Searching "comments":
| # | Comment | Survey |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Black holes are swirling, massive galaxy "storms". They are generated by the incredible gravitational pull that builds up as the formation of a galaxy is slowed by the capacity (of energy) of the galaxy itself. When the outward propulsion of the stars that were formed from the "center" of the galaxy begins to lose its momentum, stray gases from colliding stars and space debris from all the newly-formed bodies in the proximity of this young galaxy begin to collect with the galaxy's last bit of uniformed energy. This results in a swirling mass, collecting itself in a spiral-shaped fashion, much like a storm. The mass that becomes contributors to this movement adds volume to the "storm", thereby increasing its "swirling" motion as well as further contributing to the activity it joins by way of its growing weight. The pull of all this motion becomes fully gravitational, which will naturally be focused toward the center of this whole mess. Soon (millions of years soon), the "storm" is with enough gravitational pull to produce a force strong enough to lasso in nearby stars. When this occurs, it usually begins to gain force at an increased rate, only to become part of the growing cause that it fought to repel for so long. Increases gravity; more mass gets sucked in; increases gravity; more mass, etc. The pull of these wicked results manages to stay balanced with the "intake" - the center, or gravity source. Scientists have now mapped the theorized history of galaxies which have been entirely gobbled up by these pinhole monsters. Eventually, this swirling mass is impelled by its own power of the spiraling masses - still pulling in object from afar, and the pull is now immeasurably immense in its density of the center. (This point is always located in the center of the spiral in this process on any scale. This is because there, where nothing can occupy it (else the gravitational system would fall apart), the "pull" developed becomes a "push" in its own centralized space. Do the bucket of water thing, swirl it around your wrist and observe 1) if going fast enough, no water will spill from the bucket traveling around your wrist, and 2) the water *in* the bucket will hug the sides of the inside bucket - the space in the middle (bottom of the bucket) also will reveal itself. That's where the "pushing away" itself [or the mass] occurs. On the other side, it's conjectured that a spewing, blazing pinhole has extended outward, found a release and (my theory), a galaxy is created from all this new (old) energy is unleashed by the break. If the bucket spinning your wrist were going fast enough, the inside bottom of it would begin to expand outward, away from where the water (masses) are, from its own "pushing" pressure. From this, the "pull" takes a pill and begins to chill on its feast of stars, while the collection of energy exceeds the cap of space holding in all this "new" mass, forcing open a place to receive the emulsion of chemicals, gases - all that churned up space junk it collected from the "other side". I believe it's a recycling at this point. Einstein taught that nothing can be created and nothing can be destroyed. Only changed form. There's nothing coincidental or chaotic about how this repeated cycle forms the same sort of product each time - it all goes through the same process. The release of the energy in this "final" part of the process, by the way, relieves the spiral of its shape, and we're now simply looking at the new version of what it created from old, but from the other side. Before this, that pinhole of gravity became just that - a pinhole. It's estimated that all that mass, before release, fit into an area with the circumference of about a baseball. Hence, your resulting explosion when it just can't takes no mores. Our galaxy, the Milky Way, has two known traveling black holes, presently moving toward one another. One of them died out millions of years ago, but returned again near the new, larger one. It's mathematically surmised that they neither will manage to engulf the other, only slingshot the stars and other bodies into the other's mouths. Eventually, the entire Milky Way - and possibly another neighboring galaxy - will be eaten up by the lasting black hole. At one point, the two will collide and (who knows?) the larger one will continue to feed until the density reaches capacity and ... well, you know the rest. FYI: Mathematically, some of the bodies from the nearby galaxy will even be swooped in long before our own solar system. This solar system is supposedly one of the last bits of morsels to enter these deadly mouths. But ... I'm just guessing at all this. | If you could survive going through, what scientists call a "black-hole", what would you find on the other side? Where would you be? What would happen? |
| 2 | Hey, Romkey: If you are an educated wo/man, you'll understand this ... what's the color of that house up there on the hill? | If you could survive going through, what scientists call a "black-hole", what would you find on the other side? Where would you be? What would happen? |
| 3 | Hey, Kaleb131313 - why dontchya' pick on someone your own magnitude of stench? DeeJay has a fine survey here - and it's SC-by-the-book-all-the-way thumpers like you who get me riled up around here. If you don't like a survey, kindly choose to not participate please. (And, if you're conjuring up a wise-crack about your right to speech, then save a step in our communication and refer to this note to you here. In other words, no argument.) | If you could survive going through, what scientists call a "black-hole", what would you find on the other side? Where would you be? What would happen? |
| 4 | I forgot what time I was with. Interesting, Continue ... | If you could survive going through, what scientists call a "black-hole", what would you find on the other side? Where would you be? What would happen? |
| 5 | KR: Reveal to me what is beyond the "end" of the universe. My own theory is that there exists an ever-shaping circumference. And, beyond that - what the human brain can't seem to accommodate - true VOID. Not "nothing" - VOID. And, yes (I believe), the universe is expanding. This, I learned for myself finally - I didn't believe that long ago. The expansion is the destruction that's creating that one, immeasurably infinitesimally-thin layer that separates "space" and VOID - by way of simple chemical reactions. BTW: I respect what knowledge you must quickly be gaining in your life with such approaches you exemplified (above) with "... and presume that the constant k=(mc^2)/e prevails universally". It's your employment of the word "presume" - and your hesitation to practice the application of presumptions - that reveals how you willingly increase your knowledge, meanwhile developing the all-important tool of what I call "educated possibilities". I guess you'd simply name it "theorizing on your own", but there's more to it than that. Exercising that tool assists humans to limit the flat words of the past to the role of guide, while relieving the human brain of its resistance to theorize on its own. This structure sure helps the guide be a good guide and the resulting theories - wayward, unconventional, otherwise - finally to be formulated, en total. Good going. *hunkers down to study recent travels of Kristal_Rose(above)* Post-note: Reveal to me what is beyond the "end" of the universe. | If you could survive going through, what scientists call a "black-hole", what would you find on the other side? Where would you be? What would happen? |
| 6 | "...where god is conscious of god..." I know what that entails. My first "educated possibility" (really "interpretation") of the theory that the universe began with "a big bang" was that, simply, God generated His Own first thought. (Of course, being, "I am?") My theory following that describes our continuing existence: We are the mechanics of discovering if we (He) really does in fact exist. But, we've set our one hand out with the task of locating our one hand. I don't know if that busy device (whatever it represents) has made recurring visits back with anything, but, if it does, the cargo it holds is never the complete answer. It's the instrument itself - the hand we've been spending on the search - that's the answer to "Where is my hand?" That we'll probably never discover our own misunderstanding, I think, only ensures the endless life of the universe. I know that must be translatable in so many different ways, to be exchanged to science and to be expressed by mathematics, but it's the level my mind has chosen to define things. Although I have a great mathematical sense as well as theories that are trapped in there and waiting to become results, I may have robbed myself of that education by now, 37. Not concerned about it though...I don't think "interpretation" is my job. | If you could survive going through, what scientists call a "black-hole", what would you find on the other side? Where would you be? What would happen? |
| 7 | Aw - ya *know*, Mandy ... Nobody minds a little vomit on their survey (however, you could have spared us the yellow chunks ...), but ya got my *shoes* *too*? I saw you *aiming* for them, admit it! | If someone threw an amazing surprise birthday party in your honor, but your birthday was months away, would you tell them? |
| 8 | Mandy: "thought-provoking". The phrase, I mean. You used it. I'm talking about the hyphen between the words, you slighted when you used this in your ... ah, never mind. yawn, zzzzzz | If someone threw an amazing surprise birthday party in your honor, but your birthday was months away, would you tell them? |
| 9 | Yeah, right - just like you *really* climaxed when I did that ... thing, with your ... your, uh ... mail, yeah your mail, you remember? Faker, faker. | If someone threw an amazing surprise birthday party in your honor, but your birthday was months away, would you tell them? |
| 10 | How the hell did you guess, ASB? How the hell did you GUESS?!?! I -- oh. Wait. BOOKhead ... no, sorry. My bad. I thought you said "DICKhead". Carrying on ... | If someone threw an amazing surprise birthday party in your honor, but your birthday was months away, would you tell them? |