From what I've learned, a 'black hole' or singularity is a tiny, superdense piece of matter with a gravity field so disproportionate that some theorize that they may rip the space-time fabric. Like the gravity field of VY Canis Majoris concentrated around a particle the size of a grain of salt. Even if the space-time fabric WAS ripped, how does it logically follow that material that travels through that rift enters another universe?
[QUOTE=Phycosymo;21390872][IMG]http://i208.photobucket.com/albums/bb246/Phycosymo/big.gif[/IMG]
what the fuck[/QUOTE]
If you can't at least grasp what's being said in the thread then you're probably not in High School yet.
We dead guys..
We dead.
HOLY SHIT I TOTALLY CALLED THIS!!!
A few months ago..
I got extremely baked and watched the history of the universe by steven hawking and I wrote this:
[url]http://www.mediafire.com/file/zmwt4t0zm2w/Brainturd1.txt[/url]
[Quote=Brainturd]A black hole is a universe "Steam bubble" being created. In the vastness of empty nothingness (which may act as a whole other "Measure of space") The steam bubbles that are the black holes are infact either soon to be good dimensions or will eventually collapse.
If something gets sucked into the "dimension" What happens is unknown. It may appear in the other dimension or just cease to exist. Black holes may be dimensional threat one day when they become a stable enough universe to rival our own and infact impact it on a glactic scale. This is the reason a black hole may be created in the LHC because a reality is created, wheter that reality clicks and stabalizes/grows or not decides if a black hole is formed or not, Chances are it will collapse but black holes have occoured inside our own "reality" [/quote]
[QUOTE=Zenreon117;21398549]HOLY SHIT I TOTALLY CALLED THIS!!!
A few months ago..
I got extremely baked and watched the history of the universe by steven hawking and I wrote this:
[url]http://www.mediafire.com/file/zmwt4t0zm2w/Brainturd1.txt[/url][/QUOTE]
A black hole doesn't have the structure to collapse, so it's absurd to say that a black hole would collapse. Even a rotating black hole is just a ring with zero thickness, its structure is forced by its angular momentum and "collapsing" it into a point would require robbing it of its angular momentum. But that certainly has nothing to do with the black hole being destroyed. No, it just stops rotating.
The evaporation of black holes is not a decision they make. It's a question of their size. If a black hole is small, hawking radiation causes it to lose energy faster than it can suck energy in from the surroundings, and it has very little energy to begin with if it's created with a particle accelerator. Thus it is destroyed.
I wish I hadn't done so badly in maths in primary education, it's just been getting worse from there and now i'm lightyears away from where I could be in understanding this stuff if I had put more effort in earlier :(
[QUOTE=Sgt Doom;21401414]I wish I hadn't done so badly in maths in primary education, it's just been getting worse from there and now i'm lightyears away from where I could be in understanding this stuff if I had put more effort in earlier :([/QUOTE]
Did you try reading books to educate your self instead of relying on some other person to TRY and explain it to you?
I still think it's more likely that in a black hole it's just a super dense cluster of particles.
This sounds like science fiction. "Space cadet Arnold went through the black hole and ended up in another universe!" I am so sure there is a science fiction book with this theory in it.
At most I'd call this an educated guess, nothing more.
"Every time a star collapses, a new universe is born."
What is anti-blackhole?
[QUOTE=TheForeigner;21574909]What is anti-blackhole?[/QUOTE]
A whitehole.
maybe a quantum sized universe as inside a black hole is simply a singularity. It does not necessarily have a wormhole in it.
[QUOTE=DOG-GY;21379316]It's going from a parallel universe to another. That would be breaking the laws because that universe is losing matter.
Therefore this is impossible. Mexican beat me to the post because fp went down for me[/QUOTE]
I'm sure a black hole doens't give a FUCK about the laws
brb, black hole
It is a possibility that a alternate universe exists within a black hole, just that we have yet to develop the technology to get the evidence. How can we tell if the laws of physics we made up works with the black holes and the universe if we have yet to leave our own solar system?
How is a universe born out of Stars?
Universe = Lots of different atoms
Stars = Lots of same atoms
At least last I checked...
This is very interesting, and seems very possible.
I wondered, instead of a black hole containing one tiny tiny mass, it could be kind of like a mirror.
:psyboom::psyboom::psyboom::psyboom: this describes how my head feels after reading this! :ohdear:
[QUOTE=imadaman;21585961]How is a universe born out of Stars?
Universe = Lots of different atoms
Stars = Lots of same atoms
At least last I checked...[/QUOTE]
This post... It's so cosmologically uneduquated... I... :rant:
Stars [B]ARE[/B] made of different types of atoms, and these atoms are exactly the same as in the rest of the cosmos.
We are made of different types of atoms.
In short: All atoms are compounds of Protons, neutrons, electrons, quarks of different types et cetera. It's the same all over the universe.
-snip-
Why don't we just send someone through one already and see what happens?
I volunteer to go though.
[QUOTE=choco cookie;21405863]This sounds like science fiction. "Space cadet Arnold went through the black hole and ended up in another universe!" I am so sure there is a science fiction book with this theory in it.[/QUOTE]
You would be destroyed by the gravity pull and frozen in a bubble of warped time before reaching the singularity.
[QUOTE=Eudoxia;21594755]You would be destroyed by the gravity pull and frozen in a bubble of warped time before reaching the singularity.[/QUOTE]
Exactly, this is why they cannot contain universes.
[QUOTE=Hmn30;21379502]SO....we may be in a blackhole, which is in a universe that has other black holes, each one being it's own separate universe, each one having black holes of their own...each black hole having a universe that has even more black holes...[/QUOTE]
I'm thinking paradox, there couldn't be matter at the begining but if there was by the means of another universe...
That theory is something an 8 year old would think of.
This wouldn't surprise me if it were true.
It's kind of a dumb answer though.
"Where did the universe come from?"
"ANOTHER UNIVERSE!"
"BRILLIANT!"
[img]http://assets.sbnation.com/imported_assets/75318/brilliant_medium.jpg[/img]
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