@suziannesaid Gravity is something basic. It is well known. Especially in a somewhat static environment.
The movement of stars in a galaxy is somewhat chaotic. Knowing everything there is to know about gravity isn't going to help you codify stellar motion in a galaxy. It is not a single gravity well system like a solar system, and that's why Kepler just ain't gonna help you that mu ...[text shortened]... explain a Super Bowl prediction.
Stars aren't planets, and they don't have the same environment.
What is your source of information?
You can say little green aliens are doing it too, but it doesn't mean anything. You need to prove it, something you seem inept at doing at every turn.
@shallow-bluesaid A basic high school education, which you evidently never completed.
Basically, yes. And I actually paid attention in all the other classes I've taken. On the way to my BS I took several electives in Astronomy because I was interested in the science ever since I got my first telescope as a kid. But nowadays people can glean basic knowledge of almost anything on the internet. Apparently, he's only learned enough to throw out these idiotic 'gotcha' questions.
@Metal-Brain If you had even completed HS you would not be asking so many inane questions.
You want everyone here to answer your questions which can be answered by a google search, instead you want to pose questions that reveal to you your innate superiority.
@sonhousesaid @Metal-Brain If you had even completed HS you would not be asking so many inane questions.
You want everyone here to answer your questions which can be answered by a google search, instead you want to pose questions that reveal to you your innate superiority.
@shallow-bluesaid Why are you as ignorant about history as about science?
You are.
"The "Dark Ages" is a term for the Early Middle Ages or Middle Ages in Western Europe after the fall of the Western Roman Empire, characterizing it as marked by economic, intellectual, and cultural decline."