Stars are big, even if they're red dwarfs like GJ 3512. Barely more than a tenth of our sun's mass, GJ 3512 is home for a Jupiter-sized planet. Jocelyne LeBlanc is quick to point out how stars of that size, according to current models, couldn't host such large objects. Now that the apple cart's been upset, astronomers are scrambling to present different theories of formation which sound a bit far-fetched. Keeping with our theme, Mara Johnson-Groh points out
Black Holes As We Know Them May Not Exist. Rather than a singularity, these objects might be little dark energy generators. And dark energy is what fuels the universe's expansion and one of it's potential
eschatons. Now let's mix those up in a blender with Jake Parks to reveal a kooky proposition that
Planet Nine Might Be A Black Hole The Size Of A Baseball. A baseball? Did this object clear its orbital path? Does it constitute being a true black hole, or should our definition of a black hole be redefined in yet another fashion? For more stuff that Should Not Be, Sequoyah Kennedy lights a flashlight under his mug to tell everyone about
Entire Star Systems Could Be Made Of Bizarre And Terrifying Strange Matter. This ain't yo' momma's baryonic matter and it's far from hypothetical, as Sequoyah has some solid scientific cites of sightings of these kinds of strange worlds. (CS)
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from THE ANOMALIST http://bit.ly/2AKaH2H
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