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I didn't say the earth, I said the universe. Like creating a black hole or causing magnetic monopoles thus providing an impetus for proton decay?

2006-10-12 06:56:31 · 7 answers · asked by Anonymous in Science & Mathematics Physics

7 answers

NO. We can "only" destroy Earth, and we're not doing it bad.

2006-10-12 06:59:52 · answer #1 · answered by sable_laser 3 · 1 0

Present: no.

Near future: no. A black hole or magnetic monopoles would mess things up locally, but not destroy the whole universe. Remember, the far side of the universe is receding from us at a good distance, at a good fraction of the speed of light.

Far future: maybe. Read
Schild's Ladder
by Greg Egan.
In this science fiction book, experimental physicists accidentally create a new kind of universe within ours -- and the new universe is expanding by converting ours.

2006-10-12 15:05:32 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 2 0

I do not think we can create a black hole yet ...

and we are so small in this universe that I do not think we will ever make a huge impact or even come close to threaten its existence even if we do create a black hole and obliterate the earth ...

as you probably know, the galaxy we are in does gravitate around a black hole, and yet we have been evolving for ages and ages ...

2006-10-12 14:02:41 · answer #3 · answered by sebourban 4 · 0 0

And how did you interpret this human machine?
About the emotional consciousness of astrophysics, astronomers and nuclear physics about the Nobel Prize, which comes from the disturbance of morally transform their state of being, awake by the feeling of ignorance, which based the interpretation of the powers of the “Grand Atom” Universe mechanism, only founded in the Sun’s reaction, such as: light, mid atomic waves caused by the electrons’ ups and downs inside the atom, not considering the complete mechanism of the Universe: Sun (nucleus) interacting with the Interstellar System (finite surroundings) by the power of Planet Earth (center of balance), according to the book to be published by the projector and scientist self-taught person Tarcísio Brito(Brazil).

2006-10-12 14:13:42 · answer #4 · answered by britotarcisio 6 · 0 1

NO! i dont think so, because my the time we have that technology, we would have already killed eachother or destroyed the earth. we wouldnt have the chance to destroy the entire universe.

2006-10-12 14:04:44 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

No. A unit within the system cannot destroy the system.

2006-10-12 14:07:09 · answer #6 · answered by Guardian Angel 2 · 1 0

No, not at this time but we're working on it.

2006-10-12 13:59:28 · answer #7 · answered by Roadkill 6 · 0 0

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