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most will say no, but we really dont know whats on the inside just whats on the outside and the effect it has on the outside surroundings. you will say gravity will crush you and thats true when you enter into it but then everything is energy and that could be what the big bang was all that energy being released. and as far as having black holes in a black hole its possible that thats just a way of recycling energy to other newborn universes from a dying universe.

2007-04-11 10:28:55 · 4 answers · asked by SHELLTOE BISCUITS 3 in Science & Mathematics Astronomy & Space

4 answers

yes it's possible. we may be limited in technology to explore the depths of our universe, but it is possible that we're all in a black hole. when a black hole dies, it releases everything that it sucked into as radiation. radiation is energy and that energy could have caused the big bang.
enough energy could have been gathered from all the other things in the black hole to trigger the big bang. the big bang's probably didn't have that much energy to escape the black hole so maybe we really are in a black hole.

2007-04-11 10:36:06 · answer #1 · answered by anonymous 1 · 0 0

No. Our universe isn't inside a black hole or orbiting around one--though the image isn't very cheery if you think about it.

In fact, our universe is so spread out that those black holes which were discovered recently--really has no effect on how our galaxies move about; other than to act as "speed bumps" and "barriers".

But there has been no scientifically proven evidence that there are blackholes within blackholes.

Since they operate on the same principle of negative energy and immense gravity sinks, placing one within the other would have absolutely no effect.

2007-04-11 10:38:53 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 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 20:58:40 · answer #3 · answered by lewan 4 · 0 0

No way. All the light we would see would be so blue shifted, it would be deadly and we would only be able to go in one direction toward the cents. Also, we would have been torn apart by tidal forces long ago.

2007-04-11 10:39:10 · answer #4 · answered by Gene 7 · 0 0

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