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Blackholes and super cold Sodium



 
 
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  #1  
Old November 20th 03, 10:54 PM
G=EMC^2 Glazier
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Default Blackholes and super cold Sodium

Just a thought that is in the other direction,and makes a blackhole just
as black. Light slows down to 3 miles per hour going through super cold
sodium. Light can't get out of a blackhole because a BH is colder than
super cold sodium,and any energy entering a BH has its motion brought to
zero. There is no motion inside a BH. Bert PS Best to think in
every direction

  #2  
Old November 21st 03, 12:48 AM
Bill Sheppard
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Bert wrote,

There is no motion inside a BH.


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  #3  
Old November 21st 03, 12:50 AM
Bill Sheppard
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Hit 'send' by mistake. !@#$%&!!

Bert, I thought you said "spin is in". oc

  #4  
Old November 21st 03, 03:01 PM
G=EMC^2 Glazier
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Hi oc "Spin is in" Yes it is. Can I say the blackhole's horizon is
spinning but there is no spin,or any directional motion inside a
blackhole because it does not relate to the rest of the universe. oc as
I posted I was just thinking in a different direction in making the
blackhole black. My own thoughts are photons never slow down,that it
would not be a photon unless it went at "c" That electrons structure is
photons making a field that is spinning at "c" To me it looks like bees
swirling out of their hive(seen from a distance) and a single bee seen
as a photon. Still photons are attracted to cold(hot goes to cold) and
the the temperature inside a blackhole is a million times colder than
the space the BH is immersed in Bert

 




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