| |
Main
Date: 17 Nov 2006 04:14:44
From: Mark F.
Subject: Black hole
|
If you are INSIDE a black hole is it full of light? And can be called white universe of its own. Just sitting here thinking. -- Hike High Mountains Fish for Wild Trout
|
|
| |
Date: 16 Nov 2006 21:00:52
From: Brian Tung
Subject: Re: Black hole
|
Mark F. wrote: > If you are INSIDE a black hole is it full of light? And can be called white > universe of its own. > Just sitting here thinking. What you see depends quite a bit on how massive it is. But it would not be full of light; it's not like a container that traps light, but within which light is free to bounce every which way. You must remember that what we think of as the edge of a black hole is not a physical boundary; it's just a place in space within which light can't get out. As you pass the boundary, you might not notice anything especially unusual going on around you, especially if the black hole is particularly massive (and therefore particularly sparse). -- Brian Tung <brian@isi.edu > The Astronomy Corner at http://astro.isi.edu/ Unofficial C5+ Home Page at http://astro.isi.edu/c5plus/ The PleiadAtlas Home Page at http://astro.isi.edu/pleiadatlas/ My Own Personal FAQ (SAA) at http://astro.isi.edu/reference/faq.html
|
| |
Date: 17 Nov 2006 05:35:32
From: Sjouke Burry
Subject: Re: Black hole
|
Mark F. wrote: > If you are INSIDE a black hole is it full of light? And can be called white > universe of its own. > Just sitting here thinking. You wont notice for the remaining Milli(micro)seconds you have left to live, if you have not yet been torn limb from limb or even molecule from molecule by tidal forces as you and all in falling light/matter converge on the singularity.
|
| |
Date: 17 Nov 2006 08:59:21
From: Norbert
Subject: Re: Black hole
|
Mark F. a écrit : > If you are INSIDE a black hole is it full of light? And can be called white > universe of its own. > Just sitting here thinking. I suggest you to have a look at http://antwrp.gsfc.nasa.gov/htmltest/rjn_bht.html for the travel to the black hole and this page, a bit harder http://www.gothosenterprises.com/black_holes/inside_black_holes.html which describes the inside part of a black hole. Also have a look at http://casa.colorado.edu/~ajsh/schw.shtml which is full of small movies. -- à bientot (enlever les X pour me répondre) ==================================================== les secrets de l'univers http://nrumiano.free.fr un atlas de l'univers http://atunivers.free.fr images du ciel http://images.ciel.free.fr ====================================================
|
| | |
Date: 17 Nov 2006 18:26:20
From: Trane Francks
Subject: Re: Black hole
|
On 2006-11-17 16:59 +0900, Norbert wrote: > I suggest you to have a look at > http://antwrp.gsfc.nasa.gov/htmltest/rjn_bht.html for the travel to the > black hole and this page, a bit harder > http://www.gothosenterprises.com/black_holes/inside_black_holes.html > which describes the inside part of a black hole. > Also have a look at http://casa.colorado.edu/~ajsh/schw.shtml which is > full of small movies. Thank you for the links. Very interesting and very much worth a look. trane -- ///////////////////////////////////////////////////////// // Trane Francks trane@gol.com Tokyo, Japan // Practice random kindness and senseless acts of beauty.
|
| | |
Date: 18 Nov 2006 03:59:40
From: Mark F.
Subject: Re: Black hole
|
Way Cool!! I loved the links! Thanks "Norbert" <Xnorbert.rumiano@numericable.frX > wrote in message news:455d6bd7$0$29846$426a74cc@news.free.fr... > Mark F. a écrit : >> If you are INSIDE a black hole is it full of light? And can be called >> white universe of its own. >> Just sitting here thinking. > > I suggest you to have a look at > http://antwrp.gsfc.nasa.gov/htmltest/rjn_bht.html for the travel to the > black hole and this page, a bit harder > http://www.gothosenterprises.com/black_holes/inside_black_holes.html which > describes the inside part of a black hole. > Also have a look at http://casa.colorado.edu/~ajsh/schw.shtml which is > full of small movies. > > -- > à bientot (enlever les X pour me répondre) > ==================================================== > les secrets de l'univers http://nrumiano.free.fr > un atlas de l'univers http://atunivers.free.fr > images du ciel http://images.ciel.free.fr > ====================================================
|
| |
Date: 17 Nov 2006 12:56:30
From: Ernie Dunbar
Subject: Re: Black hole
|
Well, while Einstein could prove mathematically that black holes do exist (and we've even been able to prove this empirically since then), he said that their properties were just too weird to exist in nature. How could there be a place in the universe where the laws of physics, time and space just break down? Well, there is, they do, and pretty much everything about black holes *doesn't* make sense. It would be full of light that can't escape, but also full of matter - no wait, tiny subatomic particles of matter, before they too are either crushed into nothingness or torn apart by tidal forces, releasing all their energy in a reaction not unlike matter-antimatter collisions. The worst part about comprehending the whole thing is how no matter can exist there, only energy. But energy doesn't have any mass, and thus can't produce a gravitational field, can it? Mark F. wrote: > If you are INSIDE a black hole is it full of light? And can be called white > universe of its own. > Just sitting here thinking. > -- > Hike High Mountains > Fish for Wild Trout
|
| |
Date: 23 Nov 2006 03:00:46
From: Hey American Moron!
Subject: Re: Black hole
|
"Mark F." wrote: > If you are INSIDE a black hole is it full of light? Nope. > And can be called white > universe of its own. > Just sitting here thinking. More like the inside of a stovepipe. > > -- > Hike High Mountains > Fish for Wild Trout
|
|