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2006-07-07 02:28:28 · 16 answers · asked by Anonymous in Science & Mathematics Other - Science

16 answers

Fried Chicken.

It's a common mistake that people think it's "darkness" or "anti-matter", when in fact it's actually the Colonel's 11 different herbs and spices on a tasty bird.

2006-07-07 02:32:20 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 1 3

It's thought that since a black hole is a collapsed star with extreme gravity sucking everything including light into it, it has to lead to somewhere else. This is thought to be done by the black hole leading to a wormhole that ends up spitting out everything that was sucked into the blackhole out the other end of the worm hole. This is much like a beer bong except the funnel much bigger and the hose much smaller (therefore the current through the wormhole would have to be much faster to keep up with the intake of matter into the black hole) because of the extreme gravity and rate of travel through the wormhole, the matter wouldn't be in the same state as it was when it went in since the ride through the blackhole/wormhole would tear it apart to the point where it might just be single atoms. No one really knows for sure but this seems to be the general thought at the moment.

2006-07-07 09:43:38 · answer #2 · answered by sketch660 2 · 0 0

A large amount of mass, compressed to a very high density

The more massive a black hole is, the more space it takes up. In fact, the Schwarzschild radius (which means the radius of the horizon) and the mass are directly proportional to one another: if one black hole weighs ten times as much as another, its radius is ten times as large. A black hole with a mass equal to that of the Sun would have a radius of 3 kilometers. So a typical 10-solar-mass black hole would have a radius of 30 kilometers, and a million-solar-mass black hole at the center of a galaxy would have a radius of 3 million kilometers. Three million kilometers may sound like a lot, but it's actually not so big by astronomical standards. The Sun, for example, has a radius of about 700,000 kilometers, and so that supermassive black hole has a radius only about four times bigger than the Sun.

2006-07-07 09:34:53 · answer #3 · answered by maarten_slk 3 · 0 0

Black holes are spaced where immense quantities of matter are gathered!
To show you the sizes, you can imagine that in a black hole of the size of an egg there is mass equal to thousand Suns!

2006-07-07 09:33:43 · answer #4 · answered by soubassakis 6 · 0 0

A black hole is simply a singularity in the fabric of space-time, The only thing actually inside of it is an infidently dense region to which nothing, not even light can escape, this region is infidently dense to a clapsing star's enormus immediate compression, and even more dense due to matter it collects.

2006-07-07 09:35:59 · answer #5 · answered by jonny j 1 · 0 0

Nothing. That's the whole thing about black holes;-) They are a vacuum for all matter and light. They might lead to somewhere else in the galaxy, or they might just obliterate whatever they suck in. No one knows.

2006-07-07 09:34:21 · answer #6 · answered by Felix Q 3 · 0 0

There's no definitive answer to that, because anybody who goes to check will never be able to tell anybody from the outside.

My theory? Cheese. Hey, its just as likely as anything else.

2006-07-07 09:30:56 · answer #7 · answered by Dan w 3 · 0 0

Darkness.
That's why it's called a black hole.

2006-07-07 09:30:24 · answer #8 · answered by The Hit Man 6 · 0 0

*shrugs* i thought that they're like a vortex of some sorts..everything gets sucked in and condensed to nothingness

2006-07-07 09:32:46 · answer #9 · answered by Southpaw 7 · 0 0

Urethra's and Ovaries!

2006-07-07 11:32:36 · answer #10 · answered by Mr. Sacamoco 3 · 0 0

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