universe is everything in existence. It has no boundary, i.e. there is no point at which all the matter of the universe is behind you with an endless void ahead of you.It is likely that the universe in infinite, but even if it is not, that does not necessarily mean it has a boundary. The universe may be "curved", meaning that if you go in one direction for long enough you end up back where you started (as is the case on the surface of the earth).