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/sci/ - Science & Math


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1510135 No.1510135 [Reply] [Original]

OK, the red dot is a piece of matter. The line is space. If this line where to continue beyond the pictures boundaries, it would have waves. Recent observations hint at tiny bumps, or waves, being present in space due to the affects they have on light photons. Most of us know that matter spontaneously pops in and out of existence, and we don't know how, or why. I think that space can temporarily envelop matter.

Whatcha think? Is OP a fag, or on to something?

>> No.1510141

OP is always a fag.

>> No.1510342

>>1510141

Touche

>> No.1510353

>>1510135
>matter spontaneously pops in and out of existence

Explain.

>> No.1510364

Vacuum fluctuation allow particle--anti-particle pairs to be produced spontaneously, but they will annihilate almost instantly again. It's not like a whole atom pops into existence and stays there.

>> No.1510381
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1510381

Spacetime always envelopes matter, dipshit. It's not a trampoline, its a 4-d jello. That spacelike diagram in op's pic could be "not enveloped" from another reference frame.

lrn2generalrelativity

>> No.1510422

>>1510364
Exactly this.
But OP makes me think of a similar question: Can a section of space be "pinched off" so that the matter it contains can no longer interact with the rest of the Universe? In a way, creating a separate, smaller universe from a portion of the original.

>> No.1510427
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1510427

>>1510422
Wouldn't that be the inside of the event horizon on a black hole?

>> No.1510428

>>1510422

It's called black hole. (according to some theories)

>> No.1510429

>>1510422
Eh? Why would that be? (Apart from that if such a thing were possible it would be all over the media)

>> No.1510458

>>1510428
>>1510427
Though, matter beyond an event horizon still interacts gravitationally.

>> No.1510497

shapes aren't real.

>> No.1510696

>>1510497
wat

>> No.1510796

bump, why is sci skittish about this and the temperature thread?