• 667
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      71 year ago

      The extent of my knowledge of astrophysics and relativity are around the size of the next comma in this sentence, but wouldn’t a great deal of time pass “inside” such a black hole such that a “universe” could rise and fall in what would seem to us as just a few microseconds due to relativistic effects?

      • Entropywins
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        41 year ago

        The blackhole universe would seem to move infinitely slow to us and our univers would flash by in an instant to them…

        • Spzi
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          11 year ago

          Black holes still have finite mass, and can be lighter than Earth.

      • iAmTheTot
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        11 year ago

        Wouldn’t it be the other way around, if anything? Things closer to a black hole experience time slower.

          • chingadera
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            31 year ago

            Scientists conclude that because 3 energy or more is required to create a universe, there is a 99.999% probability that the observable universe is in fact a worm, with the energy of at least 3 dirt.

              • chingadera
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                1 year ago

                Given the average length of a kangaroo is 1-3 meters, I went with 2.

                The worm in this theory would be 4.39914571 × 10²⁶ kangaroos long.

                I would calculate his volume but WE DO NOT TALK ABOUT HIS GRACE’S WIDTH NOR HIS HEIGHT. We’ve all seen the consequences.