Imagine a structure having one centrally located objects with large energy and few similar looking objects revolving around it. Where did your imagination took you off? You must have either been wandering across universe or peeping into an atom. Isn't it? It's a coincidence that both have got the same structure. Most of us must have put our thoughts on the same. What wonders me is both are placed at extreme. In other words both these structure are out of scope of a general being. If one needs a telescope(macro vision), the other needs a microscope(micro vision). Although mathematical formulas have helped a lot to understand their structures, still a lot yet to be explored. I wonder! why no other object could simulate the structure in between the two extremes. Is this a nature's way to repeat itself at extreme? Until some great mind draws some bottom line only our imagination can go beyond these extremes.
Lets imagine our solar system itself is an atom of some other solar system. Scientists are struggling hard to get the exact count of planets in our solar system. The count varies between 9 to 11 with little confusion whether to include newly found planets Ceres and Eris. It becomes necessary for a solar system, not to indulge into any galactic process in order to sustain life. The similar phenomena can be seen with inert elements that do not take part in any chemical reaction.
Trying to simulate our own solar system with an inert element I should go for Neon (with 10 electrons) atom. The imagination set the planet count to 10.
Where on one hand the macro vision sets us on a neon atom, the micro vision on other hand opens way to explore life on electrons of an inert element.
I hope you are not lost between the extremes. Imaginations doesn't know boundaries. Whether our solar system itself is an atom or the atom is another solar system the truth will remain that life at extremes have vision separation. As long as the separation exist let the imagination explore.
Lets imagine our solar system itself is an atom of some other solar system. Scientists are struggling hard to get the exact count of planets in our solar system. The count varies between 9 to 11 with little confusion whether to include newly found planets Ceres and Eris. It becomes necessary for a solar system, not to indulge into any galactic process in order to sustain life. The similar phenomena can be seen with inert elements that do not take part in any chemical reaction.
Trying to simulate our own solar system with an inert element I should go for Neon (with 10 electrons) atom. The imagination set the planet count to 10.
Where on one hand the macro vision sets us on a neon atom, the micro vision on other hand opens way to explore life on electrons of an inert element.
I hope you are not lost between the extremes. Imaginations doesn't know boundaries. Whether our solar system itself is an atom or the atom is another solar system the truth will remain that life at extremes have vision separation. As long as the separation exist let the imagination explore.