Over the Hedge by T Lewis and Michael Fry for April 29, 2023

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    homfencing  over 1 year ago

    If those stars have passed beyond the cosmic event horizon, that’s exactly what WOULD be seen.

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    Yakety Sax  over 1 year ago

    https://www.nasa.gov/image-feature/goddard/2023/hubble-spots-a-star-forming-spiral

    https://www.nasa.gov/image-feature/goddard/2023/hubble-views-an-intriguing-active-galaxy

    https://www.nasa.gov/image-feature/goddard/2023/hubble-captures-an-elusive-galaxy-cluster

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    scote1379 Premium Member over 1 year ago

    Ya had to ask !

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    Doug K  over 1 year ago

    It’s probable many of the stars that we an see are no longer there.

    It’s not probable that none of those stars are there.

    It’s likely that most of the ones we can see without a telescope are still there (they/most are much closer than a million light-years away).

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    Ellis97  over 1 year ago

    What I wouldn’t give to witness a starry night.

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    Aladar30 Premium Member over 1 year ago

    This was dark.

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    Forest Dweller 54  over 1 year ago

    I can see the Milky Way every night when it isn’t cloudy. On a New moon when it’s completely dark, the sky looks like it’s full of Diamonds. I love my property. Living in the middle of a National Forest is a good thing, at least for me.

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    Purple People Eater  over 1 year ago

    So, if we could travel to another galaxy, would we be in the future or the past? (Time travel is confusing.)

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    cabalonrye  over 1 year ago

    Which also means that all the astrology mumbling is based on star light millions of years old and on stars that could be dead right now. That’s something that always amuses me when I read those predictions.

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    TMMILLER Premium Member over 1 year ago

    I lived out in the Styx. Dark nights were awesome. When I went to work for the Forest Service it was Jan 7. Cold, clear winter mountain air close to midnight looking up at the stars! Growing up where I had I thought I had seen what the skies had to offer. I learned that night, I hadn’t seen anything yet!

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    FireAnt_Hater  over 1 year ago

    I was a child in rural Alabama in the ’50s and ’60s (no light pollution). I could actually see the Milky Way. Not these days…

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    Chithing Premium Member over 1 year ago

    Uh oh. Maybe Galactus is on his way here.

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    oakie817  over 1 year ago

    remember it’s @ before # except after $

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    JMH714  over 1 year ago

    Only one star we can see that are right now: sun. Our sun.

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    leemorse9777  over 1 year ago

    One of these days, He, She, It, They are going to hit the program delete button and that will be that. Nothing to get excited about. Just another failed experiment.

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    ron  over 1 year ago

    This was a great Asimov story years ago.

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    David Rickard Premium Member over 1 year ago

    Someone must’ve recorded the 9 billion names of god.

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