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@mok214 | 15 January 20 | |
@ rainingkrypton - 15.01.20 - 04:23pm Just stumbled upon an interesting discussion about black holes, wormholes and time travel in the comments section of a YouTube vid. Would love to share it. Maybe via blogs. Now I'm convinced that a black hole is just a 'mass sink', no wormhole or tunnel into other dimensions, etc. This is due to the fact as they grow in size (stellar mass to intermediate and to supermassive) which is most likely due to matter 'freezing in space-time' due to the insane gravity where a limited maximum amount of matter possible has been 'sucked in' and compacted adding to the astronomically high mass and any additional matter accumulating on the boundary/peripheral of the Event Horizon by breaking up into its elementary constituents (Atoms and molecules... to Planck length energy strings... waveforms... or whatever fundamental form the energy fields that make up what we call matter) and forming a ring, adding to its radius - a change in position of the Event Horizon. The core is not 'infinitely dense' as Hawking Radiation is emitted which is how the black hole reverts back as to not dwell into the world of freaky Physics..one way terminal travel basically. No wormhole. No tunnel into another realm. That's what I got out of it. Makes sense. You need to learn more about astrophysics. If I was strictly sober I could tell you how wrong what you think is. I'm guessing you don't even have a clue what a point singularity is. |
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@sisfreak2017 | 16 January 20 | |
@rainingkrypton | 16 January 20 | |
@ mok214 - 15.01.20 - 06:59pm You need to learn more about astrophysics. If I was strictly sober I could tell you how wrong what you think is. I'm guessing you don't even have a clue what a point singularity is. Yes. That's the worldwide view with an infinitely dense gravitational point right inside where the laws of Physics is not the same. Spacetime curves infinitely into a funnel shape, etc etc. And, did I ever say I was an astrophysicist and anything remotely similar? I get it you're very 'well-versed' in all of this but I still got plenty of time on my hands, so I have more to see, do and experience. |
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@rainingkrypton | 16 January 20 | |
The traditional view (copy and paste): ''In the center of a black hole is a gravitational singularity, a one-dimensional point which contains a huge mass in an infinitely small space, where density and gravity become infinite and space-time curves infinitely, and where the laws of physics as we know them cease to operate. As the eminent American physicist Kip Thorne describes it, it is ''the point where all laws of physics break down''. Current theory suggests that, as an object falls into a black hole and approaches the singularity at the center, it will become stretched out or ''spaghettified'' due to the increasing differential in gravitational attraction on different parts of it, before presumably losing dimensionality completely and disappearing irrevocably into the singularity. An observer watching from a safe distance outside, though, would have a different view of the event. According to relativity theory, they would see the object moving slower and slower as it approaches the black hole until it comes to a complete halt at the event horizon, never actually falling into the black hole. The existence of a singularity is often taken as proof that the theory of general relativity has broken down, which is perhaps not unexpected as it occurs in conditions where quantum effects should become important. It is conceivable that some future combined theory of quantum gravity (such as current research into superstrings) may be able to describe black holes without the need for singularities, but such a theory is still many years away. According to the ''cosmic censorship'' hypothesis, a black hole's singularity remains hidden behind its event horizon, in that it is always surrounded by an area which does not allow light to escape, and therefore cannot be directly observed. The only exception the hypothesis allows (known as a ''naked'' singularity) is the initial Big Bang itself. |
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@rainingkrypton | 16 January 20 | |
It seems likely, then, that, by its very nature, we will never be able to fully describe or even understand the singularity at the center of a black hole. Although an observer can send signals into a black hole, nothing inside the black hole can ever communicate with anything outside it, so its secrets would seem to be safe forever.''
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@rainingkrypton | 16 January 20 | |
If you want to check out and/or participate in the discussion, here's the YouTube link: http://youtu.be/_zZvpQPxqf4 The comments are under the user: [ToriksLV], stating, ''From negative mass to timetravel, well lthat escalated quickly'' The two main people in the discussion are [David Henningson and FLPhotoCatcher] You can see that I summed it up, though mostly from user [David Henningson], so try debate with him. |
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@mok214 | 16 January 20 | |
@ sisfreak2017 - 14.01.20 - 03:52pm You sure? It looks like a cod liver oil capsule. Yes, I am sure. Cod liver oil capsules doesn't come with two other galaxies visible in it. |
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@phallica | 11 February 20 | |
Repeating radio bursts detected in a spiral galaxy 500 million light years away, 4 days of hourly bursts followed by 12 days of silence on repeat. I'm thinking some kind of pulsar but the periodicity is interesting, makes me wonder what's causing the modulation.
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@cleancut | 12 February 20 | |
@ phallica - 11.02.20 - 11:08pm Repeating radio bursts detected in a spiral galaxy 500 million light years away, 4 days of hourly bursts followed by 12 days of silence on repeat. I'm thinking some kind of pulsar but the periodicity is interesting, makes me wonder what's causing the modulation. nobody knows what causes fast radio bursts, and by nobody I mean radio astronomers who study them in the course of their career, not a random ill informed guy on the internet. That being said it's obviously aliens. A navigation beacon. Case closed. |
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@shadow27 | 12 February 20 | |
500 million light years away though... Ugh
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