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Just a layperson but it seems there are two open questions that perhaps black holes could answer. I haven't read all the literature so this may be very naive: If black holes absorb everthing into a super dense singularity and now seem present at the center of galaxies, AND, if we don't yet understand the origin of the Big Bang, isn't it possible that these are connected? Couldn't Black Holes be the 'recycling' mechanism of matter from one universe to another?

2006-10-23 07:59:50 · 5 answers · asked by Anonymous in Science & Mathematics Physics

5 answers

I have thought the same thing before. I can only assume that richard hawking and mikio kaku have had that cross their minds more than once.

2006-10-23 08:03:51 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

The function of black holes is to get dense, and at some point, collide with other black holes, causing mini big bangs. When the bang happens, everything it collected gets blasted outwards, starting over, creating new stars, new solar systems, which create new galaxies. So yes, they basically recycle matter in the universe. What they DON'T do is recycle matter from one universe to the other. There is no evidence that there is some other universe besides this one. Thats science fiction..at least for now it's science fiction.

2006-10-23 08:02:42 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

once you're saying the tremendous Bang there must be a secondary concept about this. What brought concerning the tremendous Bang? regardless of if there develop right into a huge Bang, what brought concerning the aspect that brought concerning the tremendous Bang and so on. The universe is extraordinary. there is not any elect to theorize about the previous, notwithstanding the destiny. the destiny would properly be a huge danger. both the solar getting too tremendous, the moon getting too far, global warming, our closest galaxy combining into ours, or people getting a lot too more desirable and so on. the destiny is much better to imagine about, the previous is over and the destiny is growing our latest.

2016-10-16 06:06:03 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

The problem is that it is known that the big bang must have been a time of exceptionally low entropy. And black holes are known to have maximal entropy. So the answer has to be no.

2006-10-23 09:44:17 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Good shot I always look for complete cycle in nature it has cycled and recycled so I would say it needs some further investigation. Good Luck

2006-10-23 08:53:09 · answer #5 · answered by JOHNNIE B 7 · 0 0

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