English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

If you think about it, every galaxy had black holes, we don't actually know really what they are.

If we had a ship, that was not affected by gravity.

And we were an advanced enough species to do that. there must then be something there, so theorize what that could be.

2007-12-10 05:59:57 · 17 answers · asked by H 3 in Science & Mathematics Astronomy & Space

17 answers

not possible. you'd have to shrink the ship to a size smaller than 1/10000th of an atom to break through the contained microdimensions. In my opinion.

people claim theirs not another side but thats when you look at it in a newtonain view point.

from a quantum view point things change, but I don't think your ship could do that. esp the human body.

anyway, you'd come out soooooo freaking hot and full of energy the ship would probably be destroyed once it appeared on the "other side"

if there are "other sides" they are big bangs other wise known as "white holes" (imagine that) , imagine flying out of or being part of a big bang, pretty but not pleasant..

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/White_hole


don't let science fiction confuse science fact.

many writers take science fact and twist it a tiny bit to make for a good story. But Einstein layed out the rules of wormholes and discovered that in Newtonian physics, it is not possible to maintain an open tunnel for more than a split second.

I believe Carl Sagan first came up with the idea of traveling through a black hole, in a book called Contact, but it might have been information that traveled through only, which makes more sense, because info can exist on the quantum level.

perhaps quantum tunneling on a LARGE (ship size) scale would do the trick, but in that case, who needs a black hole?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quantum_tunneling

2007-12-10 06:32:00 · answer #1 · answered by Mercury 2010 7 · 0 1

According to my understanding of black holes, if you cross the event horizon, the intense gravity causes time to stop, so I fail to see any way that one could go >through< a black hole, and come out anywhere. You would be trapped in there for a very long time, as observed from the rest of the universe. For you, no time at all.

2007-12-10 06:58:21 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 1 1

Black holes are perfect matter to energy conversion machines. No multy dimension, alternate universe, quantum stuff.

It will squeeze you until your atoms are split and then some. All of the energy released is shoot out at the poles in the form of radiation. All that energy released during billions of years can explain the expansion of the universe.

Simply beautiful.



It is way beyond an big ole garbage masher. The masher will break matter into elementary particles. In this case, not even that! Just energy squeezed out by splitting atoms.
The ultimate recycler of energy and stuff?
Again, to recycle implies to be used again. In this case there is nothing left!

Awesome isn't it?

2007-12-10 09:59:48 · answer #3 · answered by autoglide 3 · 0 1

Black holes are perfect matter to energy conversion machines. No multy dimension, alternate universe, quantum stuff.

It will squeeze you until your atoms are split and then some. All of the energy released is shoot out at the poles in the form of radiation. All that energy released during billions of years can explain the expansion of the universe.

Simply beautiful.


I like this answer alot.

In Paris Hilton terms are you saying it's a big ole garbage masher?
The ultimate recycler of energy and stuff?

2007-12-10 23:59:58 · answer #4 · answered by Paul Batchelor 1 · 0 1

Actually, you'd wind up nowhere. A black hole is not a tunnel; while it's *possible* - according to some strange calculations - the 'tunnel' would have to be infinitely long, and infinitely narrow - which means if *any* piece of matter with mass - a proton, say - were to 'fall in', the tube would be blocked instantly.

Black holes are one-way trips to nowhere, and there's no way out.

2007-12-10 06:14:12 · answer #5 · answered by quantumclaustrophobe 7 · 0 1

Nothing. At the center of a black hole time is stopped, Where speed and gravity are infnite time stops, so everything that has ever been sucked into it would not be in this time. A ship that wasn't affected by gravity also would not be affected by time. You would just pass through a black hole, Nothing would be there.

2007-12-10 06:09:57 · answer #6 · answered by turkey 2 · 1 2

you will locate extra galaxies, and permit say, as you keep vacationing on, on, till the tip of the Universe, what is going to you detect?in accordance to a historical scientific Vedic literature: the Srimad-Bhägavatam, the actual universe is surrounded by ability of a shell it is compose by ability of thick layers of cloth factors. The shell of the universe additionally marks the tip of time, for the reason that time is barely proper in this cloth universe in uncomplicated terms. what's in the different ingredient?

2016-10-01 07:27:02 · answer #7 · answered by girman 4 · 0 0

A very nasty crush to get out as soon as possible at the event horizon and some giddiness as you would be on a rather fast magic roundabout traveling at 99.999999% of the speed of light.

That is a rather silly "if" question old bean.

2007-12-10 06:21:03 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

"Probably a whole bunch of other "black-hole proof" ships"... Lol that's funny.

Really, I think it would cause a paradox. I think back holes are the manifestations of nothingness. If you could continue to be 'something' in 'nothing', you would destroy the nothingness by making it 'something'. So the conditions which cause the black hole would cease to exist. "I am" is only "I am", because of 'I ain't'.

2007-12-10 07:07:52 · answer #9 · answered by HotDockett 4 · 0 1

If I had a flying carpet, I would not need to by airline tickets. So what does the fact that I still buy airline tickets prove? That I don't have a flying carpet.

Your "thoughts" are of exactly the same quality.

2007-12-10 06:40:21 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

fedest.com, questions and answers