I don't believe it has ever been proven one way or another. The event horizon has never actually been observed. But it would appear by the way the outer arms of a spiral galaxy move in a clockwise direction, the same might hold true for a black hole, but when time itself stops, and gravitation as we know it is warped, anything is possible.
2006-11-06 06:35:53
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answer #1
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answered by The Oldest Man In The World 6
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Hi. Good question. The material we see and measure that is falling into a black hole is always rendered in artist (or computer) impression as spinning in the same direction. There is nothing to prevent material from going in the opposite direction or at ANY direction, including straight in. Not sure what you mean by 'buffers' but the vortex is an amazing place. I think that the material just takes a hard turn and heads out of the spin axis very well focused. Hard to imagine.
2006-11-06 06:47:47
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answer #2
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answered by Cirric 7
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Your slippers are less than the mattress hitting on the airborne dirt and dust bunnies. on the bottom of the universe there's a wide drain. Black holes are prevalent flushed down this drain by hyperdimensional branes. it really is what's many times referred to as a brane drain. Their spin is conjectural as you haven't given a benchmark for what they could be spinning relative to. desire this helps.
2016-11-28 20:27:58
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answer #3
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answered by plyler 4
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normally yes, but some black holes lay flat and wait for the high energy input
2006-11-06 06:33:02
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answer #4
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answered by The brainteaser 5
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great to see the hill if still a puffin
2006-11-06 08:06:51
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answer #5
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answered by sufludu 1
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