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Black Holes


Souper

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I think that Black Holes are entire universes, and that our universe is a black hole inside another universe, which is itself a black hole in OUr universe. (i also like to think the line is closed in on itself, which would explain the infinite density of black holes.)

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I guess that is white hole theory in a nutshell. Stuff falls into (what will be) a black hole and due to gravity, space time and other wizardry a new universe is born inside that black hole. We already know or at least suppose that time and space go all wonky near those things. I believe the idea is that the big bang is what happens on the other side of a black hole.

It is an interesting th and supposedly makes mathematical sense. We will probably not know for a while, but it is one of the more pleasing theories that I know of, with a sort of endless recursive nature to everything.

Edited by Camacha
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Actually, the G-force is so intense it rips atoms apart into their subatomic 1D string constituents, which is used as space for our universe.

(huge amount of 1D strings + small universe = very fast expansion)

Edited by Souper
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Actually, the G-force is so intense it rips atoms apart into their subatomic 1D string constituents, which is used as space for our universe.

(huge amount of 1D strings + small universe = very fast expansion)

Only for small and medium ones. The ones like in the center of Milky Way, and any larger, it would not be the case unless you're rather close to the center, which is deep inside the event horizon. If there was a black hole the size of our universe, you wouldn't feel tidal forces, but the sky would look all loopy instead of black and dotted with stars.

Stable orbits in black holes do exist, but not for entire worlds. If you're a particle, you could get by. :)

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I'm saying that you'd probably get shrunk down to the tiny, tiny size of the universe(s?) deep within the black hole.

No, you'd be pulled apart by the tidal forces into subatomic particles. A quark-gluon plasma is what would remain of you right before you strike the center. Then who knows what happens?

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