Nitrogen supports life. Where does all this nitrogen come from? According to google it’s from the young planets formation. I believe this to be wrong. I have had this idea that there is actually abundant matter inside the suns gravitational reach. This could explain the abundant amount of nitrogen found in our atmosphere.
Where would all this matter come from? Well the sun is a burning nuclear reactor that I suggest gives off astronomical amounts of smoke ash, gases, and even water vapor. The bi product of a nuclear fission can be steam. I could consider it factual that the sun is giving off steam on the surface from this process.
Why do we not detect matter in space? I theorize that the atoms are magnificently smaller making them hard to detect. I did a mass conversion of a balloon of air shrinking in freezing weather. This experiment leads me to believe there is matter all around our galaxy we just do not have a way of detecting it.
There are so many ideas I have to support my idea that there is abundant matter in space that I would love to chat about it. The significance in finding matter in space, would open possibilities to farming water in outer space for my orbiting farmland idea.
My main idea to support the theory of being able to farm water in space is chemistry. A few years ago I took chemistry and I was trying to make a rain machine idea for farming. After hours of theorize what makes rain besides heat. I was almost certain that some clouds actually are from outter space or parts of them anyway. The sun is not a black hole it still gives off a lot of light and heat. I believe this heat would be trapped in the suns atmospheric zone until there is too much heat . Then the heat is pushed out and cooled even though these particles are billions of times smaller they still are abundant enough to be pushed all the way to Pluto. When these particle s make it past the earths magnetic field there is also a pressure of the atmosphere being hotter pushes most of the matter away.
Any knowledge on nitrogen or possible ways to obtain water in space would be a fun idea.
Where would all this matter come from? Well the sun is a burning nuclear reactor that I suggest gives off astronomical amounts of smoke ash, gases, and even water vapor. The bi product of a nuclear fission can be steam. I could consider it factual that the sun is giving off steam on the surface from this process.
Why do we not detect matter in space? I theorize that the atoms are magnificently smaller making them hard to detect. I did a mass conversion of a balloon of air shrinking in freezing weather. This experiment leads me to believe there is matter all around our galaxy we just do not have a way of detecting it.
There are so many ideas I have to support my idea that there is abundant matter in space that I would love to chat about it. The significance in finding matter in space, would open possibilities to farming water in outer space for my orbiting farmland idea.
My main idea to support the theory of being able to farm water in space is chemistry. A few years ago I took chemistry and I was trying to make a rain machine idea for farming. After hours of theorize what makes rain besides heat. I was almost certain that some clouds actually are from outter space or parts of them anyway. The sun is not a black hole it still gives off a lot of light and heat. I believe this heat would be trapped in the suns atmospheric zone until there is too much heat . Then the heat is pushed out and cooled even though these particles are billions of times smaller they still are abundant enough to be pushed all the way to Pluto. When these particle s make it past the earths magnetic field there is also a pressure of the atmosphere being hotter pushes most of the matter away.
Any knowledge on nitrogen or possible ways to obtain water in space would be a fun idea.