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Post by The Dark Master on Feb 21, 2009 7:14:27 GMT -5
I've never heard of it............ As for gravitons, dont you mean that dark matter causes relativity?
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Post by spaghetticat on Feb 21, 2009 9:47:21 GMT -5
I think they lead to another dimension.
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Post by SilentWaves on Feb 21, 2009 9:48:24 GMT -5
limpossible. No matter how high the gravity is it cant zip you through space and through the fabric of reality to a different equal and opposite dimension.
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Post by spaghetticat on Feb 21, 2009 11:53:06 GMT -5
Sure it can. Matter is converted into the basic organic molecule A.K.A. molecular transversion. Then, they are sent through the vertebrae wormholes in hyperspace until spewed into a new dimensional "bubble". This can all be proven with Quantum Mechanics.
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Post by The Dark Master on Feb 21, 2009 12:20:14 GMT -5
I didnt know that
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Post by General Veers on Feb 21, 2009 13:24:06 GMT -5
There is only one thing that can escape a black hole. Particles of gravity called gravitrons. I dont know how exactly they work but they are responsable for gravity. And isnt tehere a movie called event horizon i heard it sux has anyone here seen it? Do they travel at the speed of light or faster (which would theoretically require that gravitons be massless or have negative mass)? Sure it can. Matter is converted into the basic organic molecule A.K.A. molecular transversion. Then, they are sent through the vertebrae wormholes in hyperspace until spewed into a new dimensional "bubble". This can all be proven with Quantum Mechanics. One of the articles that I provided say that although wormholes are mathematically possible, they would be too "fragile" and "unstable" in reality to last very long at all.
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Post by The Dark Master on Feb 21, 2009 13:28:24 GMT -5
*nods head in agreement*
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Post by Sandmaster on Feb 21, 2009 13:43:21 GMT -5
Bother about thinking about it? SM, your becoming ignorant. The greatest scientific minds of this day and age have thought about it for hours on end. Dont expect yourself to be right all the time. And can they PROVE IT? No. Why? Because they based it on ANOTHER theory that hasn't been proved.
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Post by General Veers on Feb 21, 2009 15:50:12 GMT -5
There is no singularity. There is not information paradox. There is not 'outside' which matter goes to. PDF is complete bull, and NASA is complete bull. It SOUNDS reasonable (coming from them), but if they bothered THINKING ABOUT IT. It isn't talking about a mathematical point of no size and dimensions, but a small volume of measurable size. All the matter is condensed, and this condensed matter is a singularity, which may as well be synonymous to a black hole itself. I have yet to check the other things (information paradox, "outside"...).
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Post by The Dark Master on Feb 21, 2009 15:54:23 GMT -5
I knew that
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Post by SilentWaves on Feb 22, 2009 20:32:12 GMT -5
Ok first of all no gravity at one point can send matter ot another point. a wormhole is a fold in the universe. 2nd of all quantum mechanics is just stating the possiblilities of random events. and wormholes would be likely to scatter atoms aroudn through multiple areas in space and wouldnt last long enough to detect and find even if you could move at the speed of light. and for all fo you who say nothing ccan go faster than light your wrong. The theory states nothing can go the speed of ligtht but if yuo could jump instantly past that pseed you could go infinitly fast.
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Post by General Veers on Feb 23, 2009 1:12:09 GMT -5
Yes, tachyons are the names of particles which theoretically go faster than the speed of light. Masses that travel at sublightspeed are called bradyons. Only massless entities can travel at lightspeed. These are luxons. Masses that travel at superlightspeed are called tachyons. Bradyons require finite energy to travel at a given velocity, but require more energy to travel at higher velocities. Luxons require infinite energy to travel at lightspeed. Tachyons require finite energy to travel at a given velocity, but require less energy to travel at higher velocities. www.theforce.net/swtc/hyperspace.html#physicsI read this in a Star Wars website...
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Post by secret on Feb 23, 2009 7:14:42 GMT -5
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Post by GrandEnder on Feb 23, 2009 7:38:18 GMT -5
Theoretically, a 2-d object could travel at the speed of light, and not be effected by the force of gravity.
And black holes have a theroetical opposite, called a 'white hole'.
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Post by The Dark Master on Feb 23, 2009 10:50:50 GMT -5
An anti-gravity hole? Please tell us how it works...
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Post by SilentWaves on Feb 23, 2009 16:09:15 GMT -5
ive heard of white hols their mathmatically possible but physicly improbable
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Post by The Dark Master on Feb 23, 2009 16:12:14 GMT -5
how?
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Post by General Veers on Feb 23, 2009 16:26:27 GMT -5
Ah, that's what Sandmaster was talking about...
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Post by The Dark Master on Feb 23, 2009 16:34:49 GMT -5
I didnt know about the infinite entropy bit.
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Post by spaghetticat on Feb 24, 2009 8:15:53 GMT -5
I'm going to get complicated so try to stay with me here: At the center of a black hole tachyons swirl around at just under the speed of light due to the small gravity. This small volume is known as the black holes finite mass. The expansion of this tachyon condensation causes dimensional inflation, causing a rip in space-time, also known as a wormhole.
The End
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