Most blackholes surrounding our galaxy deposit their things in Roseanne Barr's refrigerator
2007-04-19 05:32:54
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answer #1
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answered by Josh E 2
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black holes don't transfer their things anywhere. Anything that enters a black hole, lets say a space ship, will be compressed to the size of a dust mite, not before it is torn apart. it would be like it didn't exist anymore, but everything that is added to a black hole adds mass to the black hole. and everything that enters a black hole stays in the black hole.
2007-04-19 18:20:41
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answer #2
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answered by paulbritmolly 4
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A black hole takes everything that falls into it, and crushes it to nothing. The energy of the thing that fell in is eventually radiated away as new particles at the surface of the black hole.
A wormhole is a hypothetical (perhaps impossible) object that can connect any two places in spacetime---fall in, and you could emerge anywhere or anywhen.
2007-04-19 12:34:42
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answer #3
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answered by cosmo 7
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Mathematically, a "wormhole" could exist - however, it's an infinitely long, infinitely *narrow* tube, which means a single particle entering it would be enough to block it.... the first poster is correct - anything sucked into a black hole is simply added to it's mass.
2007-04-19 12:41:44
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answer #4
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answered by quantumclaustrophobe 7
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A black hole is an object with a gravitational field so powerful that no form of matter or radiation (including light) can escape. As not even light can escape, black holes appear black (resulting in the name for these objects).
they r like planets so they keep it on them :)
2007-04-19 12:33:20
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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They don't 'go' anywhere. A black hole is singularity in space - it just compresses matter down to a point. It's not a entryway, it's a garbage compressor.
2007-04-19 12:38:38
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answer #6
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answered by eri 7
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Nowhere. They just add to the mass of the black holes once they go in
2007-04-19 12:31:31
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answer #7
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answered by Gene 7
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It's not really a "hole". It's more like a freakin' huge magnet. Everything gets pulled in and becomes attached to the magnet.
2007-04-19 12:34:12
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answer #8
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answered by Anonymous
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The items sucked into the black holes in space are crushed into a matter so thin, that they just add to the black hole and it's strength. Don't believe people who say they just get completely destroyed. you can't destroy matter.
2007-04-19 12:33:51
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answer #9
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answered by JD 2
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They don't take them anywhere they gravitationally shred them to pieces and convert matter to energy
2007-04-22 23:46:19
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answer #10
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answered by hilltopobservatory 3
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