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Does a black hole have another side? i think its amazing that there is a physical world in our world where no time exists........like death.

2006-06-13 09:44:44 · 15 answers · asked by greenpeaface 1 in Arts & Humanities Philosophy

15 answers

An event horizon is the point at which light can no longer escape the gravitational pull of a black hole. To go beyond the event horizon would mean getting sucked into a black hole, and to remain at the event horizon, you would have to be flying away from that black hole at the speed of light. The intense gravitational pull would launch you about ten thousand years into the future, as defined in earth years, according to relativity. Gravity, as well as velocity affects the process of time. I think whatever happens to that matter inside a black hole, all of it gets absorbed and converted to energy, which would explain, why it supposedly disappears.

2006-06-13 09:53:59 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

The "Event Horizon" is the area around a black hole that is the boundary of reality as we know it. The pull of gravity of the black hole is so great that it bends nearby light waves and pulls in those rays that are directed towards it. Once past the event horizon the rules of physics cease to exist. It is theorised that energy could possibly be transformed into incredibly dense matter that behaves in a quantum state. As you were pulled towards the event horizon, the universe would seem to speed up, and to an observer outside, you would slow down. So time would continue to move on, but not as fast for you as the rest of us.

2006-06-13 18:14:21 · answer #2 · answered by thoughthard 2 · 0 0

In my humble opinion-i believe that what exists there no longer exists as we would deem "reality" according to the 4 dimensions (except maybe time). The presence of "Is"ness will be wholly dependent on the other dimensions which certain parts of the subatomic universe possess an ability to manifest themselves in. A black hole is our 4-dimensional version of a whirlpool to a one dimensional being on top of some water. It cannot experience the event horizon beyond its own dimensional perception but it does not mean other dimensional objects dont persist beyond the event horizon.

2006-06-13 17:22:29 · answer #3 · answered by zephyrescent 4 · 0 0

We cannot know because in principle we cannot see past the event horizon. There are ideas in theoretical physics that what goes through a black hole may emerge into another universe, but as this goes beyond my study of philosophy other peoole will have to answer that for you.

2006-06-14 14:21:27 · answer #4 · answered by Philosophical Fred 4 · 0 0

When the big bang banged, its output contained 10 or 11 dimensions. We were left with only four. I'll bet the other side of the event horizon takes you into unknown dimensions.

2006-06-13 17:37:20 · answer #5 · answered by Hsk 2 · 0 0

Who knows? I like to think that there is a white hole on the other side spewing out matter, or maybe antimatter, into another universe.

2006-06-13 17:15:17 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

i belive what the black hole takes is to fill up other multi-universe
of course nothing can excape in the universe either it travels into another time who knows!

2006-06-13 17:05:31 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Well, I don't know for sure, but I'm hoping it's ice cream. I have a feeling the answer is more like "parallel universe", but I'm an optimist...
and enjoy frozen treats.

2006-06-13 16:50:26 · answer #8 · answered by Awesomepotamus 1 · 0 0

The other side is the other side. Like many concepts in quantum mechanics, it is what it is and has no further definition.

2006-06-13 16:48:55 · answer #9 · answered by Andy 3 · 0 0

We really don't know. We have quite alot of theories, but to assume that an object sucks in everything it can without an outlet, just kinda seems unlikely...

2006-06-13 16:48:16 · answer #10 · answered by DarkWolf_1st 4 · 0 0

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