My theory is that as a black hole gains more mass, it expands into its own self contained universe. Black holes can exist in many different sizes. Is it possible that our visible universe was once or still is contained inside a black hole? As a black hole pulls in more matter it becomes less dense and grows larger. It would continue to grow until it reaches a certain critical density or until black holes within it negate this expansion. Since no one knows what happens inside the event horizon, it is all theoretical. Are any of the black holes in our visible universe are old enough to exhibit this behavior? This opens another question of just how many levels does this go? Is our universe inside a black hole that is contained within another universe that is also contained within a black hole?
2007-01-05
02:59:36
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3 answers
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asked by
Land Warrior
4
in
Science & Mathematics
➔ Astronomy & Space
Isn't the big bang theory based on the fact that the universe was once a singularity?
2007-01-05
03:22:08 ·
update #1