Question:

How can a Wormhole be a Black Hole?

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I though a Black Hole was just a dead star that stopped shinning. How can you connect two Black Holes with a throat, and travel through time, or to different parts of the Universe? Also, we haven't even see a Black Hole, so how can we know all this when we can't even see them?

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  1. It is star that has somewhat died through collapse due to matter being used up completely in the ignition process.. as in not operating as it would have before...giving off light. It is a moment where creation has come into play to show us all another reality or another form of physics at work.

    It's NOT about black holes being connected to black holes which in turn are connected via wormholes.

    It is about black holes being connected to white holes and so what if they are theoretical! You all want proof and yet it is a clear indication this is how nature works. In duality. Hot and cold. There is always an opposite to the other. A yin and yang.

    So of course there IS going to be a white hole at the end and there is going to be a transit tube called a wormhole which is connecting the two.

    You can see a black hole, but only how it disturbs other bodies in space and also the how it emits high energy jets (synchrotron radiation), gamma and xrays. You can't see the event horizon since it is pulling light in.

    White holes... we may be seeing but we are calling them by another name...or another description.


  2. I feel that a Wormhole isn't a Black Hole, I feel that they are two separate individual entities.  It is true that a Black Hole is indeed "Black" and can't really be seen, but it has been proven that there is indeed such an entity.  It's considered to be like a magnifying glass in space where you can still see the "things" behind it, however, the warping of space is also noticed.  Maps have been made of this phenomenon.  

    What hasn't been proven is the existence of a Wormhole, the thing where there is a throat, which pinches off easily, however, supposedly can still be used for transport between where ever the "throat" begins and where it ends, different parts of the universe!  (what isn't known is exactly where these things begin and end!)  Einstine first thought of this phenomenon and considered that in fact something like it is possible, but it hasn't been proven yet!

  3. I'll take a stab at this . . .

    Black Holes have been proven to exist 100% without a doubt. However, Worm Holes and White Holes are still theoretical. A more recently proposed view of black holes might be interpreted as shedding some light on the nature of classical white holes and worm holes. Some researchers proposed that when a black hole forms, a big bang occurs at the core which creates a new universe that expands into extra dimensions outside of the parent universe.This is known as Fecund Universes. The initial feeding of matter from the parent universe's black hole and the expansion that follows in the new universe might be thought of as a cosmological type of white hole. Unlike traditional white holes, this type of white hole would not be localized in space in the new universe and its horizon would have to be identified with the cosmological horizon.

    White holes appear as part of the vacuum solution to the Einstein field equations describing a Schwarzschild worm hole. One end of this type of worm hole is a black hole, drawing in matter, and the other is a white hole, emitting matter. While this gives the impression that black holes in our universe may connect to white holes elsewhere, in reality, this is untrue, for two reasons. First, Schwarzschild worm holes are unstable, disconnecting as soon as they form. Second, Schwarzschild worm holes are only a solution to the Einstein field equations in a vacuum (when no matter interacts with the hole). Real black holes are formed by the collapse of stars. When the infalling stellar matter is added to a diagram of a black hole's history, it removes the part of the diagram corresponding to the white hole, which then removes the diagram for the relationship with a worm hole.

    Bottom line: We still don't know.

  4. Black holes are viewed by watching all of the other bodies around it getting sucked in.

    The general theory that no one publishes is that when Black holes aren't feeding they can be used for quick transport as a worm hole.

    That is an old theory. You must be getting info from an old book other than the new technology they show on shows on TV.  Technically they say that black holes are the result of a start imploding upon itsself, but a well known unproved theory is that they are a portal to an alternate universe that is sucking in from an alternate universe. The spitting out on the other side is new matter coming from the other universe. That could be a type of wormhole but it isn't for fast travel through this universe.

    They have found other holes which they used to call white holes, that they considered was a way to travel faster through space. They now debate whether they actually exist, but they have proven anomilies in the space time continuum that they believe allow ships to travel through a type of portal.

    They have proven recently that every galaxy has at least one black hole in it's center. They still haven't proven what they are for, but they are working on it. They constantly change their minds because they cannot figure out the math on it.

  5. You're right, a black hole is not actually a hole at all, but a stellar remnant.  However, black holes are very dense, very hot, and have a LOT of gravity.  

    A wormhole is a theoretical construct that bends the fabric of space-time so that two points, previously very far away, are now 'touching'.  Think of space-time as a sheet of paper.  If you touch two of the edges together, you've curved space-time and where the two edges touch  you've created a wormhole.  Even though the two edges are very far apart normally, now they're touching.  

    So, I suppose the theory goes that a black hole's gravity is so extreme that it could possibly curve the fabric of space-time in this manner, creating a wormhole to another location.  It's all just theoretical for now, of course, as we have no way to test this.

  6. But we can and have seen a black hole from a distant and have been able to measure matter disappearing into the black hole. We also think we understand how a black hole becomes a black hole. As a matter of fact, we have a rather very large black hole right in the center of our very own Milky Way Galaxy. We even feel man could survive going through a black hole providing it was a very small black hole. Of course, many Scientists are very skeptical regarding entering a black hole only to exit into another part of the Universe.

  7. A black hole is by no means dead.

    It is just a mass that has gotten too big.  It got so big that it will not allow anything to escape (There is an exception to this, but it is nothing that we could be concerned about)

    So when it is so massive that it's gravitational pull is so strong that you would need an escape velocity of greater than the speed of light. (so even light is sucked in to it)

    What this does is cause a singularity in the space time feilds. If you image gravitation to be like a sheet that is held out, and a massive body causes a dimple in a sheet, and creates a gravitational feild.  

    Now a black whole is the same thing, except that it is a hole that is punched in the sheet.

    Now imagine that the sheet is curved, or is a big sphere. If you have two holes punched in to that sheet, you could defy the normal bounds of the universe, and not travel accross the sheet. But rather you could travel through the center of it.

    In one black hole, and out the other.  (But as I have said before, you can not get out of the black hole... so you are just stuck in the middle)

    So basicly, I have not heard of any theory that can actualy use this theory.  But it is a theory none the less.

    And ... how do we know this.  Theory!  We have lots of theories and equations that can be used to describe these things. We have never "seen" an atom, or a neucleus, but we all accept that they must exist.

  8. It derives from the concept of space-time, where gravity and the physical world work in the same realm, so thus a black hole sucks in whatever and it may come out somewhere else because of a space-time tunnel.

    //

    \\  Golgothor

    //

  9. Just a different name some call it worm hole and some call it black hole

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