"Double-A" wrote in message
oups.com...
nightbat wrote:
nightbat wrote
The Flavored Coffee Guy wrote:
Black holes are observed evidence. But, then in your fictional
universe matter comes from a tin cup balanced in the top of some tree,
and only you know where it is.
I think I just lost your profound train of thought.
Any symetrical blast that detonated a
nuclear bomb is evendence that if there's an explosion, there will be
an implosion. You haven't told us where that went. But, black holes
prove it has to be there.
Look here, a list of black holes, all real.
http://chandra.harvard.edu/xray_sources/blackholes.html
So, are symetrical explosions and exactly how an implosion takes place
when all you see is a blast.
http://hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu.edu.../bomb3.html#c2
They are real thoughts on real science.
nightbat
No Coffee Guy server they are theoretical non real world
possibility sci fi speculations. A black hole doesn't exist in the
center of explosions get a clue. Stop falling for all that Hollywood B
movie and hype sci fi and get a grip. Real world science is quite
different it requires evidence not speculation. You're not to blame for
they sure make it all seem real in Hollywood for that's what they get
paid for. Now not another word until I have my cup of fresh brew,
thanks.
carry on,
the nightbat
Yes as nightbat says, there is no real world conclusive evidence that
black holes exist. But Hollywood and speculative Sci-Fi book writers
love this sort of thing. Nothing has been observed that couldn't have
an explanation other than a black hole. Black holes, Jurassic Park,
and Monster Island only exist on film!
Double-A
Hey, I just had an idea for a new book or possibly a movie or two. The Big
Bang was initiated by a Big Spark which was caused by the collision of two
big rocks. Now the questions are, 1) Who struck the rocks together, 2) What
explosive gas/liquid/solid/Bose-Einstein goo was fermenting in space in the
first place, 3) What happened to the guy's fingers who banged the rocks
together? and 4) Are Black Holes nothing more than swirling Brownian motion
eddies?
-eric