chambers wrote:^very interesting theory...
i've also questioned about whether there are multiple universes existing simultaneously......like two different planets or galaxies....it's also lead me to question what really is in a black hole. We all know its just a big gravity shit hole....but what happens on the other side?....or is there really nothing of utter importance on the other side? do objects just get ripped apart atom by atom until theres finally just the energy left from doing so?
just alot of questions i wished i was 1) intelligent enough to answer 2) possible to find an answer too.
There is no 'other side' of a black hole, thats science fiction.
Gravity is proportional to the mass of an object. You and I have gravity, a marble has gravity, but less than us. The Earth and moon have gravity, the sun has gravity... all mass has gravity. Gravity is the force that pulls all objects towards each other (not only does the Earth pull you downwards when you jump, you pull the Earth upwards towards you!).
When a large star (much, much larger than our sun) dies (stops burning), it goes through the same process of star death that all other stars do... to a point. I'm not 100% sure on the details, but it first becomes a red supergiant, expanding in side by some order (hundred times as large as it was? thousand times as large? not sure..). Finally, it explodes. What a normal (smaller) star does, is explodes in what is called a nova. All the matter that was part of that star goes flying outwards, and you are left with a small center, called a dwarf star (I believe). That dwarf is not burning, is not massive enough to pull celestial objects towards it, its kind of a dead rock.
Anyway, when a large star dies, it explodes as a super nova - huge explosion. The difference between a large star dying and a smaller star is, the large star was so massive, and has so much gravity, it starts pulling nearby objects towards its dense center. The gravity is so much so that the remaining celestial body starts pulling everything inwards, even its own matter. It gets denser and denser, and adds more and more mass to it. Since it is adding more mass to it, it has more gravity (remember, gravity is proportional to mass). This process continues until the object is so dense and so massive that its gravity is so large it even pulls light inwards. This is why it appears 'black', because no light reflects off it, it just gets pulled into the incredibly dense mass that is the black hole.
So, lets theoretically say you could jump into a black hole. Science fiction tells you that you would be sucked in, and spit out somewhere else. Well, what would happen would be you would be ripped into individual atoms, and pulled into the center of the mass of the black hole. Your atoms would become part of the dense mass, and that would be it.
So, basically, the last thing you said is on point, although... its not that there is only energy left. The black hole is made of matter - just very dense matter. Atoms themselves are mostly empty space. If you think of the nucleus of an atoms as the center of a football field (I think this is the example I was taught in HS), the nearest electron is something like a mile away (the teacher references a specific road). So, the atom is mostly (>99%, I think) empty space. This means, there is a lot of possibility to compress that atom, which happens in the black hole to achieve that density.
What happens when atoms are compressed like that, and sub atomic particles are brought so close? Thats the kinda stuff science needs to be focusing on! Who knows?