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What happens to the matter?
Where it goes?
What energy is released/absorbed?
What are Wormholes?
What are White holes?

2007-12-08 22:36:57 · 14 answers · asked by Ratnesh Sharma 2 in Science & Mathematics Astronomy & Space

14 answers

ok from what i remeber is that black holes shoot out gamma bursts with the energy that it doesnt use.
Wormholes are spaces in the universe when space moves around it accelerating it to light speed or above and whiteholes if linked together with blackholes are belived by scientist to make another universe in the middle with energy brought in by the black hole whitehles also expell energy

2007-12-08 22:44:11 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

"...What happens to the matter?..." The best SWAG (..scientific wild-assed guess..) is that all matter drawn into a black hole is totally annihilated.

"...Where it goes?..." Not even a good SWAG for this question

"...What energy is released/absorbed?..." Most of the energy of the material being drawn into a black hole is released in the form of high-energy radiation as it's accelerated to near the speed of light. With the exception of something called Hawking Radiation, black holes themselves do not radiate energy.

"...What are Wormholes?..." These are hypothetical shortcuts through spacetime. Jodie Foster went through one in the movie 'Contact.' If you put two dots on a flat piece of paper about 6 inches apart and then fold the paper so that the dots are directly opposite each other you can see that the distance between them has decreased significantly. Substitute the paper for spacetime and you get the idea behind wormholes.

"...What are White holes?..." Theoretically these are the 'other side' of black holes where all the stuff sucked in comes spewing out. There's no evidence yet that any such thing as white holes exist.

2007-12-08 22:53:24 · answer #2 · answered by Chug-a-Lug 7 · 0 0

Q1-What happens to the matter?

A1- No one so far has yet actually proven what happens to the matter after they get sucked in by the black hole however some scientists think that that matter is probably compressed into "Black Matter" .

Q2-Where it goes?

A2- These types of matter are known to form into clouds like the Oort Cloud. Some scientists believe that these clouds are responsible for making comets and even newborn stars.

As for the question , scientists believe the matter ends up in space as black matter which makes space look dark

Q3-What energy is released/absorbed?

A3- Just like 'black matter' the energy is believed to be called
'Dark Energy' which is released by the dark matter. The Dark Energy is converted into stron radio wave signals although there is no sound in space, astronomers can pick up these radio waves but then again not much is known about Dark Energy as well...

Q4 - What are Wormholes?
Wormholes are holes that are believe by Einstein. He says that if you walkthrough the holes you might be able to travel back in time or it might lead you to another place in space. Some Scientists believe that Black Holes are sort of like Wormholes where you can travel through time or it might lead you to another place or dimension or another kind of
"Space" or Universe.

Q5 - What are White Holes?

A5- White Holes are believed to be on the other side of the black hole. Scientists believe that if you go into a black hole
you'll end up out on a white hole. They call it a white hole because basically 'white' is the opposite color of 'black' but
the theories about white holes are much weaker these days.
Scientists can't be bothered to know about white holes.
In fact they are more interested on what happens to matter when it is sucked in by the black hole.

2007-12-09 00:09:27 · answer #3 · answered by Who 3 · 0 0

Simply put, A black hole is the name given to regions in galaxies that don't emit light. They are burned out stars that have shrunk to very small objects compared to what they were before. And because they have shrank, they become very dense. And because gravity is dictated by density of an object, the denser the object, the more pull it has on surrounding objects. And the more it sucks in, the denser it gets and the more pull it has. when objects hit the surface of the dead star it is absorbed and releases a tremendous amount of energy in the process, but most is absorbed by the dead stars gravity. Some of this energy however dose escape in the form of X rays and Gama rays. Light itself can't escape so the area looks like a hole in space.
A 'worm hole' is an imaginary, or theoretical portal in space to another region or dimension or universe. Same with 'white holes.'

2007-12-09 04:57:32 · answer #4 · answered by Jackolantern 7 · 1 0

The matter and energy cannot leave the event horizon, so they are drawn into the singularity and crushed into nonexistence. However, Hawking radiation will eventually — after potentially trillions of years — mean the matter will be leaked out by the interaction of virtual quantum particles with the event horizon.

2007-12-09 00:15:33 · answer #5 · answered by poorcocoboiboi 6 · 0 0

If a black hollow might desire to exist it would a 2 photograph voltaic mass sphere approximately 3 km in diameter whose floor gravity became such that the exterior get away speed may be extra advantageous than the fee of sunshine. because of the fact no radiation might desire to flee it would be invisible. it would be produced by way of the remnant of an exploded great nova.

2016-11-14 04:16:34 · answer #6 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

Matter including light is captured and where it goes no one knows.
Wormholes are theory only,supposedly they are expressways to to other wormholes across the universe.

2007-12-08 22:45:20 · answer #7 · answered by izzie 5 · 0 0

Sucked into black holes = goner stretched out of existence
matter = same
released nothing(nothing escapes) everything(again nothings escapes)
worm holes are like loop holes they don't pull you out of existence they pull you to another existence x)
white holes... no idea

2007-12-08 22:41:56 · answer #8 · answered by zero_ng93 1 · 0 0

It is absorbed in the blackhole
see above
all
theoretical cunstructs
dont exist

2007-12-08 22:40:17 · answer #9 · answered by psychopiet 6 · 0 0

Know one knows do they...It probably gets sucked up into a parallel universe or something...or maybe into a vaccum of nothingness...

2007-12-08 22:40:04 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

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