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OCW Scholar - Physics I: Classical Mechanics 15 Online
OpenStudy (anonymous):

What other mass objects that are heavier than a supernovae or a black hole?

OpenStudy (anonymous):

Do you mean to ask what objects are denser?

OpenStudy (anonymous):

I'm trying to determine whether there is a way of artificially creating a dense object either with or without mass that is able to bend or warp the space-time fabric.

OpenStudy (anonymous):

Well, we already manipulate materials on earth into objects for our use. Are you wanting to know if humans can create something from no mass to something with mass? I think that study is under the branch of particle physics. As for an object with no mass, the only thing that comes to mind is a photon.

OpenStudy (anonymous):

Neutron Stars are also incredibly heavy, while not of "infinite density" (like a black hole) they are still pretty far out there.

OpenStudy (anonymous):

In theory the LHC could generate ultra tiny black holes, though they would exist merely for a very short time because they would loose energy through hawking radiation. And even if they lived long enough and hawking radiation proved wrong, they could not harm anything on earth because of their super tiny mass of about \[10^{-22}kg\] That would be the dense object question. The biggest Mass Question is concerning massive objects in space? if you consider our Universe one big object then the combination of galaxies stars and planets including dark matter would be the object with the biggest mass we can observe and that thought of in the observable Universe since gravitational waves can't excert the speed of light. Otherwise the biggest and densest mass in one "Object" observed would be the supermassive black holes thought of existing in the center of the most galaxies.

OpenStudy (anonymous):

btw THERE IS A WAY TO DO THAT BUT THE OBJECT MUST HAVE MASS

OpenStudy (anonymous):

btw one object is the mass of the multiverse

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