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And no there is not a wrong answer since no really know what happens. I think it brings you to an alternate universe or is like a shortcut to the other side of the universe.

2007-09-05 04:40:48 · 18 answers · asked by Anonymous in Science & Mathematics Astronomy & Space

hey guys , what you've just said is a theory since math couldnt solve the question of a black hole came close though. think about it all the great astronomers of the past where all right and WRONG. earth being the center of everything/the sun being the center of everything/the galaxy being the whole universe all wrong/ and thats what they truely believed at the time so whos to say you are right if pleople have been proven wrong over the centeries. I know my answer is way off , thats because i was just having fun. since black holes suck in all mass and black holes are bening exposed everyday , wouldnt the universe start shrinking after it stops expanding? Eddie from Cambridge UK on the rise.

2007-09-05 05:28:29 · update #1

18 answers

It is IMPOSSIBLE to go through a Black Hole.

Take some time to study what Black Holes are. Google 'what is a Black Hole' and do some research. The entire concept of it being a space/time portal is nothing more than fiction and fantasy.

You enter the event horizon, you are completely destroyed by the gravity, your dead leftovers permanently become a part of the Black Hole's mass. The end.

ok - according to your additionals you were just joking. All astronomers of the past were not right and wrong. Theory is based upon evidence and current scientific data. That does not mean that maybe one day we will discover that the Sun really does revolve around the Earth. Current theory suggests that our Universe will not collapse upon itself. It will continue to expand forever. Black Holes are NOT being discovered every day. A Black Hole is not some menacing vacuum cleaner going around sucking everything up.

jhstha's inferrence that just because the star gravitationally collapsed into itself now suddenly has close to infinite gravitational power is not true. A Black Hole has the EXACT SAME gravity it had when it was a star. The gravitational pull of an object is experienced the greatest at its surface. The farther you go into the object, the lower the gravity. When we speak of a Black Hole having a large gravitaional pull, this is only in referrence to it's SIZE. It has the same gravity as before but now it is a smaller object with a denser mass BUT the same total mass it had when it was a star. Any black hole in existence today is not pulling objects closer to it any faster than when it was a star. And we (hopefully) have enough intelligence to know that a star, whether it is like our Sun or 10x larger, is not some space/time portal.

yoli- attempting to convert people into your religion on a science forum only makes you AND your religion look stupid.

2007-09-05 13:55:44 · answer #1 · answered by Troasa 7 · 0 0

Things that go near a black hole end up like a bug on a windshield. The word hole in this case is misleading. It is not a hole in the sense of what we know here on Earth like a hole in the ground or a drain in the sink with sides and so forth.

A black hole is a sphere like our Earth or the Sun. Like the Sun, a black hole also is a star who's gravity is so strong that light cannot escape it's surface and shine out into space.

If you could get close enough to a black hole you would see what would appear to be a dark circle . This is how it came to be called a black hole. Compared to and among all the bright stars in the heavens these strange phenomenon are like a dark hole in space.

Knowing this now you can see that anything that gets near a black hole does not go anywhere but to certain destruction

2007-09-05 05:49:35 · answer #2 · answered by ericbryce2 7 · 1 0

I think you might be onto something there, about black holes being a transfer to another time and place. I have a theory to test it, let's pack a big giant rocket with all kinds of junk, and then launch it into a black hole.
If it comes back to us, then we know something is on the other side, if not then we know nothing is on the other side.
Either way, it would be fun to do, and the data we get back would help scientist's a lot.

2007-09-05 06:48:02 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

Black holes aren´t holes at all. That´s just a name. They are not some kind of magical tunnels to some other universe. They are points. Singularities of infinite density. You can´t go into it let alone through it. You fall down on to a black hole. And if you do you become part of it.

2007-09-05 05:14:50 · answer #4 · answered by DrAnders_pHd 6 · 1 0

little question that is a parallel universe... we've perspectives of the two aspects of spiral galaxies off the Hubble, and intensely of course there's a black hollow on one area, with plenty gravity, even ;easy can;t escape it. Then on the different area, there is not any longer something..we cant see the products or something for that count, popping out the different area, in spite of the fact that each and everything in the form horizon on one area is disappearing.. Very unusual. it may take a very very long term just to bypass the form horizon.. what you need to keep in mind is that the form horizon is 10 image voltaic hundreds. The suns diameter on my own is a hundred situations the dimensions of our earth. enable's say you fly from the state you're in to the state next to you, Calfornia to Nevada working example. once you look down, all you notice is land and it form of sounds like perpetually and ever, in basic terms land... nicely, all you're seeing relatively is in basic terms the single state you're going from and the single you're going into, probably each and every of the encompassing states on the main! that's geographically a very small mass, while in comparison with drawing near a black hollow of 10 image voltaic hundreds. The black hollow is so enormous, we could rather see that is obstacles, while dealing with it..i could say however, getting on the threshold of the form horizon, the tidal forces could make it complicated to circulate through, for this reason leaving purely our spirit to shuttle through time. i think of based on the form black hollow, it may the two take us back in time, or forward. the two way, we could no longer return to this area as quickly as this occured! i've got consistently concept-approximately black holes as 'recycling centers.' that is onle of my theories. maybe our black holes are sucking in each and every of the stellar mass they could, sending it to a parallel universe this is in turn sending it back into the nebulaes.. who knows! good success,

2016-10-18 00:54:37 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Of course there can be a lot of wrong answers, because one simply cannot go through a black hole. A black hole is a spot of unimaginable dense matter and a power of gravity so high, that we call it close to infinity (which it, of course isn't, because if the gravity was infinitely high, the whole universe would collaps) However, the power of gravity is high enough to even capture the fastest object we know: light. So if you go "in" you won't come out any more, not to mention at all going through. Hence we don't need to think of any crappy "what-if" questions if they are as unreal as yours.

2007-09-05 04:59:32 · answer #6 · answered by jhstha 4 · 3 2

This really should be in the Religions & Other Fallacies section, as if you are religious and try to 'go through a Black Hole' you are gonna meet your maker toot sweet!

2007-09-05 05:15:53 · answer #7 · answered by Faesson 7 · 1 0

I don't know but lets go with what we do know

You turn red and stretch (spaggetified) you can escape you are simply overcome by infinite gravity and a million "G" forces. Some even say the blackholes are wormholes to other parts of the universe or to another universe.

2007-09-05 05:17:46 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

A black hole isn't a "hole". It just looks like one. It is a very dense body floating in the universe, so you really can't go "through" it.

2007-09-05 05:06:02 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

You can't go 'through' a black hole. It is a planet that has such strong gravity, that not even light can escape it. If you tried to go through it, you'd smash into it and die.

2007-09-06 03:13:38 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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