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A short history of nearly everythingБЂњnow flying away from us . . .БЂ«PBS NewsHour transcript, August 20, 2002. БЂњfills less than a trillionth of the available space.БЂ«Natural History, БЂњBetween the Planets,БЂ«October 2001, p. 20. БЂњThe total now is БЂat least ninety . . .БЂ™ БЂ«New Scientist, БЂњMany Moons,БЂ«March 17, 2001, p. 39; and Economist, БЂњA Roadmap for Planet-Hunting,БЂ«April 8, 2000, p. 87. БЂњwe wonБЂ™t reach the Oort cloud . . .БЂ«Sagan and Druyan, Comet, p. 198. БЂњprobably result in the deaths of all the crew . . .БЂ«New Yorker, БЂњMedicine on Mars,БЂ«February 14, 2000, p. 39. БЂњthe comets drift in a stately manner . . .БЂ«Sagan and Druyan, p. 195. БЂњThe most perfect vacuum ever created . . .БЂ«Ball, H2O, p. 15. БЂњ Our nearest neighbor in the cosmos,БЂ«Proxima Centauri . . .БЂ«Guth, p. 1; and Hawking, A Brief History of Time, p. 39. БЂњThe average distance between stars . . .БЂ«Dyson, Disturbing the Universe, p. 251. БЂњIf we were randomly inserted . . .БЂ«Sagan, p. 52. CHAPTER 3 THE REVEREND EVANSБЂ™S UNIVERSE БЂњthe energy of a hundred billion suns . . .БЂ«Ferris, The Whole Shebang, p. 37 ...» | Код для вставки книги в блог HTML
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