Sorry for the horrible formatting, this is my first/. comment, and systems I've used otherplaces interpret CR/LF as BR tags. My bad, I guess. Is that an option I can turn on? I'll just look, I suppose.
.. Better Format:
It is thought that swarms of these clumps came together over the age of the universe to create the galaxies we see today.
I'm not a physicist, and I haven't read other comments or even the article, but I do question whether or not we could see the 'ancient' galaxies that we see today.
I think that they'd have to move faster than the speed of light, which is pretty much not groovy, at all. I doubt that galaxies, as a whole, know how to perform the Picard maneveur.
It is thought that swarms of these clumps came together over the age of the universe to create the galaxies we see today.
I'm not a physicist, and I haven't read other comments or even the article, but I do question whether or not we could see the 'ancient' galaxies that we see today.
I think that they'd have to move faster than the speed of light, which is pretty much not groovy, at all. I doubt that galaxies, as a whole, know how to perform the Picard maneveur.
I meant that they can't be the galaxies we see in other places..
Sorry for the horrible formatting, this is my first /. comment, and systems I've used otherplaces interpret CR/LF as BR tags. My bad, I guess. Is that an option I can turn on? I'll just look, I suppose.
.. Better Format:
It is thought that swarms of these clumps came together over the age of the universe to create the galaxies we see today.
I'm not a physicist, and I haven't read other comments or even the article, but I do question whether or not we could see the 'ancient' galaxies that we see today.
I think that they'd have to move faster than the speed of light, which is pretty much not groovy, at all. I doubt that galaxies, as a whole, know how to perform the Picard maneveur.
--Lambda Jedi
It is thought that swarms of these clumps came together over the age of the universe to create the galaxies we see today. I'm not a physicist, and I haven't read other comments or even the article, but I do question whether or not we could see the 'ancient' galaxies that we see today. I think that they'd have to move faster than the speed of light, which is pretty much not groovy, at all. I doubt that galaxies, as a whole, know how to perform the Picard maneveur.