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Also, is it possible to surive wormhole travel in a conventional present day spacecraft?

2006-10-03 05:02:13 · 4 answers · asked by Barry Bushell 2 in Science & Mathematics Astronomy & Space

4 answers

Hi. No material yet developed could survive anywhere near the forces experienced near a normal star, much less a neutron star of black hole, so no. In my opinion, the folding of space needed to allow a wormhole "shortcut" to another place could be any size at all.

2006-10-03 05:08:37 · answer #1 · answered by Cirric 7 · 0 0

Definitely dont jump in no matter how cool a movie you thought "black Hole" was.

there is a serious question about the nature of quasars being embrionic galaxies thrown out of galaxies making new ones and this seems to be the view of Halton Arp of the Max Plank institute who studied configurations of galaxies for decades.

A quasar may be a white hole spewing out matter, and where does it come from? perhaps the galactic center of the galaxy that emited it? and connected by a wormhole?

This puts Hubbles law and the notion that you can tell how far away an galaxy is by how red it is in question. Some object might be intrinsically red. And this is not currently a popular view in astronomy, but may be closer to the truth.

2006-10-03 05:14:27 · answer #2 · answered by whirlingmerc 6 · 0 0

Space is not a factor, mass is.

And no, its not possible with a current spacecraft.

2006-10-03 05:19:08 · answer #3 · answered by ag_iitkgp 7 · 0 0

No it would not be.You would be crushed to smithereens before you knew waht was happening.

2006-10-03 05:11:58 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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