Nobody had ever gone through a black hole, period. What's it like? Given that a black hole is the result of the collapse of neutrons into their composite quarks, the inside of a black hole would be a state of infinite density coupled with infinite energy. Since this sounds a lot like the initial conditions for the beginning of the universe, and since theory has it that such a false vacuum state may well be hyper-dimensional, my idea is that there are higher dimensional states inside a black hole. Where do "you" actually go? In this context, the answer is nowhere, because you can't describe a higher dimension as part of this reality. It exists somewhere and somewhen else, but nowhere in 3 dimensions and no-when in our physical universe's measurement of time. Perhaps someday that particular onion will be peeled a little deeper.
2006-11-29 06:52:45
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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OK. Essentially what you're talking about there is a SINGULARITY. It's the focus of mind-******* energy, super intense gravity and you couldn't get anywhere near it without dying let alone go through one - were you theoretically able to do so you would first have to be crushed to (probably) a subatomic size then as you went into it it would finish crushing the living crap out of you whilst warping what's left beyond recognition.
Basically you can't go through one. Dunno if there's anyway to (Star-Trek-ily) create immense fields around you to protect you from the gravity but the scale is almost unimaginable.
It's a nice metaphor but wholly unrealistic.
People conjecture there are alternative multiverses on the other side of a black hole......goddamn hippies,....
2006-11-29 06:35:44
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answer #2
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answered by Partyboy 1
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I can tell you what happened when The Nawab of Bengals` soldiers put 146
British soldiers into a black hole in Calcutta in 1756. The dungeon hole was so cramped and hot, that 123 of them died over night.
2006-11-30 12:56:18
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answer #3
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answered by Social Science Lady 7
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Nobody has been through a black hole full stop. Nobody has even been to mars yet. Anyhow according to science if you went within a million miles of a black hole it would pull you in. Blackholes pull in and break up everything within range. Nothing goes in and comes out again, not even light.
2006-11-29 06:22:24
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answer #4
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answered by james l 2
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"you" don't go inside a black hole -- "you" would be ripped up into your constituent atomic pieces by gravitational tidal forces before you even reached the event horizon. Your atoms would go into the black hole, and join all the other atoms (eventually) at the center, the "singularity." The singularity is just a super-dense concentration of matter at the center of the black hole.
2006-11-29 06:18:58
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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You don't go through a black hole, you go into a black hole and get crushed. As the black hole dies, you are leaked back out as Hawking radiation.
2006-11-29 06:52:43
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answer #6
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answered by Chris J 6
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itsa hard to tell, a black hole is a huge source of gravitational pull and its so strong that not even light can escape from it, so i dont think anyone will go in and live to tell a tale, in movies you see people go in and come out another sidde but both sides are pulling in so i dont see how they do that, i guess its just hollywood
2006-11-29 06:18:27
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answer #7
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answered by ~*cRaCkNeSs*~ 3
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Kilcooley Estate in Bangor, Co Down
2006-11-29 06:23:31
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answer #8
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answered by The Shadow 3
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Most likely you don't "go" anywhere, you are simply crushed by the gravity the black hole generates and impact on the surface.
2006-11-29 06:17:35
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answer #9
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answered by snowgoose8 2
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Huddersfield
2006-11-29 12:07:39
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answer #10
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answered by Anonymous
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