Talk:Fluidic space

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This external link Stellar Cartography - F, which was part of the article, contains nothing not in this article. It is preserved here as a reference.



The following statement, taken from the article: "The term fluidic space, could be in reference to the idea of entire galaxies consisting almost entirely of hydrogen and other gasses. In galaxies such as these, there are no stars, and the gravity of the gasses condense them to such an extent that they take on an almost fluid quality. It is believed that there are a great deal more of these galaxies than ones similar to our own.", - This needs to be sourced/referenced. I've never heard anything about this, nor do I see how this could be. 65.92.152.82 19:40, 14 January 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Gasses compressing under gravity is how stars are formed. A gas is a fluid anyway, you don't need to compress it to make it act like one, by definition. --Tango 01:46, 23 June 2006 (UTC)[reply]