Stephen Hawking famously bet a colleague that "information swallowed by a black hole is forever hidden and can never be revealed." He spent 30 years or so mulling over the question -- and finally announced a couple of years ago that he had, in fact, lost the bet.
Hawking finally concluded that a black hole preserves the "information" relating to the constituent atoms of whatever it sucks in. But it would preserve it the way the blender in my kitchen "preserves" information about carrots -- it's all there, and the component atoms are still recognizable. But when it comes out, its physical structure has been altered somewhat; it doesn't look anything like it did when it went in.
As for your question: nobody goes fully through a black hole -- not even Super Man. Once you pass the event horizon, you've reached a place where even light cannot escape. There is no going through.
But if, just for the sake of supposing, you somehow figured out a way to do it, there's nothing to suggest that by going through you'd do anything more than simply come out the other side. Black holes are highly dense and are generally places one would not want to be. But they are not magic.
Besides, even if traveling through a black hole did somehow lead to a parallel universe, surely there'd be an easier way to get there. Would it be worth the trip? A parallel universe may not be any more interesting than the one we already have.
2006-12-29 15:20:35
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answer #1
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answered by Georgia Fella 2
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Before or after you were stretched to about 100 light years long? If you could get close to a black hole without getting blasted with heavy radiation, gamma, x rays, positrons, etc, time would slow to a crawl. While the rest of us would go on time would pass at a slowed rate for you; 100 years per minuet or so. Once you get to the event horizon of the black hole you would start to fall in an stretch over and into the black hole. Of course your feet or head or arm would still be attached and your body wouldn't be stretched yet. This is all theory, but I don't think you would live long enough to go to a parallel universe.
Peace
2006-12-29 23:26:07
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answer #2
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answered by Massageman 2
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No this is called a worm hole two totally different things. A black hole is a point in the center of most galaxies which is created by a star with such a strong gravitational pull nothing not even light can escape so no one knows what mysteries lie inside the black hole because the last point in which we can receive light traces from the hole is the event horizon (the point in which you would have to travel faster than the speed of light to escape it's strong gravitational pull). All we know is that nothing can escape them any if something could it would have to travel faster than the speed of light which is humanly impossible. I just finished a reserch project on them so I know a lot about them.
2006-12-30 01:20:57
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answer #3
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answered by jkvbmc 2
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You would reach the point of singlarity, the middle, or so the theory says. I suppose, since we know so little about black holes and even less about the nature of the universe, it would be feasible to enter a sort of parallel universe or even jump through time or space. It would be quite an experience.
2006-12-29 23:59:22
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answer #4
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answered by Shifter 3
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there is no way of knowing.
It is possible that you may go to another universe or enter the space between universes in the multiverse.
There are MANY theories, all are pretty and sound nice but we just dont know.
Traditional physics breaks down once you reach the event horison of a blackhole. That light is trapped itself is a conundrum that is very difficult to fathom.
One thing that we could assume if we wished to (though in science its never wise to assume till you know all) is that you would be broken down into the lowest state particles that exist. But again this may not be the case.
2006-12-29 23:22:51
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answer #5
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answered by delprofundo 3
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when talking about black holes it is now necessary to modify the concept how black holes are formed? i donot agree with the prevaling concept. sun and other stars were created at same time but why do those star die soon and form black holea for that i have given a new concept it is due to orientation of stars in space gravity since do not cnacells up as electrostatic force it add ups and forms a region in sapce where gravity concerntration is high and since all stars are moving and if any matter or star come at the point where gravity concerntrates then their fules are consumed fast and blackholes are formed and to compensate gravity concerntration an another point is induced in which white holes form and they are joined by a neck so combination of all those makes worm hole and everything is acclerated with cretain fix value. we can travel through black hole and it opens to white hole but concerntrated gravity always donot give black hole then such point is called as I+ point and opposite to it is i-
2006-12-29 23:42:20
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answer #6
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answered by question master 2
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a black hole is a real tear in space time over allmost all dimetions in our universe space time unversal rotation such as a black hole twisted backword would be space time but allot of enery in one place now hyperspace is the universal tim of the universe twisted to the right or rotation of the galaxcy a white hole emits energy from another universe and a black hole take energy out it is a balance that keeps each universe alive there are only two universe's the amount of enery to make a black hole in our universe you would have to use a huge sphere of space time in real life science and then twist time and space so teleportation is not possbille bu this is molecule lasers and teleportation confilct of what possible www.beyond-science.com or www.beyond-science.net
2006-12-30 02:29:41
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answer #7
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answered by zetabinary 1
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The word "hole" is not really an accurate description of the phenomenon you are alluding to. It is actually a superdense cluster of matter and energy whose gravity well has collapsed in on itself creating gravity that is exponentially greater than the sum of the matter it contains. It then attracts other matter to it, thus increasing its mass, collapsing the gravity again, and thus increasing the gravity even more. Matter is drawn in from all sides simultaneously, though the curvature of space can make it appear like a tornado of sorts.
Once the matter reaches the "bottom" of this "hole", it becomes part of the matter cluster, is destroyed, and becomes a part of the alternating matter/energy synogism.
2006-12-29 23:27:44
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answer #8
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answered by rawson_wayne 3
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A black hole may be a way into another dimension or universe.
Or you could just become obliterated. We are probably traveling toward a black hole right now as I type this.
2006-12-30 00:13:15
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answer #9
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answered by Dana Katherine 4
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You would probably just cease to exist as all of the molecules that make up your body would be separated and you would be destroyed.
2006-12-29 22:49:24
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answer #10
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answered by tigerx2114 2
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