What is a white hole in outer space
[From: ] [author: ] [Date: 13-05-04] [Hit: ]
I went to Wikipedia for a little info. After a LOT of rereads, I think I get it.Black Holes and White Holes are the same thing, however its not as simple as saying, A Black Hole is like an carburetor,......
One explanation for this is a warp in Space-Time, which is actually a Wormhole, but get this. The Wormhole does NOT run between White Holes and Black Holes.
I went to Wikipedia for a little info. After a LOT of rereads, I think I get it. Black Holes and White Holes are the same thing, however it's not as simple as saying, "A Black Hole is like an carburetor, and a White Hole is like a tailpipe." The two are literally, physically the same thing, but depending on where in the Space-Time curve you're observing the object, it may be White...or it may be Black.
In other words, when entering a White Hole, you may see it as a Black Hole in its far-flung future, just as when entering a Black Hole, you may see its White Hole in its far-flung past.
The big problem I have is, frankly, the Black Hole is the ultimate stop sign. Whichever end of the wormhole you enter...guess where you end up? *Crunch!!*
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A white hole would be the opposite of a black hole, a black hole is a point in space that got so dense it be fan to suck things in, it would like be crushing the earth into the size of a peanut, and a white hole would be something connected to the black hole, black hole sucks in, white hole spits out, essentially a wormhole, that could stretch from one end of the universe to the other.
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After the discovery of black holes, where matter just falls in and disappears, it was thought that *white* holes must also exist - a place where energy and matter come bursting out. Such objects were thought to have been found: quasars.
After further study, it was determined that quasars were *not* white holes, but small energetic galaxies that were powered again by a central black hole.
White holes don't exist.
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Basically, from what I understand it's te opposite of a black hole. Black holes are massive amounts of gravity and white holes would be compromised of anti matter, a force opposite of gravity, possibly even stronger than a black hole but in a different way.
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A star is a micro white hole. You would either go into orbit around the star or fall into it like many comets fall into the Sun.
OK, I'm "stretching" the definition of a "white" hole a bit.
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