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Eva Nessenius - Planetenembryo - Origin of the Moon - Growing Earth
Phase in the evolution of a young protoplanetary disk over 16.000 years.
(NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center with the Advanced Visualization
Laboratory at the National Center for Supercomputing Applications,
A. Boley, A. Kritsuk and M. Norman)
I revised my former concept of the biogenic formation of the early continents
of the earth. This one is in accordance with the current state of the scientific
research of many factors although I put them together differently, coming
to a more logical and amazing result:
eartharxiv.org/repository/view/9116/
Astronomers use powerful telescopes to observe star and planet formation regions that are around 390 to 1500 light-years away. This means that they are seeing stages of development that took place 390 to 1500 years ago, in historical times. The physical conditions in the universe may have been different 4.5 billion years ago when our solar system was formed. Therefore, these certainly very interesting observations are not transferable; one cannot draw conclusions that the planets in our solar system were formed 4.5 billion years ago in exactly the same way as those we see today, i. e. HOPS-315:
www.eso.org/public/images/eso2512a/
Nevertheless, the models of these processes created on the basis of observations, measurements, and calculations using computer simulations are very interesting and worth seeing. One can let this sink in without jumping to conclusions:
NASA Video: science.nasa.gov/resource/protoplanetary-disk/
I have been thinking about these questions for quite some time and have come
to different conclusions about the origin of the Earth and the Moon than those proclaimed in popular science media, as if something had already been proven
which is not the case.
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