Well all of this is THEORY. Nothing is proven to be correct or true so the answer to your question can be a wide variety of opinions. From what is out there, is the POSSIBILITY of what is known as a "white" hole. A white hole is the opposite of a Black Hole in which it expels the matter it has sucked in, in another area of space. That is the most logical answer to your question on "where" does it go. Other theories are that the matter is expelled in other universes, where there is an endless loop of universes. Other than that, the Singularity of a black hole is a few miles across. This is pretty much ground zero of a black hole and is where any "matter" would be stored. I emphasize "matter" cause nobody knows if its still considered matter at that point. If you want to hear my opinion on this topic ... space is what makes up the universe. Space is an area where matter exists. If in the singularity of a black hole, where countless stars can fit into such a tiny space, then space (and time) does not exist. Quite simply it IS another dimension from what we are used to. And it will remain unexplained. A Black Hole is the greatest mystery of the universe and thats your best answer.
2007-05-13 21:26:10
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answer #1
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answered by Ertai2 4
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They dont go to other dimensions. In fact, because of the black hole's very high gravity, all the things that get sucked will never get out what happens is all their atoms and particles will disintegrate and never form back.
what your talking about is a Wormhole perhaps. because when stuff enter a wormhole, what the scientists predict is that these stuff get transported to a different part of the universe depending on where the end of that wormhole is.
hope this helps
2007-05-14 05:26:56
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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Well, beyond the event horizon of a black hole, the laws of physics cease to exist, and also, that object is permanently gone from the universe; at the event horizon, the escape velocity is the speed of light.
Thus, even if a human or a robot could survive passage beyond the event horizon of a black hole, there would be no way for the observer to communicate with our universe anymore. So if you want to know what happens past an event horizon, there's only one way to find out: you gotta go past one yourself.
2007-05-14 03:14:23
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answer #3
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answered by easymac 4
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in reguards to your reading a newspaper article about mass going through a blackhole to another dimension... ask them to prove it. No one knows where the mass goes, maybe its converted to Hawking Radiation, but even that shouldnt be able to escape the Hole itself once its past the event horizon. FIctionalized beyond compare, Suggestions about whats on the other side range from other universes to sheer nothingness... which is basically saying it could be anything or nothing at all.
2007-05-14 07:29:16
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answer #4
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answered by amadeus_tso 2
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hawking radiation:
Radiation theoretically emitted from just outside the event horizon of a black hole. Stephen W. Hawking proposed in 1974 that subatomic particle pairs (photons, neutrinos, and some massive particles) arising naturally near the event horizon may result in one particle's escaping the vicinity of the black hole while the other particle, of negative energy, disappears into it. The flow of particles of negative energy into the black hole reduces its mass until it disappears completely in a final burst of radiation.
2007-05-14 03:29:30
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answer #5
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answered by DeepBlue 4
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They don't. A black hole is a Roach Motel on steroids: the mass goes in, but it doesn't come out (except for Hawking radiation).
2007-05-14 03:04:27
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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goes in, gets compacted by the weight of a collapsed sun
not all that complicated
2007-05-14 03:06:59
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answer #7
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answered by kurtcovana94 2
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