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As a fundamental rule of Physics, no matter can be created or destroyed. We also know that Black Hole sucks anything in its path, including light. But what happens to all the stuff the Black Hole absorbs once the Black Hole dissapears?

2006-10-29 15:42:01 · 7 answers · asked by petswodahs 1 in Science & Mathematics Astronomy & Space

7 answers

It is given off

2006-10-29 15:59:19 · answer #1 · answered by futureastronaut1 3 · 0 1

Where does a black hole come from? Well let us see!
We take a 1.5 solar mass star the size of our sun.
The surface gravity dictates that an orbiting object must travel so fast to maintain orbit .
If the satellite speeds up it will spiral away from the surface .if it slows it will crash onto the surface.{The stars gravity is concentrated at the center]
If we put a tunnel below the surface the orbital velocity decreases due to the fact that some of the mass is above the satellite.
If we compress the star its circumference decreases and its surface gravity increases.Again the subsurface gravity changes in step {aprox.]
As we increase the surface compression we continue to displace space from the interior of the star.
As the star gets smaller several transitions take place which we will ignore for the moment [I.E. White dwarf and neutron star]
As the star gets smaller the surface gravity and orbital velocity increases.
Eventually the orbital velocity reaches the speed of light. Nothing can go faster.
Theory has it that no light can escape from the surface ,hence a black hole!
It has a surface gravity of "C" Its mass and gravity are concentrated at the center. Its mass as a singularity!
When you pass through the event horizen all mass is still below you so your orbital velocity increases. Clearly "C" plus!!
Nothing can exceed the speed of light,so a black hole has no place in this universe.
Let us speculate a bit.
If a black hole could exist it would not be black,it would glow dimly in white light.
As light was trapped in orbit at the surface, the quantum effect would cause a small percentage of random photons to spiral outward, hence the glow.
This creates a paradox that dooms the black hole to nonexistence!
The quantum effect dictates the glow but the slower average photons would be trapped.
They could not spiral out, they could not spiral in and they could not maintain orbit!
Black holes better reinvent themseves!!!

2006-10-30 03:11:05 · answer #2 · answered by Billy Butthead 7 · 0 0

Actually, while the matter is indeed pulled into the Black Hole it is also stored as information around the accreation disk of the black hole, so technically, no information (or energy) is lost. This was figured out by Stephen Hawking.

Also, its now thought that the matter entering the black hole comes out somewhere else in this Universe.

2006-10-29 15:47:51 · answer #3 · answered by AdamKadmon 7 · 0 0

Hi. Pretty simple. The mass is absorbed which results in the event horizon getting a tad larger. There should be a physical law that states something like "Mass and energy can be removed form our universe provided an event horizon is enlarged to compensate."

2006-10-29 15:46:52 · answer #4 · answered by Cirric 7 · 0 0

Black holes can radiate via Hawking radiation.

I notice that Professor Steven Hawking was mentioned in other replies, so I thought I'd provide the URL to his website. Check it out.

http://www.hawking.org.uk/home/hindex.html


Best regards,
Jim

2006-10-29 16:20:56 · answer #5 · answered by Jim H 3 · 0 0

The black hole does not disappear...

2006-10-29 15:47:23 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

It's all still in there, since it's still an ever increasing gravitational anomaly.

2006-10-29 16:20:58 · answer #7 · answered by arbiter007 6 · 0 0

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