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Physics, Astronomy & Cosmology / Why don't atoms melt?
« on: 18/01/2009 17:58:49 »
Sort of got carried away here
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Jeez, yor-on
What was all that about?
I have read it several times.
Help me.
I think you may have hit the button at what point does an atom literally vibrate so much that it shakes itself to nothingness at that point could it be said to have melted ? It would just vaporise into nothing perhaps ?An atom of a gas, that is a free atom, vibrate around which point?
yor_onQuoteSo a black hole should then be able to create an awful lot of space.
But could it also be so 'strong' that it would eliminate 'space' itself?
As that is a area containing energy?.
My question has still not being addressed. I will put it another way:
Is a black hole space time in another universe?
Or is a black hole just a massive solid object we cannot see?
Or is a black hole a white hole in another universe?
Our has universe could have been created from a white hole? This possibility has not been dismissed by many physicist
Or could our whole universe be the result of an enormous black hole from somewhere else?
Are we living inside the result of a colossal black hole?
Alan
This is a sad sad thing
One alternative could be to say that as those Black Holes can't be born except in that beginning of the Big Bang then only the matter outside the EV (event horizon) from our frame seen, will be the matter 'moving in'. All other matter inside might already have reached their 'destination' under that first creation as it then must have involved that inflationary period, which then could make a 'no space' space inside that EV.
If for example those super black holes residing in our galaxies center once was very tightly knitted together, and created from that first cooling of the quark soup.
Then 'split up' by the inflation that they might even have started by their creation.
Which then would eliminate the possibility's of that 'region' inside the EV to ever have any 'potential energy' as 'normal space' seems to have.