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There are no true contradictions. However, some time back Stephan hawking published this formula: S= (C^3+A)/4HG. This equation allegedly proved that information was destroyed in black holes. After 30 years of debate, Mr. Hawking finally announced that he was incorrect.

2007-02-06 06:22:55 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

In quantum mechanics, the Heisenberg uncertainty relation allows for violation of conservation of energy, but the amount of violation is inversely proportional to the amount of time the violation is allowed to occur.

For example, an electron can appear out of nowhere (creation of mass violates the law) but it will have to disappear eventually.

The uncertainty relation also says something such as a baseball could appear out of thin air, but since this is much more matter being created, it would only last an extremely short amount of time (something crazy like 10^(-100) seconds).

2007-02-06 14:34:20 · answer #2 · answered by Tony O 2 · 0 0

Look this up - but I think in quantam mechanics there is the rare case at the event horizon of a black hole where a particle of matter and a partical of antimatter are both created and usually destroy each other, but at the event horizon the force is great enough to tear the antimatter away from its matter partical and into the black hole. Thus, a new partical has been added to the universe.

2007-02-06 14:25:15 · answer #3 · answered by Jeff C 3 · 1 0

There are none.

2007-02-06 14:20:12 · answer #4 · answered by Michael Dino C 4 · 1 1

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