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/sci/ - Science & Math

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>> No.6469749 [DELETED]  [View]
File: 37 KB, 480x324, galactic_black_hole.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
6469749

Hello /sci/

Me and my friends were discussing black holes the other day. One of my friends raised a question, he said "What if, a black holes and white holes are connected, because if you can't destroy or create matter then it would make sense for them to be joined."

I really thought about this and would like to know what you guys think about this.

>> No.5350487 [View]
File: 37 KB, 480x324, black hole.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
5350487

University of Illinois
Psychology
4.0
When we're given a study guide in class, I start studying the night before. I number each of the points off, and on a piece of paper I write down the relevant information (from the book and notes) onto the paper. After the entire study guide is complete, I go back through and read the notes. Then I go to bed. In the morning, I wake up and read through the notes as many times as I can until right before the exam.

If I have a long list to memorise, I try to create helpful mnemonic or way to remember it (usually I hate these, but for cramming they're great, just make sure they mean something to you. Sometimes they're even practically nonsensical). For example, if I was trying to remember Sternberg's triangle theory of love, and I needed to memorise the three parts of it (passion, intimacy, and commitment), I could take the first letters of those (PIC) and then remember that I have to "'PIC[k]'" my mate." It sounds silly, but as long as it's something you can remember on the test, it doesn't matter.

On a semi-related note, what kind of retarded children actually needed the mnemonic "My Very Earnest Mother . . ." to remember the planets? It's not like it was hard or anything.

If I think of any more tricks I use I'll post them.

>> No.5327083 [View]
File: 37 KB, 480x324, galactic_black_hole.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
5327083

1: What happens (if anything) inside of a black hole? What does it look like inside of one?

2: What would happen if you theoretically "fell into" a black hole?

3: Where do black holes come from?

4: Do they suck everything in as told or do they have things orbiting them?

5: What, in actuality, makes up and IS a black hole?

>> No.5324743 [View]
File: 37 KB, 480x324, galactic_black_hole[1].jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
5324743

What happens to a black hole when it dies?

>> No.5265042 [View]
File: 37 KB, 480x324, galactic_black_hole.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
5265042

Can i escape a black hole with a fast motercycle/

>> No.4948620 [View]
File: 37 KB, 480x324, black_hole_universe.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
4948620

Is there anything scientific that suggest that the universe isn't inside a blackhole? And that there is still matter being spit out into our universe from the exit point resulting dividing by zero?

>> No.4714347 [View]
File: 37 KB, 480x324, bh.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
4714347

I have come up with a theory that expands and incorporates all current knowledge of black holes.
Assuming a singularity is in-fact what lies at the center of a black hole I have theorized and proofed what happens to matter once it passes the event horizon, why some matter is ejected from a black hole after entering the event horizon, why black holes die, how they grow and form (rather than the general concept of formation; how they form on the quantum level)
I have also theorized how we can detect if this theory correctly explains black holes and believe indirectly, proof of it has already been found near and spatially perpendicular from them.

All math, evidence, working, notes, investigation and diagrams will be posted once I have finished writing my paper. Not to worry, it should take less than a week.

>inb4 it's fucking nothing
>inb4 people always say they ahve proven something or other and never come through
>inb4 trolling
>inb4 you're not hawking therefore can't into black holes.

I'm really excited as I very recently finished proofing the work, so I thought I'd tell my regular /sci/ board some good news is coming in the future.

wish me luck... see you in a week

>> No.4616947 [View]
File: 37 KB, 480x324, galactic_black_hole.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
4616947

What is majoring in physics like? Also, are there any other undergraduate degree choices that would allow me to pursue an astronomy program in graduate school?

>> No.4513257 [View]
File: 37 KB, 480x324, bh.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
4513257

Question for you /sci/ (no doubt you fags won't reply to this since you are all being trolled in that conspiracyshit video)

Lets say we are able to construct a monstrocity of an electrical circuit, stretching from earth to a nearby black hole.
Since electrons are influenced by gravity, as they approach the black hole, they will accelerate, gaining energy, then descelerate upon return from vicinity of the black hole. (assume the circuit skirts the ''point of no return'' but does not directly enter it.)
How would this affect the current and voltage and resistance at certain points in the circuit (for example, on earth, earth-non gravitational space barrier, non gravitational space, non gravitational space barrier/black hole barrier and so on....)
one further thought is if you had a parallel circuit split just before the black hole, with one side entering the influence and the other not. How would this affect the splitting of current? If kirchof's law is obliged then the current would be split according to resistance, but with a distance of lightyears, how would the physics account for the pre-emptive split?

discuss

>> No.4379079 [View]
File: 37 KB, 480x324, galactic_black_hole.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
4379079

hey /sci/ what the big deal with supermassive black holes? like did people say they didn't know supermassive black holes existed. does this mean that they know black holes existed just not the super massve one? Did they not know they grow the more matter the sucked in? what the deal? why was supermassive black holes such a big missing link?

>> No.4306200 [View]
File: 37 KB, 480x324, bh2.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
4306200

Two things I keep wondering about

1. Why do some black holes rotate but others dont?
2. Why do some black holes feed but others dont?

>> No.4202375 [View]
File: 37 KB, 480x324, galactic_black_hole.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
4202375

Quick question /sci/, where does matter in a black hole go?

>> No.4086295 [View]
File: 37 KB, 480x324, galactic_black_hole.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
4086295

Would it be possible to transmit power to electric vehicles using tesla coils? why not.

>> No.3395458 [View]
File: 37 KB, 480x324, galactic_black_hole.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
3395458

What if I ejaculated into a black hole?

>> No.3348291 [View]
File: 37 KB, 480x324, galactic_black_hole.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
3348291

Did time begin at the big bang ? If so, what is time ? Did the universe suddenly come into being due so some vaccuum fluctuation or did it allways exist as a singularity and one day decided just to expand ? Why would it do that ? If everything was created at the big bang, what about the space that the universe is currently occupying ?

>> No.3335405 [View]
File: 37 KB, 480x324, galactic_black_hole.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
3335405

Tonight at approximately 2:30 am I will be leaving on a journey back to 2031. So this Is your last chance to ask a time traveler anything. And If you read any of my other threads and notice that my tipcode Is different It's because someone found my other one.

>> No.3327005 [View]
File: 37 KB, 480x324, galactic_black_hole.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
3327005

Ask a time traveler anything.

>> No.3322461 [View]
File: 37 KB, 480x324, galactic_black_hole.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
3322461

Ask a time traveler anything.

>> No.3316220 [View]
File: 37 KB, 480x324, galactic_black_hole.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
3316220

Hello,
I am a time traveler from the year 2031.
I will answer any questions you have.

>> No.3213228 [View]
File: 37 KB, 480x324, bh.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
3213228

can the gravitational singularity at the center of a black hole simply be an extremely compact and dense sphere of matter (perhaps in a new state yet unknown to us)? has this already been proposed? are there objections?

>> No.3165012 [View]
File: 37 KB, 480x324, galactic_black_hole.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
3165012

So, I've just finished _The Black Hole War_ by Susskind, and I had a thought: I often find the mechanism for black hole evaporation to be described with virtual particle pairs: one enters the event horizon, the other doesn't. My thought was: are virtual particle pairs entangled? If they are entangled, does "spooky action at a distance" then allow information from within the black hole to be transmitted out?

And another thing about this so-called Holographic Principle. I was thinking about the maximum information density of a cube. For a sphere, like a blakc hole, things make sense. The information content of a book, or an IC, is limited by its surface area, too. To overcome this, we create thin layers to compact alot of area into a small volume. Does this have an analogue in 4 dimentional space-time?

>> No.3016780 [View]
File: 37 KB, 480x324, galactic_black_hole.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
3016780

Are you guys never wondering how there's always a gigantic penis at the center of a galaxy? You see, I've been thinking that those gigantic penises are the result of the gravitational pull of billons of stars constantly influencing this very point of spacetime, the center. The gravitational pull of a billon stars, even if there's a great distance in between, must be tremdous - atleast on this very specific point, tremendous.

So maybe, these gigantic black penises, aren't penises. Maybe they're just a gigantic tear in spacetime itself.

>> No.2207797 [View]
File: 37 KB, 480x324, galactic_black_hole.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
2207797

In Hawking's equation for the entropy increase of a black hole ( S = A/4) is the surface area, A the area of the entire black hole or just from the event horizon inwards? I'm guessing the second but not sure.

>> No.1893737 [View]
File: 37 KB, 480x324, black-hole.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
1893737

Scientists say that galaxies are moving away from one an other, and therefore the Universe is expanding...

However wouldnt it also be true to say that the universe is colliding onto itself in a spiral-like manner (like whirlpool for example).

to an object inside, or closer to the center of a whirlpool, all of the objects farther away from it appear to be moving further and further away, thus giving the illusion that there is expansion, when in reality, its all just coming together into one big clusterfuck...

just food for thought

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