In response to Crispy
Oh man, I am so upsest with black holes, not in a freaky kind of way or anything, I just find them very interesting. I'm always researching and reading stories about them. No matter what anyone believes, I will always believe that you can travel to other dimensions through the black hole. It is impossible for it to lead to "no where" so it must atleast lead somewhere....Let's just hope that in the near future we can travel through other dimensions through the black holes. That would save a lot of space on Earth. In less then 100 years the Earth will be over populated, so we need somewhere to stay...(maybe space stations, I dunno', but it would be cool though).
In response to Jermman
Hey, I'm always right, and Maddox is cool! :P lol

~Kujila
In response to GokuDBZ3128
How do you know we'd find any habitable planets even if a blackhole took us to another universe?
In response to Artekia
Well, I assume that by the time we can go through a black hole, into another dimension (if there is one) then we'd have pretty damn good technology. Well, since there are an infimite amount of planets in our dimension, imagine another dimension. An infimite amount of planets, now, there definitely has to be a life form somewhere in there. HAS to be. It seems almost impossible for there not to be. A never ender amount of planets. There is life form somewhere. Even in our dimension, there is another life form out there. There has to be. Right now as we speak the atmosphere is expanding. Slowly by surely. It is expanding and will never stop expanding. There is definitely another life form out there.
In response to GokuDBZ3128
I know don't you just <font size +2>HATE</font> when people do that? It's so annoying, it makes your victory in the argument seem like nothing!!!
In response to GokuDBZ3128
Oh man, I am so upsest with black holes, not in a freaky kind of way or anything, I just find them very interesting. I'm always researching and reading stories about them.

Not really all that impressive. All you need for a black hole is a lot of mass in a small amount of space, such that (2GM/R) 1/2 > C where G is the universal gravitational constant, M is the total mass within the radius R, and C is the speed of light. So any light that gets near or goes directly at it won't be reflected at all which is of course why it gets its name. Though it's important to note that it doesn't create any larger of a pull than a body of mass that has a larger radius. So for instance if the sun were to collapse in on itself and get small enough to have a very high escape velocity(larger than the speed of light) the orbit of all the planets in our solar system would remain completely unchanged.

No matter what anyone believes, I will always believe that you can travel to other dimensions through the black hole. It is impossible for it to lead to "no where" so it must atleast lead somewhere....

Yes it leads straight into a lot of mass tightly compacted :).

Let's just hope that in the near future we can travel through other dimensions through the black holes.

The problem with traveling close to a black hole is that when you get close to it the difference in force between small distances is very different so anything that gets close will be literally ripped into very fine pieces before becoming part of the tightly clumped together mass.

That would save a lot of space on Earth. In less then 100 years the Earth will be over populated, so we need somewhere to stay...(maybe space stations, I dunno', but it would be cool though).

Heh the Earth is currently no where near being over populated atleast not in most regions. Regardless it's much more reasonable to be able to colonize currently uninhabitable planets than it is to get near a black hole which odds are just leads to a clump of dense mass anyway.
In response to GokuDBZ3128
GokuDBZ3128 wrote:
No matter what anyone believes, I will always believe that you can travel to other dimensions through the black hole. It is impossible for it to lead to "no where" so it must atleast lead somewhere....

A few flaws there. First of which, and the most obvious, you'll be ripped to shreds before you even pass the event horizon. Second, it is impossible for a black hole to lead anywhere, because it is a hole in, well, WHERE. It's not like a hole in a sheet of paper, where there is something on the other side. And, of course, third, light cannot escape from the event horizon of a black hole, and even if you COULD pop out somewhere else, you'd be in ANOTHER black hole, and would be stuck there, between the black holes. Not that you'd care, of course, you'd be dead.
In response to Garthor
Garthor wrote:
GokuDBZ3128 wrote:
No matter what anyone believes, I will always believe that you can travel to other dimensions through the black hole. It is impossible for it to lead to "no where" so it must atleast lead somewhere....

A few flaws there. First of which, and the most obvious, you'll be ripped to shreds before you even pass the event horizon. Second, it is impossible for a black hole to lead anywhere, because it is a hole in, well, WHERE. It's not like a hole in a sheet of paper, where there is something on the other side. And, of course, third, light cannot escape from the event horizon of a black hole, and even if you COULD pop out somewhere else, you'd be in ANOTHER black hole, and would be stuck there, between the black holes. Not that you'd care, of course, you'd be dead.

http://developer.byond.com/forum/index.cgi?id=288519
In response to Jon88
Actually, that's not light escaping, it's certain informaiton about the black hole itself being able to escape using ground state fluctuations to discern it.
In response to Garthor
I just find all this stuff fascinating.

This has always been on my mind: Do you think we will every invent a peice of technology in which we can use to safely enter a black hole?
In response to GokuDBZ3128
No, that would be physically impossible, and would break the laws of physics. Even if we could invent it, we would be more worried about the fact that we were floating off into space.
In response to Garthor
Well, there is always someone out there willing to try. I mean, I would have never, ever volunteer to land on the moon. Who knows what could happen? I guarantee that if we somehow invented a suit or a ship that could enter the black hole (but nobody is sure of it) someone will be willing to try. Don't know who/why, but they would.
In response to GokuDBZ3128
No, it would be physically impossible to create it. On top of that, we wouldn't find anything inside a black hole. You're letting the Hollywood definition of a black hole obsess you.
I generally don’t find that having nothing better to do than sitting at my computer arguing with someone else who also has nothing better to do than sitting at their computer arguing with me to be a good time.
In response to GokuDBZ3128
As Garthor keeps stating, its physically impossible. It would be breaking laws of physics, not just theories.
In response to Jotdaniel
Jotdaniel wrote:
As Garthor keeps stating, its physically impossible. It would be breaking laws of physics, not just theories.

Bah! What are you talking about? Physics == theories. :)

Besides, what is so difficult about breaking the so-called laws of physics anyway? People discover new phenomia that don't fit the current theories all the time. It's how science works, you make up a theory that tries to explain the world. Then you use it for a while, until you discover something that isn't explained by your old theory. So then you make up a new theoery to replace it. And so on..
In response to BobOfDoom
Try Gravity buddy. A nuetron star collapses into a black hole, you have all that mass in a infinitely small spot of space. The gravity of this mass is so great that it keeps sucking energy and matter into that same spot, compressing it. Tell me again how the law of gravity is just a theory...
In response to Jotdaniel
Jotdaniel wrote:
Try Gravity buddy. A nuetron star collapses into a black hole, you have all that mass in a infinitely small spot of space. The gravity of this mass is so great that it keeps sucking energy and matter into that same spot, compressing it. Tell me again how the law of gravity is just a theory...

All of the "laws" of physics and such are just theories. Good theories that have worked so far, but theories none the less.
In response to Jotdaniel
Ehh, technically science doesn't use the term "suck". It just doesn't happen, if its in a book its relative or a kid book. I don't see where hes coming up with alternate time dimensions from a black hole though... watch Sci Fi a little too often? =P

Anyhow, if you don't believe me look up something on how plants work the water through themselves. If you want to use an incorrect term and put it simple they "suck" the water through.. but thats not what actually happens. I just remember one of my teachers jumping my case for using the term suck in Biology in which she would state "SCIENCE DOESN'T SUCK". Annoying =P
In response to SSJ2GohanDBGT
The point was gotten across, I know its not "sucking" in the strictest sense of the word.
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