Sat Jan 03, 2004 9:53 am by Papa_MegaMan
Physics, eh? What about English? Did you learn how to use some commas?
Black hole theory: (again!)
If you look upon space as a massive plane, you are partially correct in your views. However, space is not as flat as you think it is. Gravity dislocation from stars and other astral bodies creates plateaus, hills, and pits in the fabric of space. It has already been proven that this has effects on light; light "bends" and "warps" when it gets close to some spatial body.
A star burns by converting hydrogen gas into helium-3 using the process of fusion, creating energy by merging the nuclei of atoms. However abundant, though, hydrogen is not limitless, and the star will eventually run out. To compensate for the loss of hydrogen, the star will expand, and thin out to regulate the lost energy. This has the added side effect of creating more gravity. (more mass=more gravity) When the star completely runs out of hydrogen, it can do one of several things, all of which result from the final collapse of the star due to it's own gravity.
1. If it's "lucky," it may still have enough hydrogen around to collapse into a smaller star and start the process again.
2. If there's another star around, it may be absorbed into the higher-energy star; at which point, the new star could:
A: become a new, self-sustaining giant star
or
B: redistribute the energy back into a twin star system, until it becomes a really impressive-looking double nova.
3. It will completely collapse, resulting in a catastrophic amount of gravity dislocation.
On a map of space time, astral bodies such as stars will appear as small "pits" or "hills" in the plane, due to their gravity dislocation. Once a star collapses, it has a small chance that the collapse, due to the star's previous mass, will not stop its implosion, resulting in a rather large dent in the fabric of space. (Notice how I don't use the phrase "space-time." I'll get to that later.) This is your average black hole, or more correctly labeled, a "black dent." This utter mass has such gravitational force that it literally drags in space around it. (Remember the dent?) Not only space, but most objects around it, including light. (Hence the "black" in a black hole)
The gravity dislocation from a collapsing star could also become several other things which I am too tired to list right now. Maybe later, in another essay.
But wait! How come PMM never uses that old term "space-time?" Recall the image of the plane with bumps and pits, used to model space. However, since that only depicts universal force, it cannot measure time. Time is something we have created to depict the linearality of eventuality. Time is only how we model the passing of things, and in terms of universality, time is completely immeasurable. The fabric of space is littered with all kinds of imperfections caused by the four universal forces. (Strong and weak nuclear force, elecromagnetic force, and gravitational force) Since none of these four can affect time, an abstract notion conjured up by man, time can no longer fit into the equation.
Also, light has mass, though very minute. This is due to one thing that most physists have observed: remember how I told you that light bends around the dents and bumps caused by gravity dislocation? According to gravity/graviton theory, all things with mass, due to the presence of graviton particles, (Subatomic particles that have been theorized to create gravity on things with mass, ie: atoms.) are attracted to each other, and are all duly affected by the force of gravity. In the same way, most scientists and I have observed that light does not always travel in wavemotion, such as energy, but as something with mass. Recently, several scientists succeeded in slowing down light to about 25.4 mph, reinforcing this theory.
Does that answer your questions?