Lets discuss nothing - Page 3

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Posted: 13 years ago
#21

Originally posted by: MadameX

OMG, you would ignore your dad while talking to yourself?!?! 🤣🤣 You are the heights of insanity. 🤣🤣 Actually you remind of when my youngest brother was very small and he would talk to himself while playing with his toy cars...I thought he was crazy but it turns out he was pretending to be a commentator so he wasn't talking to himself per say but just that no one was listening to him. 🤣🤣

more than me... My dad had quite often caught my Bro in his school life... doing that when he used to study... 🤣 He must be saying this & that... my Dad will go listen... & it always turns out he is not speaking what he is studying... but rather speaking of cars & bikes... 🤣🤣
Edited by Sachi16 - 13 years ago
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Posted: 13 years ago
#22
Let's Discuss "NOTHING"😉

"What is nothing?"

It's a great question with may be no precise answer ..

Let's say we walk into a room and there is "nothing in it" -- no objects of any kind, no furniture and no people. It's just four walls, a ceiling and a floor.

Even though we think of the room as empty, what this room contains is air. Floating around the room are an unbelievable number of atoms and molecules. The air in the room contains nitrogen, oxygen, carbon dioxide, water vapor and all sorts of other chemicals. But we cannot see all these atoms because they are transparent. So we think of the room as full of nothing, even though it is full of atoms.
So,to get to a real form of "nothing", we need to go into outer space. Imagine that you go to the farthest, emptiest corner of the universe. This is as close to nothing as we are ever going to get. What we are looking for is a section of space that contains zero atoms. No atoms at all -- it is a perfect vacuum. That is the best approximation of "nothing" that we have in our universe today.

But here's a deeper question: Is a section of space that contains zero atoms really "nothing"?

Not really. Space, even if there are no atoms in it, is "something." For example, photons can move through space even if the space contains zero atoms. So can gravity. So can radio waves. So can a magnet's field. And we can measure space -- a chunk of space has a length, a width and a height. And time elapses. In other words, empty space is a measurable framework that has the ability to transmit certain types of energy.

"True nothing" would be truly nothing -- no space. This is hard to get a grasp on, because we cannot imagine this kind of nothing. We have never seen it. It is, presumably, what existed before the universe existed. Apparently, at the creation of the universe, there was truly nothing.

But in reality , Who knows what is 'Nothing' ?😉



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