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9 answers

dude. isn't it obvious? Big Bang maybe??? hang with me

Black Holes crush time, space, mass and energy into basic building blocks -- such as particles photons quarks and strings

The energy / matter must be "ported" somewhere or be destroyed.

you can't destroy energy right?????
so then where does it go???? some makes up the BH but some is blasted past it while some of it breaks the barrier.

perhaps through a one way tunnel coming "out" of the black hole. a WORMHOLE held in the "11th deminsion".
11th D -- a container dimension for all other dimensions
Remember: They claimed Black holes where hypothetical too, just like we don't believe in wormholes yet.
Now we find a BH in the center of every galaxy, holding them together

Once out of the wormhole, all the particles, photons, quarks, and strings that we broke down now shoot out a WHITE HOLE still hot from the Black Hole's power

aka Big Bang...... basic particles flying out super hot and full of energy, binding back together and rearranging matter back into its "calm" state as we know and love in our 3Ds today

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http://casa.colorado.edu/~ajsh/schww.html
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maybe I should say black holes warp reality when it feeds, and at that time, all D's are forced together forcing the two separate containing "branes" to collide, porting matter and energy out into the "other" side, creating a white hole or aka big bang.

ta da. Must watch
http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=4183875433858020781&q=Parallel+Universes&total=1159&start=0&num=10&so=0&type=search&plindex=5

2007-09-10 19:44:33 · answer #1 · answered by Mercury 2010 7 · 0 1

White Hole's are fictitious as seems to be the case with most of your questions. How many Universes do I get to pick from?

White holes appear as part of the vacuum solution to the Einstein field equations describing a Schwarzschild wormhole. One end of this type of wormhole is a black hole, drawing in matter, and the other is a white hole, emitting matter. While this gives the impression that black holes in this universe may connect to white holes elsewhere, this turns out not to be the case for two reasons. First, Schwarzschild wormholes are unstable, disconnecting as soon as they form. Second, Schwarzschild wormholes are only a solution to the Einstein field equations in vacuum (when no matter interacts with the hole). Real black holes are formed by the collapse of stars. When the infalling stellar matter is added to a diagram of a black hole's history, it removes the part of the diagram corresponding to the white hole.

The existence of white holes that are not part of a wormhole is doubtful, as they appear to violate the second law of thermodynamics.

White holes have long been speculated about in science fiction movies, television shows, and comic books. That is the only Universe they exist in.

The same people that think Black Holes are some kind of a space/time warp travel device now bring you...White Holes. Enjoy.

Mercury - if the energy in Black Holes 'must be ported somewhere' then why does not the Earth 'port' it's energy which is also attracted from gravity? Where is Earth's 'White Earth'?

pure fiction

2007-09-11 01:19:42 · answer #2 · answered by Troasa 7 · 0 0

My first inclination is to jokingly say "yeah I know a few" but the answer is, a black hole is a star just like our Sun. It's gravity is so strong that light cannot escape it's surface to shine out into space. It not really a hole, but a sphere. The opposite of a black hole is a regular star. There is no such thing as a white hole.
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2007-09-11 01:47:59 · answer #3 · answered by ericbryce2 7 · 1 1

Our universe. Stephen Hawking discovered that black holes are not black, the are "white hot," as he describes. There is more to it than that, but Hawking argues that white holes are the same as black holes on the quantum level. He discovered that Hawking Radiation and mass is ejected from the black hole and intense gamma rays are emitted. Theoretically all matter will eventually be ejected from a black hole, but it may take a long time before its rate of consumption reduces below the ejection rate.

Go to http://www.hawking.org.uk/home/hindex.html to learn more about Stephen and his studies of black holes. I am sure his papers concerning black holes and referenced there. His public lectures target all audiences, and he is very good are reducing complex problems to understandable concepts.

2007-09-11 01:09:24 · answer #4 · answered by BJ 4 · 0 0

So-called 'white holes' are the hypothetical output from black holes. No such thing has ever been observed, nor any evidence found that suggests white holes actually exist.

2007-09-11 01:10:35 · answer #5 · answered by Chug-a-Lug 7 · 1 0

I think a white hole is an opposite to a black hole that spits out new matter that was eaten by the black hole, and they exist in this universe.

2007-09-11 01:01:25 · answer #6 · answered by dsgc05™ 6 · 0 2

There are no white holes in this universe, I don't about what is in other universes, nor does anyone else.

2007-09-13 16:20:45 · answer #7 · answered by johnandeileen2000 7 · 0 0

The question got you some good answers, though perhaps unpleasantly smug on some.

I'm answering this because I want to have easy access to the answers so's to study them a bit more.

I sort of like the answer given by the guy before me.

2007-09-12 00:19:22 · answer #8 · answered by Jack P 7 · 0 0

Unless you could help with some details>>>>>>>>?

2007-09-15 00:49:37 · answer #9 · answered by hamoh10 5 · 0 0

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