Icebear...That's an interesting Forum link you have
provided with one person's opinion about "gas in space."
However, just like GLP threads (mine included) you have
to watch "buying-into" every theory that gets posted.
Watch for credible BACK-UP SOURCES with these claims (your
Forum post did not give sources to check)...and
be sure you are not just "reinventing the wheel backwards."
This is what came up from Cal-Tech about "gaseous structures
in space:"
ANSWER TO "THERE ARE NO GAS STRUCTURES IN SPACE"
[
link to coolcosmos.ipac.caltech.edu]
From Cal Tech:
Quote [Less than 50%]
We often think of the vast areas of space between the stars as being completely empty. However, this is not really true. Much of the space between the stars is filled with atomic and molecular gas (primarily hydrogen and helium) and tiny pieces of solid particles or dust (composed mainly of carbon, silicon and oxygen). In some places this interstellar material is very dense, forming nebulas. In other regions the gas and dust density is very low. The image to the right shows an infrared view of the gas and dust in our galaxy along the plane of our Milky Way galaxy.
[END QUOTE]
Maybe you are talking about something other than what
I am reading with your posts. It's been well established
in astronomy that gaseous structures are part of the
"evidence" of energies-at-work in many examples including
the gas and dust clouds which hide supernova events, etc.
O'sCookie