(09-16-2011, 11:53 PM)Tenet Nosce Wrote:Quote:Superbubble is the astronomical term used to describe a cavity hundreds of light years across filled with 106 K gas blown into the interstellar medium by multiple supernovae and stellar winds. The solar system lies near the center of an old superbubble, known as the Local Bubble, whose boundaries can be traced by a sudden rise in dust extinction of stars at distances greater than a few hundred light years.What?! We just "happen" to be in the center of an old one?! It is a cosmic vesica piscis!
This conjured a few questions/ideas. What if this giant diamond the size of Jupiter (I have a hard time thinking of it as a "planet" since its so unique), is the dead core of the previous galaxy that seeded the milky-way galaxy? If its a giant crystal, couldn't it be a giant data crystal with the arkashic record of the previous galaxy?