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Please don't give me a wikipedia link or a copy-and-paste from there; I don't understand a word of it. Could the black hole actually teleport you somewhere? Or does the object get crushed?

2007-07-07 18:32:05 · 17 answers · asked by demon_card99 4 in Science & Mathematics Astronomy & Space

17 answers

It will basically get crushed into nothing. Whether it can be a source of "wormholes" has not been proven yet, it's just skepticism.

2007-07-07 18:34:46 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

Despite overwhelming evidence that black holes do exist they are still just theoretical objects in space. The most popular theory about black holes is that anything pulled in to it gets crushed. But you can't ask a complicated question with out getting a complicated answer. No one really knows what happens. The theory I like is the possibility that light and time go hand in hand with each other, and since light can't even escape the gravity of a black hole that maybe it's an opening to another dimension or possible to another point in time. We probably will not ever know. For right now it's just best guess until astrophysicists can figure out something we don't know yet.

2007-07-07 18:50:49 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

A black hole is an object with a gravitational field so powerful that a region of space becomes cut off from the rest of the universe – no matter or radiation, including visible light, that has entered the region can ever escape.

It would be interesting if you could sit and watch an object go into a black hole ... The object would actually appear to slow down and stop before it entered, and would begin to turn red and gradually get dimmer and dimmer unti lyou could no longer see it...

How and why this happens is too long to write here...but everything you would want to know is right here:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_hole

2007-07-07 18:49:54 · answer #3 · answered by Keger E 3 · 0 0

My understanding is that objects falling into black holes get stretched out, and time slows down for them, as they get crushed. So, from the perspective of a person falling into a black hole, billions of years would go by in fast forward, as they are stretched out, spiraling faster and faster around the black hole. But from an outside observer, if they could magically see through the event horizon, the person falling would get crushed.

I think the object in the middle of a black hole is a singularity, that is, an object that occupies no volume but which has a huge mass and infinite density. At least that's my understanding.

2007-07-07 18:42:53 · answer #4 · answered by Gary 6 · 0 0

Scientist don't know all the answers, of course, but they are reasonably certain of the following if and when an object falls inside a black hole then:

1. It will experience that flash of embarrassment
2. It will look around to see if anyone saw what happened
3. It will try to smoothly get to its feet, as if it "meant" to fall
4. It will discover that it has skinned its knee
5. Despite the pain, it will walk normally until WELL out of the area, at which time it will begin to limp and whimper like a baby

2007-07-07 18:40:46 · answer #5 · answered by Just_One_Man's_Opinion 5 · 0 0

The correct scientific term is anniahlated. It sounds too common but its the process in which a particle comes in contact with its antiparticle and completely destroyed.

After the particles are made into nothing,the left over energy would become antimatter, the definition of a black hole. A great source of energy.

Methods to develop antimatter exist today and are currently being used to make new energy sources and weapons for the military.

2007-07-07 21:01:03 · answer #6 · answered by sucka 2 · 0 0

while stuff falls right into a black hollow, the gravitational pull is powerful adequate to tear any merchandise aside into atoms, and atoms into the products that make up atoms, called quarks. it incredibly is the shrink of what i be conscious of. you may call that "out of lifestyles", it appears like that to me. despite the fact that, your commentary is going into some distinctive territory. Gravity could desire to be the 'weakest' stress, despite the fact that that's the excellent in quantity. attempt looking a magnet to maintain the Earth orbiting the sunlight, in basic terms approximately one hundred million miles away! and then there is this assertion: "that could be a actuality: if count replaced into divisble, it could desire to be broken down infinitely and all those products could desire to have a length. If an inifnite quantity of goods have a length, it could occupy an inifnite area!" 2 concepts - there is no assure that count is "infinitely divisible". yet arithmetic shows us that an infinte sum of reducing parts isn't inevitably countless. case in point: a million + a million/2 + a million/4 + a million/8 + a million/sixteen + a million/32 + ... + a million/(2^n) = 2 as n strategies infinity. inspite of the incontrovertible fact that, in basic terms to maintain you at a loss for words... a million + a million/2 + a million/3 + a million/4 + a million/5 + ... + a million/n strategies infinity as n strategies infinity.

2016-11-08 10:58:20 · answer #7 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

It is sort of like the Borg -resistance is futile. You are just another piece of mass being incorporated into the great mass in a small spherical entity at the end of the black hole. What eventually happens to the hole and its contents is guess. We haven't seen any evidence of a black-hole blowout.

2007-07-07 18:36:34 · answer #8 · answered by cattbarf 7 · 0 0

In a brief explanation, yes, objects do get crushed. Generally in a black hole, there exist a gravitional pull so immense, that any objects who are close to it will become indefinitely crushed. The pull is so strong that not even light itself can escape it.

2007-07-07 18:36:01 · answer #9 · answered by brother Mohammed 2 · 0 0

As it began to enter the black hole it would stretch and scew. then as it came close it would begin to condense and finally it would become apart of the highly dense matter in the center of the black hole which is often only the size of a needle but contains the amount of matter that is in giant space rocks.

2007-07-07 18:46:32 · answer #10 · answered by Hoody Hoo 3 · 0 0

One would have to assume that black holes actually exist. Scientists assume they are looking through a vacuum at things millions of miles away. According to what they say, you would just be sucked up and crushed into a dense little speck.

2007-07-07 18:35:14 · answer #11 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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