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Saturday, 1 September 2018

Interstellar space is filled with “toxic grease” that would make future space travel very difficult, say researchers

Natural News: Manned spacecraft better pack windshield wipers when they venture out of the solar system and into interstellar space. An article in The Daily Mail Online reported that the void between the stars are filled with greasy carbon dust that is toxic to life despite being made of the same element as organic life.

This dust is made from the same carbon that makes up most asteroids, planets, stars, and organic lifeforms. An international research team replicated it in a laboratory to determine its effects on future space exploration.

They reported that the dust behaves somewhat like grease. The Milky Way alone is overflowing with it, much more the rest of the universe. Any starship that goes through interstellar space will find itself covered in a sticky layer of cosmic dust....read more>>>...

A.L.I.T.D OPINIONA very interesting notion; except we'd change the concept of greasy carbon dust to more like travelling through a very deep ocean! From what we've been researching, the notion of space being a vacuum is ludicrous because to be a vacuum it has to be a sealed unit; which we cannot state as we've never found the edges of space. The photo above of an exploding/forming galaxy looks like water vapour and also appears to be a sound frequency pattern or Cymatic Sound Pattern. Our theory is that the earth is surrounded by water ... sounds wacky but so does the popular notion of space being a vacuum filled with greasy carbon dust.