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  1. Default

    Thats something I dont get, If they move then why is there no path of destruction. Its like the space that they went over is somehow repaired yet the things pulled in are done. Wont find out all the information in my liftime.

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    All you need to know is that Chuck Norris created all.

    -MBP

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    because the point where there is a whole is just that a point. If it moves the fabric of time space moves around it.

    Think of it this way:

    Making you own black hole
    Fun for parents and kids!

    What you need:
    1) a bucket or shallow bowel
    2) a liquid such as water
    3) an old film tube -those black things people put film in when not in a camera, you know those things that people put change in that are black with the gray caps *or anything simular shaped.

    What to do: move tube around in water notice how the water and the space in the tube are two separate things the water can splash in the tube sometimes but for the most part the water stays around the tube even when it moves around in the water.

    The fabric of space time works the same way, a better example would be to take a small ball and move it around or even a drop of oil. Oh think of a lava lamp. The stuff moves around the lamp but it does not leave a black space in it's path. The fabric of time space is on 3 axis x y and z not just x and y.



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    I seen a pretty good representation of how a black hole looks in reference to a omniscient galactic view (I assume this is theoretical of course) But they basically drew a grid representation of the universe layed out horizontally with the stars and planets on it and whatnot. And the black holes themselves appear literally as dips in the grid somewhat similar to if you were to hold a piece of paper up horizontally using strings and tape, then placed your finger directly in the middle and pushed down. The same way the paper would curve down and create a spherical slope in all directions (kinda like the same effect watching water swirl down a drain looks) is how black holes work in this dimension. Now I'm guessng the grid itself was supposed to represent the dimension we live in. But its cool to think what might be inside the the epicenter of a black and to think that just like almost everything in this world if stretched long enough it would rip. What might happen if the dip in this dimension finally ripped. Maybe it would pull everything into it kinda like when there's a big enough hole in an airplane and it sucks everything out into the lower pressure outside the plane?

    Who knows. I'm just high and blabbing right now.

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    That grid is a representation of space time fabric. The further down it goes the slower time moves and the greater the gravity. Planets and other objects can circle these dips (all objects create them even a speck of dust, it is just some are bigger than others like planets and stars) we call this circling orbits. On that scale they dip down far because the actual distance is infinite as there is a tiny hole at the bottom. Remember that this is expressed in a 2D environment while the actual effect is in a 3d environment.

    What this also shows is that the more closely located to a central mass the slower time is. Thus in theory if two people are on sea level the one with the most mass closest to him will move though time the slowest.



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    Got it now.

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    How black holes form!

    What you need:
    1) peace of paper
    2) 1lb of like change
    3) 1lb needle -not sure if anyone actually makes this

    Put coins on pice of paper and see how each one pushes the paper down a bit. See how if you stack them it pushes down more. Now take a pin that has the same weight and it will go right through. Even though you had the same amount of mass or in this case weight on the paper once you concentrated it in a very small point there was too much and it just fell though.



  8. Default

    question is, does it ever stop falling?

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