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gravity bends space time. extreme gravity can make space act like a lens. (abell super cluster) would two interacting supermassive objects be able to cause spacial turbulence? I.E. pockets of dense space in confines with pockets of neutral, Dare i say possible, negative space? if so is this a possible creator of vacuum genesis?

2007-04-23 23:17:08 · 4 answers · asked by noneya b 3 in Science & Mathematics Astronomy & Space

4 answers

Try googling "Tippler Time Machine".

2007-04-24 02:35:38 · answer #1 · answered by cosmo 7 · 0 0

The answer to that is kinda simple; the black holes that we all hear about that hang out in sppace are just that; a supermassive object with a vacuum so insane that even light cannot escape the pull. Once inside a black hole, I would lilke to think that due to the force of the gravity, negative space is indeed reached. Hope you found this helpful ;)

2007-04-24 07:28:00 · answer #2 · answered by inkslayer77 2 · 0 0

That's a tricky question. What you are talking about is gravitaional lens. This concept has been used so far by hubble space telescope. If i recall right, the image deep field camera made a series of images using a far massive galaxy.

In this proces, the objects that are beyond the galaxy emit rays of light (waves) that curve around the galaxy due to massive gravity. The small precentage that goes pass the galaxy is received by hubble, and they got the images of very far galaxys.

I'm not up to date on this matter, so i may be wrong.

2007-04-24 06:33:21 · answer #3 · answered by Keppler 2 · 0 0

No ... masses distort space/time and don't make it "turbulent" and I have never heard of negative space.

2007-04-24 06:45:41 · answer #4 · answered by Gene 7 · 0 0

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