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Is it the super massive blackhole in the middle of our galaxy that makes everything spin? If so would passing through the central band of this massive gravity not cause a poleshift?

2007-11-10 10:18:51 · 9 answers · asked by Anonymous in Science & Mathematics Astronomy & Space

I have read that there is a sort of cycle the solar system goes through in which magnetics reverse.(Pole shift) NASA say the next one our sun will undergo is 2012. Could the earth undergo such a poleshift?

2007-11-10 10:47:14 · update #1

there is a blackhole at the centre

http://science.nasa.gov/headlines/y2000/ast29feb_1m.htm

2007-11-10 10:53:14 · update #2

9 answers

No. Angular momentum does. Don't allow yourself to be misled by 2012 disinformation. Try to get your science information from real science websites and library books. The Earth is not going to be passing through the galactic band. The Earth is not going to reverse it's poles. I don't understand why people are so gullable to believe this crap. Stay off 2012 websites and stay off of youtube.

The Earth has a wobble in it's rotation. Because of this, the Milky Way APPEARS to go up and down in the sky in accord with the sunrise. The Galaxy is not actually moving up and down and the Sun is not moving through the galactic center any more than the Sun travels around the Earth. An investigation into poleshifts will reveal that they are in no way whatsoever related to precession.

The next time you see something on the internet, try looking at your information source. Research and verify claims before accepting them ad-hoc. Don't allow yourself to be gullable in subjects that you don't understand. There are no laws stating that what is printed on the internet needs to be truthful.

regarding your additionals - While I do not disagree that there most probably exists a black hole at the center of the Milky Way galaxy, it is also true that the event horzon of such has NOT been detected. While it may be safe to assume that a black hole exists there, at this point in time 11/07 it remains a theory. It is true that the Sun reverses it's magnetic poles rather regularly about every 11 years, the last Earth magnetic reversal was 780,000 years ago. There are a lot of things being hyped up as 2012 end-of-the-world propaganda. This is simply one of the lies.

2007-11-10 10:55:10 · answer #1 · answered by Troasa 7 · 0 0

I think the black hole in the center of the galaxy does serve as the mass around which the rest of the galaxy rotates, just like the Sun is the massive center around which the rest of the solar system rotates. But since its gravitational field is spherically symmetrical, its influence is not different just because you are on one side or another. All that matters is how far away it is, the direction makes no difference at all. There is no central band to pass through.

2007-11-10 11:12:01 · answer #2 · answered by campbelp2002 7 · 0 0

Not really. The galaxy was rotating from its formation, and that likely occured before the black hole formed. The gravity of the black hole is what keeps the stars near the centre orbiting it. But you have to remember that the gravity of a black hole isn't more than the gravity of that amount of mass in any other form. A black hole doesn't reach out and grab things at a distance.

Not sure what you mean by "passing through the central band of this massive gravity". The black hole in the centre of the galaxy is so large and massive that getting close to it would likely result in being pulled into it by its gravity.
However, stars are orbiting the central black hole, so its possible to orbit the black hole (at a high enough speed and with the right trajectory).
But its 25,000 light years away, so we have a few millenia to wait before we can travel there ourselves to find out.

2007-11-10 10:30:46 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

there is not any objective. A black hollow is the end results of a collapsed famous person - while this happens it creates a gravitational nicely - it rather is an extreme gravitational plughole - count number is then drawn in the direction of it,so that's for sure on the centre of a swirling vortex of count number falling into it - as count number does this it gets overwhelmed - so violently that it supplies off capacity - there is not any WHY - they do merely in accordance with physics like E=Mc^2 - the quantity of capacity from count number. to seek for objective potential you think of that the universe has one - it does not - it merely exists - and the above is a few thank you to asserting WHY they are on the centre and WHY they supply off capacity. so as that they do no longer look to be there FOR something - they simply finally end up there by utilising default.

2016-10-02 01:31:50 · answer #4 · answered by dickirson 4 · 0 0

do you mean spin or orbit around it? if you mean orbit around it then yes. because if it didnt counter the gravity with centrifugal force (sphereical orbit around the black hole) it would get sucked in. so only things that are rotating around it in some way are left.

and what do you mean central band? if you mean going into it far worse would happen that a pole shift.

2007-11-10 10:23:09 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

no there is no black whole. quite the contrary. there are many starts in the center of our galaxy. we spin because thats what gravity does. We have many satelites orbiting around earth becasue of gravity. we dont slow down b/c there is no friction in space. and no, earth will never pass through the center of our galaxy because our solar system orbits the center of the galaxy and its orbit will never cross the center.

2007-11-10 10:24:20 · answer #6 · answered by chessgeek4400 2 · 1 2

No it has nothing to do other objects spinning, only bodies within the gravity well of the black hole is affected by it.

2007-11-10 10:22:20 · answer #7 · answered by johnandeileen2000 7 · 0 0

there is no black hole in the center of the milky way galaxy. there is one in the middle of our nearest galactic neighbor andromeda. there is a huge amount of mass in the center of the milky way which is why we orbit around it but it's not a black hole.

2007-11-10 10:39:11 · answer #8 · answered by brandon 5 · 0 1

the black hole eats stars occasionally.
so, in your theory, we would go through pole shifts all the time.

that is not the evidence we see today.

2007-11-10 10:39:06 · answer #9 · answered by Mercury 2010 7 · 0 1

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