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explain your answer as best you can and try to have some imagination.

2007-04-10 11:00:45 · 16 answers · asked by SHELLTOE BISCUITS 3 in Science & Mathematics Astronomy & Space

i think its funny that everyone is saying no but can one person tell me what is on the inside of a blackhole, no. but it is more likely were not. as far as having blackholes inside of blackholes, it could be a way of recycling energy from one universe to another. the big bang could have just been the formation of the blackhole that feeds our universe. so all the black holes we have could be feeding one singularity of another blackhole till bam another bigbang. or something like that.

2007-04-10 11:53:37 · update #1

16 answers

In principle we could be, and not know it. But there is actually reason to believe that we are not, namely that the latest observations indicate that space is "open", i.e. the expansion of the universe is accelerating and space is infinite. If we were inside a black hole then space would appear 'closed", with so-called positive curvature, meaning that if you traveled far enough you would eventually loop back and return to your starting point. It appears that that is not the case, so.....

2007-04-10 11:11:23 · answer #1 · answered by Astronomer1980 3 · 0 0

there's a distance close to to the black hollow said as the Schwartzschild radius, the position the gravitational attraction turns into so sturdy no longer even mild can smash out. In a experience, it really is the boundary of the black hollow, because that we haven't got any way of understanding some thing about what is going on interior that radius, notwithstanding the maths we use to describe gravitational cave in has the full mass shrinking to an infinitely small length. subsequently, it makes no experience to communicate about a black hollow having an interior.

2016-12-03 19:37:03 · answer #2 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

If we were inside of a black hole, everything would be compressed into a gravitational singularity (sometimes called a spacetime singularity) where quantities which are used to measure the gravitational field become infinite.

2007-04-10 11:06:51 · answer #3 · answered by TheTaylorEffect 3 · 1 1

A black hole is gravity gone beserk, if I remember correctly.

If we WERE in a black hole, then how could we see other black holes? How would the earth or anything else be able to hold a form with such intense gravity? Wouldn't we be inverted and obliterated?

2007-04-10 11:03:39 · answer #4 · answered by FaZizzle 7 · 0 1

No anything that enters into a black hole will be ripped apart because of the intense gravity.

2007-04-10 11:05:38 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 1 1

The density of a black hole comes from a lack of space between atoms. If we have anything, we have space.

2007-04-10 11:06:04 · answer #6 · answered by Mike1942f 7 · 1 1

absoloutly not a black hole distroys anything it touches including a sun also black holes travel around they do not stay in one place orbiting like our planet , did you know that a black hole is an imploded star.

2007-04-10 11:09:13 · answer #7 · answered by ? 3 · 0 1

Absolutely not. If it were, we could only move in one direction toward the center and we would have been ripped apart long ago.

2007-04-10 11:07:15 · answer #8 · answered by Gene 7 · 0 1

It is my theory that our entire universe is actually a grain of sand on the beach on a planet in a larger universe. I hope no one kicks the sand.

2007-04-10 11:04:53 · answer #9 · answered by Barkley Hound 7 · 1 2

We would die because we would be dragged in from the black hole and it would stretch us into half and we would die right?

2007-04-10 11:27:34 · answer #10 · answered by D: 4 · 0 1

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