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my teacher asked me this question just wondering if anybody could help me

2006-09-26 08:56:19 · 11 answers · asked by zerophilmister 2 in Science & Mathematics Astronomy & Space

11 answers

well, they say black holes bend the universe. so may be other side of the black hole might be very far away from the opening. n many believe that it (black hole) has so much of energy that it even bends the time, SO i think it opens in some other time.

2006-09-30 17:20:38 · answer #1 · answered by ishaan 1 · 1 1

It is wrong to say that there is no end to black whole because of the asymptote.
It is only so from the OUTSIDE observer's point of view - that is if you are watching somebody fall into the blackwhole, you will never see him cross the event horizon in finite time.
But if it is you, who is falling in, the time it takes you to get there is not only finite, but also very brief. Provided that you are not torn into pieces by the gravitational field (which you will be), you will cross the event horizon (without noticing as there is nothing special about it), and continue the accelerating free fall.
At the end there is a singularity - a point where laws of physics break down - science stops there, as there is no science without laws.
Purely theoretically, one of the solutions to the Einstein's equation, describing the black whole is indeed the metric, that continues past the singularity, and can be interpreted as another universe inside the black whole. But it does not really mean that (not in the scientific sense) - you always solve an equation within a certain area (that does not include singularities). Extending the solution beyond that area does not make very much sense.

2006-09-26 09:12:41 · answer #2 · answered by n0body 4 · 0 1

A black hole has no end. It is an asymptote (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Asymptote) - meaning it will approach a value, but never reach it and is therefore infinite.

But for the sake of argument, assuming you could reach the end of a black hole, what you would find would be the infinitely dense remains of a dead star. In fact, it would be energy only - no matter. But the energy would be so powerful that nothing could penetrate it. Or another universe. Nobody knows.

2006-09-26 09:03:01 · answer #3 · answered by ohmneo 3 · 1 0

The other side of a blackhole is the whitehole.

2006-09-26 09:00:18 · answer #4 · answered by Cristian 2 · 1 1

A black hole isn't really a hole, its an object with an extremely high mass to volume ratio that results from an object unable to overcome its own gravity, so it collapses on itself. Because its mass is so great, the pull of gravity towards it is so high that nothing (including light) can escape it.

2006-09-26 08:59:48 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 3 0

Black holes steadily "evaporate" via a procedure called "Hawking Radiation." it truly is a truly complicated procedure, although the genuine area is it steadily eeks away the mass of a black hollow till it diminishes to no longer something.

2016-12-02 02:58:19 · answer #6 · answered by mizer 3 · 0 0

even if the theory of a wormhole being in the center of a black hole is true, there would be no way to determine where the opposite end would be.

2006-09-26 09:04:25 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

Ocala, Florida.

2006-09-26 09:03:49 · answer #8 · answered by willow oak 5 · 0 2

It's the men's room at a White Castle in Fresno, California. Nasty place....

2006-09-26 09:09:53 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 0 2

No one really knows, all we can do is theorize and guess what that answer is.

Remember that ignorance is sometimes the answer

2006-09-26 09:15:15 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 1 1

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