No, quite impossible. It would swallow everything around it.
The magnetic field is related to the mass of the Earth and the materials it consits of. Since no mass is being added, it cannot get more.
2006-08-14 01:19:57
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answer #1
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answered by Gungnir 5
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Yes.
Black holes are remnants of the vacuum. Gravity is the result of compression around a black hole.
Right now, the the strength of earth's magnetic field is decreasing as a result of the earth's warming and the magnetic poles are becoming increasingly unstable. In the next few hundred years, the earth's magnetic current will momentarily cease and the earth's magnetic field will become much less dense allowing more harmful rays to reach its surface. More of the earth's electrons will float off into space and it will once again have contributed its share to the continuing existence of the universe.
Life will not end but, you will want to take an umbrella and where lots of sunscreen when ever you go outside to avoid being burned. Your electronic gadgets may cease to work and data stored on magnetic disk drives will be lost. Communications systems will become very staticky or cease to function.
Electrons will leave and re-enter the earth at several points resulting in several poles. As soon as the earth defines a difference in potential at two poles again, everything will settle down and more jobs will have been created to re-capture data that has been lost and reconfigure communications systems.
We had better keep a close eye on nuclear reactors during this time.
2006-08-14 11:14:32
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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nope if the Bermuda triangle was a black hole it would have swallowed the earth the sun and everything else in the solar system.
even if it was a localised thing it would take everything that went into it, not only somethings
the Bermuda triangle has been explained tho, that it is very easy to lose Ur barrings in due to the geography of the place, and that there are not real navigation points there, this does not explain any of the other strange things that happen in the area tho
2006-08-14 08:26:11
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answer #3
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answered by caprilover79 3
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Any black hole on earth would soon compact the earth into a pinpoint that had a Schwartschild Radius the size of a nut.
As this is not what we observe .... then clearly no physicist has made a functional black hole and lost control of it yet...
They do make mini black holes that self destruct in large Atomic Collider experiments.
2006-08-14 08:27:21
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answer #4
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answered by PlayTOE- 3
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no... there isn't... If there were a black hole in this location there would be no earth. The gravity in a black hole is so intense that it absorbs everything and separates atoms... Basically the earth and most likely the solar system would be gone. Plus, black holes are created by dying stars, not planets. So the only body in the solar system that could create/become a black hole is the sun
2006-08-14 08:20:51
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answer #5
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answered by Luis T 3
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No. Black holes are created by the collapse of an unusually large star.
The Bermuda Triangle is not really very mysterious, and it doesn't need a supernatural or pseudo-scientific explanation.
2006-08-14 08:44:23
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answer #6
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answered by ecmfw 4
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I was reading an interesting article the other day about the " Closest Black Hole to Earth Discovered " , I'm linking below... might be interesting to you. There's still so much we don't know about the world we live in and what surrounds it!!!
2006-08-14 08:25:24
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answer #7
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answered by YessicaT@PR 3
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I really don't think a black hole is existing in earth beacsue the black hole has so much gravity it can capture light too.
2006-08-14 09:29:41
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answer #8
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answered by AD 4
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Yes there is a black hole in the world. It is located in the white house. It sucks in all intelligent thought and leaves us with stupidity.
2006-08-14 08:24:23
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answer #9
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answered by happytraveler 4
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No. The gravitational effects of a black hole would be very easy to see.
2006-08-14 09:16:49
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answer #10
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answered by dougdell 4
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