if a black hole absorbed a white hole, what would happen?
@MTALHAHASSAN2
@mathstudent55 @mohhef @Awolflover1 @agent0smith @AloneS @aziaboo45
@Nnesha @nevermind_justschool @newtonson @nkhanfar @niyex
@nevermind_justschool @niyex
@jigglypuff314 @JFraser @Jaynator495 @jacobciezki @jojo12g @jfernandes
this is still be a black hole.
@Nnesha @jigglypuff314 @JFraser @Jaynator495 @jacobciezki @jojo12g @jfernandes
@agent0smith @Awolflover1 @Atrineas @yagosik
@Mahoganie.Carson
any ideas?
Check this link out https://www.quora.com/What-would-happen-if-a-black-hole-absorbs-a-worm-hole#!n=12 hope it helps :)
would it create an infinite point of singularity?
Well if a blackhole takes in matter and a white hole rejects it then. . . (The world may never know) I'll go research it
thats what i said
@redneck88 @Rashadeb1 @RandomeQuestions @RhondaSommer @welshfella @queelius
not really
Ok. . . I'll keep looking
well if black holes eat the stuff, and white holes put it out, would the white hole continuosly duplicate itself?
theoretically, atleast
@redneck88 @Rashadeb1 @RandomeQuestions @RhondaSommer @welshfella @queelius @mathstudent55 @mohhef @Awolflover1 @agent0smith @AloneS @aziaboo45
smith, whaddya think?
In theories which consider collisions between objects which have opposite arrows of time it is usually derived that upon such collision the object with reverse time arrow will quickly switch its time direction for which only a microscopic perturbation is enough. This means that in a hypothetical universe where there is a black and a white hole, in a short time after their first interaction the white hole will become another black hole so that the system will end up with two black holes. I found this. . .
@ethiano
stationary black holes do not carry classical supertranslation hair, just as they do not carry classical electric hair. However, as in the electric case, the action of QHf creates soft gravitons on the horizon. From this point forward, the argument that black holes carry soft supertranslation hair proceeds in a nearly identical fashion to the electromagnetic case. thus, stating that in a case where white holes were to be collide with a blackhole, nothing would happen.
We have reconsidered the black hole information paradox in light of recent insights into the infrared structure of quantum gravity. An explicit description has been given of a few of the pixels in the holographic plate at the future boundary of the horizon. Some information is accessibly stored on these pixels in the form of soft photons and gravitons. A complete description of the holographic plate and resolution of the information paradox remains an open challenge, which we have presented new and concrete tools to address.
Join our real-time social learning platform and learn together with your friends!