Wormholes look like this.
[img]http://www.ex-astris-scientia.org/treknology/wormhole.jpg[/img]
[QUOTE=Thom12255;17775697]Wormholes look like this.
[img]http://www.ex-astris-scientia.org/treknology/wormhole.jpg[/img][/QUOTE]
Well...That was a bit of a failure
[QUOTE=CaptainObvious1;17775714]Well...That was a bit of a failure[/QUOTE]
How so?
[QUOTE=CaptainObvious1;17775878]Hotlink picture.....[/QUOTE]
works fine for me.
[QUOTE=Thom12255;17775945]works fine for me.[/QUOTE]
Not for me guy.
A sun, during it's lifetime, will grow bigger and bigger. It will gain mass, and the gravitational pull will increase. Inside the sun are nuclear explosions, all the time, this is why it keeps expanding.
Eventually a sun burns out, and it becomes smaller and smaller. But the gravitational pull doesn't diminish, instead it increases, and increases, untill the star implodes. and a black hole is created.
Some say a black hole (aka wormhole) leads to different space, and time, or different realities.
or get one of these babies:
[media]http://www.sg-999.org.uk/stargate2.jpg[/media]
And no, blackholes dont just exist in theory.
Correct, you can't see it. But you can see the effect blackholes have on their surroundings.
If we can sustain fusion reactions, some of the things we could theoretically do with vibrating cosmic strings is pretty legit.
[QUOTE=gamefreek76;17720964]You are completely wrong, indeed.
They compress all matter into an infinitely dense singularity, which has infinite gravity, and time is all fucked and shit.[/QUOTE]
If something was infinitely dense and had infinite gravity, wouldn't everything in the universe be instantly sucked into it, no matter how far away it was?
[QUOTE=rb_pk;17775102]There was[/QUOTE]
No there wasn't.
[editline]12:41PM[/editline]
[QUOTE=Sinox;17776320]If something was infinitely dense and had infinite gravity, wouldn't everything in the universe be instantly sucked into it, no matter how far away it was?[/QUOTE]
It's pretty commonly accepted that at the center of each galaxy is a black hole. Meaning we are being sucked into one, but were orbiting it (and will be for the next few billion years).
What happens if a galaxy has two black holes, what happens when they both come into contact?
[QUOTE=bigdoggie;17776784]What happens if a galaxy has two black holes, what happens when they both come into contact?[/QUOTE]
A baby Black Hole is born.
[QUOTE=bigdoggie;17776784]What happens if a galaxy has two black holes, what happens when they both come into contact?[/QUOTE]
They merge together...
[QUOTE=bigdoggie;17776974]Explanation?[/QUOTE]
They suck each other in. It's like what would happen if two suns collided, (though it's somewhat different given that blackholes have infinite mass)
[QUOTE=Kybalt;17776988]They suck each other in. It's like what would happen if two suns collided, (though it's somewhat different given that blackholes have infinite mass)[/QUOTE]
Black holes don't have infinite mass. The singularity is said to have infinite density...because it has mass and is said to have zero volume, like a mathematical point with no dimensions.
Density = mass/volume
Also, Sun is the name of our star.
Also, from the previous page:
[QUOTE=Block]
If they were to collide there would just be one black hole then. With the mass of the both black holes of course. I think the collision isn't as clean as I'm making it seem like though. I remember reading about gravitational waves that would happen from a collision like that.
[/QUOTE]
When 2 blackholes collide gravitational waves will fly trough the universe like ripples in the water.
These are however, harmless.
Source: National Geographic Junior.
Also when you get sucked into a blackhole you'll be turned into a spaghetti string.
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