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@Billybird: Well, the best way to think of it, and it really is just amazing by the way, is that when you gaze into the night sky with your sweetheart, you're looking into the past. The reason for this is because although light travels insanely fast, 186,000 miles per second and I believe 6 trillion miles per year,

@MrBlahBlah: I know, I appreciate all of the people on here who have contributed to it. It really is nice to have these kinds of articles here on Giz because they promote healthy discussions throughout the community, and they especially allow us to utilize our imaginations, something not all of us get to do anymore.

@LessthanZach: You're telling me. Thanks for the correction with regards to atmospheric pressure and density. In no way do I claim to know it all when it comes to the cosmos, but I love to sometimes make a educated guess and use a process of elimination so that the bright minds such as yourself and others here on Giz

@ToastyUterus: That's an excellent way to put it, thank you.

@FritzLaurel: Thank you for your reply first of all. Referring to your last question, I have no idea. I mean, the way that I understand the nature of the black hole itself is that it begins as a star with a mass of approximately 10 solar masses. It goes through its main sequence, eventually becomes a neutron star,

@Maave: I for one think that it isn't a matter of 'if' or 'where', but when.

Wow. My mom's fiance posed a great question to me after I shared this story with him.

The real question then becomes, is 61% of the Netflix library available for internet streaming?

@RockyRan: "Most of us don't lack such basic common sense"

@M1911: In which it does more damage right? Doesn't the shattering of the glass allow the shock to be spread over the bottle and thus reduce said shock? Almost like falling from a high platform and bouncing off the ground, and falling from a relatively low platform and just landing with a thud.

@aaron33: I}) Totally agree. Never have purchased anything from CL but I always said to myself if I do, it'd be in a police station lot.

@koopagabla: @GustavoSM: So we're in agreement? There's no damn way.

Can O Worms.

@GustavoSM: Neutron stars or SM Black Holes maybe?

@Monty: @dcdttu: That's right. They larger they are the brighter and thus hotter they burn, the shorter they last.

Apple Employee: We've completed our drain of the AT&T death star, sir.

And while some people, myself included, marvel at how large and bright a star of that size would look like in our sky, I find it equally amazing that there are solar systems that are large enough to contain these giants.

@zeco: I believe that is only the surface though, and temperatures near the center of the star are probably 1,000,000 degrees.