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Re: Black Holes That Turn Into Nothing

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Posted by Mike Hutchinson/">Mike Hutchinson on January 27, 1998 16:13:18 UTC

: Interesting... that sugest that the universe will : never revert back to the singularity that the "big : bang" started from as space-time will always be : there. That being the case then the singularity : from which the "big Bang" must have come from was : a rather special one it that all space time came : from it as well.

: Sounds a bit like it was not a "singularity" as : we think of them here in this forum eh?

: : : : : As a black hole gathers more matter, its event horizon expands. As the event horizon expands, the gravity well becomes less and less steep. Eventually there comes a point when an object can easily survive transition across the event horizon - but can never escape. Now, inside the event horizon as the object approaches the singularity that must exist, is a different matter. Such an object is approaching a point of infinite gravity and an some point will be stretched into spaghetti before reaching the singularity. It is at the singularity that current theories break down and predicting what happens becomes problematic.

: : As far as I know, no matter how large black holes become, their gravitational effect is never cut off from the rest of the universe. And the larger they become, the more ordinary the conditions appear at the event horizon - ordinary to the point the matter falls in without any unusual gravitational stress.

: : : As a black hole gathers more matter and distorts : : : space-time more, there must come a point where the space : : : around it gets so "stretched" that it eventually rips : : : space-time. The black hole that the big bang came from, : : : si I understand, was such a black hole. it sucked into : : : itself not only matter and energy, but space-time as : : : well.

: : : I was wondering how much matter would be needed to : : : create a gravitational force great enough to cause : : : this. (maybe the answer is everything in the universe)

: : : I assume that if this did happen, then anyone on the : : : other side of such a rip would not be able to detect : : : the gravitational affect of the black hole any : : : longer as there would be no space-time through which : : : it could propagate. Thus it would seen to others to : : : have disappeared.

: : : Any thoughts?

: : : What if the universe didn't start with a singularity, but rather with a honeycomb of blackholes that effectively reduce the size of the four dimensional universe. With nuclear reactions a critical mass and critical geometry must be achieved before the fission can occur. What if,after countless eons, that so many stars implode to form black holes that the size of the universe is reduced, thus (with massenergy being constant) a form of critical massgeometry arises that produces enough of a gravitational force to trigger the big bang. Once the bang occurs, the new four? dimensional universe is created and the cycle begins all over again. As far as parallel universes and holes in the space-time fabric, I'm not convinced that the universe is that complicated and secondly, it smacks of human ego to think that a parallel universe would be four dimensional and similiar to ours. Did God create us in his image or vice versa???

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