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I'm trying to find info on monopoles within black holes or even just info on their magnetic fields but I'm not getting solid proof on black holes' mag fields, and am finding it hard to get up to date information

any opinions or information you could dig up could help.

2007-09-27 18:36:23 · 3 answers · asked by Mercury 2010 7 in Science & Mathematics Astronomy & Space

3 answers

The monopole doesn't exist within the black hole. The monopole is a large subatomic particle. According to the last article you posted.

Using machines not yet available. They will collide monopoles with each other at extreme speeds. They will stay together long enough to have their own mas and create a source of gravity. One held together this will begin to suck in all matter immediately surrounding it from the immense mass of all of these particles. This will continue until it is (closed off from this universe thus creating its own universe. This will form a continuous black hole on side sucking in matter and a universe constantly expanding as the matter expands. I think I understood that to happen. Which is why is it believed to happen all the time as matter is constantly colliding. But the proof of it would be near impossible because it would be almost instantaneously gone the minute it occurred. Why are unsure because we are yet to create one with these larger subatomic particles (amount of energy needed to collide this is astronical compared to what we have)

2007-09-27 19:44:53 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

If a black hole could exist it would have no magnetic field.
It would not conserve angular momentum.
The only resemblance to a celestial body would be it's gravitational field.
It is strictly a theoretical entity that has never been detected and has some features that make it a non viable entity.

2007-09-28 03:06:37 · answer #2 · answered by Billy Butthead 7 · 0 1

i often times try to keep up with astronomy. i may be wrong, but i dont think a whole lot is actually known about black holes, other than thier desctructive gravitational pull.

2007-09-27 18:46:29 · answer #3 · answered by Joey 2 · 0 0

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