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#22 |
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#23 |
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If the blackhole was big enough, you could actually survive beyond the event horizon (of course you could not communicate outside it). |
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#25 |
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If the blackhole was big enough, you could actually survive beyond the event horizon (of course you could not communicate outside it). But how are you going to escape? :S |
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#26 |
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The radiation would kill you would it not? Does anyone know how big a singularity actually is? Really?! That is very interesting. So if you had like the "right" equipment as an astronaut you could research the hole? :P Anyway, once past the horizon, you're stuff - no amount of rocket thrust or velocity will get you back out again. |
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#27 |
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Anyway, once past the horizon, you're stuff - no amount of rocket thrust or velocity will get you back out again. |
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#30 |
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Could i take this into the theoretical realm for a moment? If you could somehow generate your own gravitational forces, could you offset the effect of the black holes gravity? I'm not sure i'm making sense, but in the same way a planet orbits the Sun, if your craft could create sufficient gravity to offset that of the black hole and then sufficient velocity to shift the craft at very high speed, could you not get in very close orbit to a black hole, perhaps passing over the event horizon, close to the centre and slingshot out again? Silly thought probably, but it just kind of popped in there. [rofl] |
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#31 |
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Could i take this into the theoretical realm for a moment? If you could somehow generate your own gravitational forces, could you offset the effect of the black holes gravity? ![]() suppose you need one hell of an imagination to understand the cosmos "Sod what it actually means, just do the maths" A lot of what the modelling generates has no simple or even physical visualisation to it, so it's best not to worry about it, and this is very true for singularities: theoretically modelling them with mathematics is fine but trying to picture what one is like is pointless because there is no physical description for one. |
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#32 |
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Unfortunately not - think of space being like a sheet of rubber and the black hole is like a very heavy ball of iron placed on to it. The rubber will deform and create a deep pit with very steep sides: it's the steepness that's the problem. Do you recall who made that rubber mat analogy popular? It is a good one, but I forget where I heard it before. |
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#33 |
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#36 |
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Here's a wild speculation.........
Its been theorized that the universe is expanding at an accelerating rate because.... well, there are a few possibilities, but one is that there is a repulsive force that is growing stronger and stronger over time, possibly reaching a point in a surprisingly short (compared to the lifetime of the universe that was postulated before this) time. Its theorized that this repulsive force might even eventually reach the point when the remaining Stars and Planets and in fact anything material are torn apart as atoms themselves became repulsed from one another..... Would there be any black holes remaining in that far distant time? And does there ever become a point where the gravity of the holes becomes so low, due to the changing conditions, that the trapped/captured matter starts to.... be released? (or something) What might that do? Or is there a hole in the "whole" idea big enough to toss the Death Star through? Edit: Interesting. It appears I am not the first person who has thought of this. Damn! (I thought I was being so clever) ![]() But I can't seem to find an answer to the question!....... ![]() |
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#37 |
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Unfortunately not - think of space being like a sheet of rubber and the black hole is like a very heavy ball of iron placed on to it. The rubber will deform and create a deep pit with very steep sides: it's the steepness that's the problem. "Inside" the event horizon, the steepness is so much that you'd need to have a velocity greater than the speed of light to climb up and that's not possible if you have mass. If you generate your own gravity, however much you make, then you're just going to contribute to make the pit's sides steeper. I will put forward this: What happens to the event horizons (specifically their radii) when those of 2 blackholes cross one another? |
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#39 |
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#40 |
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