English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

also what would happen if they were to collide

2007-01-22 13:06:21 · 4 answers · asked by mikeyplocky 2 in Science & Mathematics Astronomy & Space

4 answers

It would depend on what environment each is in. Secondly, an unstoppable object, and an unmovable object by definition can't coexist in the same environment.

2007-01-22 13:15:02 · answer #1 · answered by Count Acumen 5 · 0 0

Well, here's a shot in the dark, Neutrino's move through space-time without interacting with normal matter, so once they get going, they are practically the unstoppable particle.

As far as immovable objects - sorry we're fresh out, the closest you'll get is a superdense object - called a supergiant black-hole. These occur at the center of most galaxies. and could be as large as our whole solar system and contain the mass of hundreds or thousands of stars and are unbelievably dense, only if/when whole galaxies collide nearly head on would these things even move each other very much, they might eventually merge and become one bigger supergiant black hole.

These objects are so dense that they curve space into basically a big funnel or gravitational drain which sucks everything near it in, but particles from stars that get eaten get closer and closer, some escape , but there are times when there is so much matter being "stuffed" down the drain, that the whole thing lights up like a galactic version of a lighthouse shooting radiation/light beams thousands and millions of light years.

So what happens when the unstoppable meets "the immovable", the unstoppable probably just disappears when the unstoppable moves along the curve of the "drain" and gets stuck in a perfect graviational loop - forever. This is called the "event horizon" think of it like the point of no return. The neutrino might never stop but it never leaves either.



http://www.astronomy.net/forums/blackholes2/messages/4571.shtml?show=top

2007-01-22 22:24:00 · answer #2 · answered by Mark T 7 · 0 0

neutrinos I believe fly through space and are not stopped when they meet an object they can not move like a planet. They just fly through them. In the whole Universe of things, nothing is unmoveable.

2007-01-22 21:16:00 · answer #3 · answered by gosh137 6 · 0 0

their insurance rates would go up

2007-01-22 21:34:51 · answer #4 · answered by fuufingf 5 · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers