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Would it enter into a new galaxy or will it be on the other side of the black hole? Maybe the question I am asking is what is on the other side of a black hole???

2007-03-06 05:45:13 · 11 answers · asked by Rolly 2 in Science & Mathematics Astronomy & Space

11 answers

Black holes do not have a suctioning effect. They merely have gravity, just like the Earth or the Sun. The only difference is that the matter in a black hole is so densely packed that you can get so close to the center of it without hitting the surface that escape velocity is higher than the speed of light.

So the answer to your question is than anything that falls into a black hole just stays there, just like it would if it fell to Earth or into the Sun. A meteor that falls to Earth is just as trapped on Earth as one that falls onto a black hole. The fact that escape velocity is much higher for the black hole means nothing, since meteors do not have engines they cannot take off again, even from Earth.

2007-03-06 06:17:33 · answer #1 · answered by campbelp2002 7 · 1 0

You're putting a nonsensical restriction on your question. Nothing would "survive" a black hole. It would all get shredded and smashed.

Some people like to imagine that the "hole" leads somewhere but it's just a name. Whatever might happen inside a black hole can't be observed. There might be "white holes" connected to them somehow, somewhere else in some dimension, but all we really know is that stuff that gets close enough disappears.

The "other side" of a black hole, in normal space, is just more space. It doesn't look like a conduit or "wormhole". It's just a big, black sphere that tends to warp the view behind it as you circle around. Beyond its gravity well, everything is normal.

2007-03-06 08:49:32 · answer #2 · answered by skepsis 7 · 0 0

There are some super massive black holes where you would be able to survive long enough, without getting ripped apart by tidal forces, to enter the event horizon of the black hole. You wouldn't be able to see anything behind you because of the path all objects would follow once they entered the black hole. You would be able to see anything being emitted from the singularity of the black hole from another part of the galaxy however. It's all in the math of Schwarzchild black holes, although you need advanced coordinates to actually see inside it.

2007-03-06 06:04:55 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

because it procedures the shape Horizon, the gravity will grow to be so extreme, that even the distinction contained in the dimensions of an merchandise creates adequate gravitational distinction via quantity of pull from one end of an objecy to the different, that an merchandise is pulled and stretched and is pulled aside(spaghetti). because the guy debris( it truly is argued how a lengthy way remember is pulled aside before entering the shape horizon), attain the shape Hoizon( a boundery defined because the point of no go back, even gentle), that from the perspective of an outdoors observer, the talked about merchandise disappears, yet from the perspective of the article(now very small products), time then stands nevertheless. it truly is argued that no longer something ever reaches the middle of a Black hollow because as time is so warped that the outcome of circulate is continually halted. Oters speculate that even although time isn't perceived from the gadgets perspective, there is now no defined end factor or center to get to. Cheers!!

2016-10-17 10:35:19 · answer #4 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

A black hole is an intensly dense ball of matter which has a huge gravitational pull. Its not a tunnel as far as it is currently conceivable with our knowledge of the universe.

2007-03-06 05:54:43 · answer #5 · answered by ryushinigami 3 · 0 0

That a good one, but I think it would be somewhere in the black hole, it could not get out, it would be part of the mass.

2007-03-06 05:54:51 · answer #6 · answered by Dallas S 4 · 0 0

nobody knows exactly, possibly into a parallel universe. Think of of the our universe as a slice of bread in a loaf. If you fell through a hole in a slice of bead you would fall onto another slice within the loaf.

2007-03-06 09:58:06 · answer #7 · answered by Adam B 2 · 0 0

nothing would survive. anything that fell into a blackhole would just become part of the blackhole. a blackhole is a dead star. its still there its just really small and dense. there is nothing on the otherside of a blackhole....thats like asking whats on the other side of the sun

2007-03-06 06:04:22 · answer #8 · answered by Bones 3 · 1 0

Its theorized that it would just end up at some random point in the universe due to the worm-hole effect.

2007-03-06 05:54:47 · answer #9 · answered by Bobby the WOOD Heenan 4 · 0 1

In the recycling bin

2007-03-06 06:03:02 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

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