Geosphere, that's an interesting idea I don't know that it's actually necessary, but we don't really know enough about black holes to know it's not possible. The physics there are very extreme. Subatomic particles are very close together in black holes where in normal matter there is a lot of empty space.
RQ wrote: Black holes might have infinite density, but the do have an event horizon, and they can only accumulate so much mass until they do burst out from the exit of negative mass, which only makes them heavier. I read somewhere that a black hole the size of a dot can suck in the whole Rocky Mountain mountain system. Surely it would then take a lot more mass since black holes are literally in empty space where there is nothing around them, a lot more time and mass, but the do explode after they get "filled up."
RQ wrote:Well, they don't collect mass until the Big Crunch happens,
RQ wrote:otherwise we'd probably be in one,
RQ wrote:The mere proof of the black hole death is the fact that we have a sun that is only 5-10 billion years old, and that there are other stars in the galaxy which we know don't last forever.
RQ wrote: Black holes might have infinite density, but the do have an event horizon, and they can only accumulate so much mass until they do burst out from the exit of negative mass.
RQ wrote:I read somewhere that a black hole the size of a dot can suck in the whole Rocky Mountain mountain system.
RQ wrote:literally in empty space where there is nothing around them,
RQ wrote:but the do explode after they get "filled up."
Return to Higher Spatial Dimensions
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 50 guests