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Houston Astros Blooming Baseballs Shirt

Writer's picture: shiert limoshiert limo

The universe expands from an unimaginably hot and Houston Astros Blooming Baseballs Shirt speck (perhaps a singularity) with all the known forces unified. In a tiny fraction of a second tremendous changes are unleased. The strong force separates from the electronuclear. The weak force then separates from the electromagnetic. ~1 microsecond into this process Quarks are confined within hadrons. 1 millisecond in hydrogen nuclei are formed. 1 second in neutrinos begin to interact with other particles. At about the 3 minute mark helium nuclei are formed. 379,000 years in, the plasma cools enough for stable atoms to form and photons are released from this veil forming the Cosmic Background Radiation we see today. It’s 100 million years before the first stars can form, many generations of stars are busy creating the heavy elements necessary for life as we know it from the process of fission (both during the life of the star and during nova, supernova, and stellar collisions including those of neutron stars). All of these things almost certainly had to happen before life could form. So that’s somewhere around 1 billion years later before there is likely to be a place that is hospitable to life as we know it. But that’s even before galaxies have formed so that may be way too early, we just don’t know for certain.

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So, are there lots of 2023 Ritual cast pride shirt systems like our own? We don’t know. Are systems like ours the only place life, especially intelligent life, can develop? We don’t know. Unfortunately, this area of science is still in the tedious process of collecting sufficient data to make reliable predictions. We know for certain there are exoplanets out there, and there are LOTS of them. The chance that some of them are like Earth is very high. The chance of finding lots of star systems similar to our own is also pretty high; there is no reason to assume we are unique. As our techniques for finding exoplanets get better, as we build better telescopes and better ways of interpreting the data they deliver, we will almost certainly find star systems very like our own. It will just take time.

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