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This information may have been posted elsewhere, but I couldn't find it.
http://www.cnn.com/2011/US/06/15/black.holes.nasa.chandra/index.html?&hpt=hp_c1
I love astrophysics!
Steve
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Warning, addicted to SETI crunching!
Crunching as a member of GPU Users Group.
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Good article! I have wondered what happens to all the stuff that enters a black hole. Where exactly does it all go?
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Computer: Voyager | OS: Microsoft Windows 7 Professional - Service Pack 1 | CPU: Intel(R) Core(TM) i7 CPU 960 @ 3.20GHz (x64) | GFX: NVIDIA GeForce GTX 460 1.00GB | ram: 6142.4MB |
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Good article! I have wondered what happens to all the stuff that enters a black hole. Where exactly does it all go?
It collapses in on itself. That's the simple way of thinking about it. Consider 11 dimensions. Suppose you have a water balloon. You make an O with your thumb and first finger. The water balloon is behind the circle of your fingers. If you squeeze the water balloon from the side that is behind your fingers, it emerges on the other side of your fingers. It is there all the time, but not visible on one side until it is pushed through.
Steve
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Warning, addicted to SETI crunching!
Crunching as a member of GPU Users Group.
GPUUG Website |
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So items still exist after entering a black hole? Where do they end up? Are they deposited somewhere else, or sit in a pit of some kind? Do they hold their same form, or are they obliterated by the effects of the black hole on the trip in?
*scratches his head*
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Computer: Voyager | OS: Microsoft Windows 7 Professional - Service Pack 1 | CPU: Intel(R) Core(TM) i7 CPU 960 @ 3.20GHz (x64) | GFX: NVIDIA GeForce GTX 460 1.00GB | ram: 6142.4MB |
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I believe this is where matter and anti-matter come into play and as it compresses into a singularity, matter is destroyed by anti-matter into a energy form that requires no space to contain. Just a theory though :) |
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I believe this is where matter and anti-matter come into play and as it compresses into a singularity, matter is destroyed by anti-matter into a energy form that requires no space to contain. Just a theory though :)
In the event horizon of a black hole, the tension is very great. Mass seems to be carried out by gravitons, which is all that can escape. Some of it flies out, and is refered to as Hawking radiation. Eventually a black hole will evaporate. If membrane theory is correct, this universe emerged from two branes colliding. The collision changed the frequency of the vibration of the branes. The resultant change in frequency can be represented in the mass of our universe. When a black hole evaporates, perhaps the frequency once again returns to that of the original brane, like a guitar string becoming silent after being struck. This is just my crude understanding of what M-theory may represent. Most likely I am wrong.
Steve
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Warning, addicted to SETI crunching!
Crunching as a member of GPU Users Group.
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Volunteer tester Send message
Joined: 9 Apr 02 Posts: 12012 Credit: 19,606,855 RAC: 43,348

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After reading all the theories and ideas presented in this thread, I can now say that I have a deeper understanding of exactly where I have been depositing my paychecks into. |
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A black hole is like a write only memory. You can write to it but you'll never be able to read it. There was a story about a magazine editor who gave this theme to check the ability of a person seeking a job. The article was written and published and from all the world came requests of more information about this new memory chip. The unfortunate editor had to write an editorial explaining how that article had been conceived and published by error of the managing editor.
Tullio
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After reading all the theories and ideas presented in this thread, I can now say that I have a deeper understanding of exactly where I have been depositing my paychecks into.
LOL
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Computer: Voyager | OS: Microsoft Windows 7 Professional - Service Pack 1 | CPU: Intel(R) Core(TM) i7 CPU 960 @ 3.20GHz (x64) | GFX: NVIDIA GeForce GTX 460 1.00GB | ram: 6142.4MB |
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I am really liking Garrett Lisi's idea on unified theory. Beyond that, I believe the concept of compactification in which we cannot see past the 3 dimensionsm due to our relative size, is where matter may "hide". I would see a black hole acting no different since this is suppose to be "unified" throughout our universe. |
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Isn't there a theory somewhere that says that the big bang was in fact a single black hole, that had swallowed up the entire universe. It got to the stage where it couldn't contain all the matter any more and just exploded? |
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I hope this black hole is a bit different than was posted by CNN.
WASHINGTON - A monster black hole shredded a Sun-like star, producing a strangely long-lasting flash of gamma rays that probably won’t be seen again in a million years, astronomers reported Thursday.
That is definitely not the norm for gamma ray bursts, energetic blasts that typically flare up and end in a matter of seconds or milliseconds, often the sign of the death throes of a collapsing star.
~more~
http://cnews.canoe.ca/CNEWS/Science/2011/06/17/18297026.html
Quiet black hole impulsively eats a star
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Isn't there a theory somewhere that says that the big bang was in fact a single black hole, that had swallowed up the entire universe. It got to the stage where it couldn't contain all the matter any more and just exploded?
That would explain recent discoveries of galaxies moving faster than the speed of light.
If a black hole exploded, throwing matter outward at a greater speed than light, the matter expelled would continue at it's rate of travel until affected by the gravity and mass other matter.
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If any question why we died, tell them, because our fathers lied.
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It certainly would Robert! But if evrything we can see is constantly moving away from us, at whatever speed, what is it expanding into?
The only conclusion I can think of is that there has to be a super universe, and our own observable universe, which is part of it. This super universe may have billions of super massive black holes all over it, every so often one collects so much matter it just produces a big bang.
Eventually, the parts of our big bang will get gobbled up by another super massive black hole somewhere else, and that part of the super universe will have its own local big bang, and so on ad infinitum.
Because everything appears to be moving away from us in all directions, it's always been thought that us in the Milkyway Galaxy were around the fringe of the centre of the big bang, but I think that may have been disproved now.
All fascinating stuff! |
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It certainly would Robert! But if everything we can see is constantly moving away from us, at whatever speed, what is it expanding into?
The universe is infinite. The expansion is just a bunch of stuff making its presence known to the rest of the universe. Photons and Gravitons at speed C.
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Subject is black Hole related. Kinda blows your mind.
LOS ANGELES -- A team of European astronomers, glimpsing back in time to when the universe was just a youngster, says it has detected the most distant and earliest quasar yet.
Light from this brilliant, starlike object took nearly 13 billion years to reach Earth, meaning the quasar existed when the universe was only 770 million years old – a kid by cosmic standards. The discovery ranks as the brightest object ever found.
~more~
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/06/29/quasar-earliest-brightest-most-distant_n_887094.html
'Monster' Quasar Is Brightest Object Ever Found |
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ISTM, that for a Black Hole to explode, more energy must exist than all the forces holding it together. Perhaps a LOT MORE, because the gravitational force will remain strong over distance.
Has the process of exploding been theorized?
Martin
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ML1Volunteer tester Send message
Joined: 25 Nov 01 Posts: 7210 Credit: 3,703,390 RAC: 728

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... for a Black Hole to explode, ...
Has the process of exploding been theorized?
You get black holes born from explosions.
You might say that a black itself explodes very slowly from the slow erosion of Hawking radiation whereby it in effect evaporates away.
Keep searchin',
Martin
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Mandriva Linux A user friendly OS!
See new freedom Mageia2
The Future is what We make IT (GPLv3) |
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Sheep, the whole lot of you are sheep that follow any Shepherd that gets his article published in Nature magazine or Astrophysical journal! Sheep!!!
Lets be completely clear here!!
1. Albert Einstein was wrong in his theories! Johnney Guinness speaks the truth!
2. There are no black holes!
3. There are no singularities!
4. Matter never disappears, we can always explain where it goes!
5. There was no Big Bang! The Universe has always been here!
6. Energy is ALWAYS conserved!
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How do i know all this information is true when tens of thousands of scientists around the world all write scientific papers based on Einstein's work?
I know i'm right in my scientific findings because God told me! I asked God for help to solve the problems i was having in physics and he helped me. The Lord is my Shepherd, he has guided me through the valley of darkness when i was in times of trouble. And the Lord God showed me the light in physics when i needed guidance.
Thou shalt not follow false prophets like Albert Einstein, Isaac Newton, Stephen Hawking, Nature magazine, Physics Review Letters, and Astrophysical journal. The Lord is my Shepherd and he leads me into the light (Electromagnetic radiation), the ever lasting light (There was no Big Bang either!). Never again will i be a sheep to the Shepherd's of science. There are no black holes! God told me!
John.
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Black Hole Mass Must Be Quantized, Say Physicists
http://www.technologyreview.com/blog/arxiv/26978/?p1=blogs
Having focused for many years on the giant black holes that form when stars collapse and the supermassive black holes at the centre of galaxies, physicists have more recently begun to study microscopic black holes, with tiny masses.
One reason to think about these objects is that they may have been formed during the Big Bang and may still permeate the universe today. The existence of so-called primordial black holes is one possible explanation for the universe's missing mass.
Another reason physicists are interested in micro black holes is that some theorists predict that the Large Hadron Collider will produce them.
So the work of Gia Dvali and pals at the Ludwig-Maximilians-Universitat in Munich, Germany, will be of great interest. These guys say that if black holes form on this tiny quantum scale, then their masses must be quantised.
Their reasoning is simple. If black hole mass is not quantised, then the mass could take essentially any value. And if that were the case, the rate of production of micro black holes would be infinite: they could form in any collision, at any energy.
Since that's clearly not the case, the masses of micro black holes must be quantised.
That immediately raises a number of important questions, not least of which is what governs black hole quantisation. Dvali and co reasonably argue that black holes must be quantised in units of the fundamental Planck length. But exactly how this would affect the way they spring in and out of existence isn't clear.
Dvali and co suggest that micro black holes would first appear in their lowest quantum state at the LHC in the form of some kind of quantum resonance, what particle physicists call a hump in their data. This would initially be hard to distinguish from an ordinary particle, but higher energy experiments ought to reveal black holes in higher states too.
For the moment, there's no way to work out at exactly what energy we should expect to see them. "To uncover the precise form of the quantization rule for lowest black hole resonances, we need more experimental input," says Dvali and co. Quite!
Of course, the question of this kind of black hole production at the LHC once again raises the thorny question of whether the safety assurances we've been given about these experiments are valid.
We've looked at the arguments before. One important question is whether state-of-the-art theoretical physics is up to the task of making a trustworthy prediction that the LHC is safe.
Today's paper makes clear that our understanding of micro black hole physics is rapidly changing. So it would be entirely reasonable to ask on what basis physicists are able to make safety assurances.
(Let's put aside for a moment the question of whether particle physicists are in any position to make safety assessments in the first place, given that they have the most to gain from running these experiments.)
This is a debate that particle physicists are strangely reluctant to engage in, having ignored most of the questions marks over safety.
So this is a good opportunity to raise the issue again. Sit back and enjoy the fireworks (or puzzle over the deafening silence)!
Ref: http://arxiv.org/abs/1106.5894: Black Hole Masses Are Quantized
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