Mods: I am well aware that this is the incorrect place for this thread, but am unable to create a thread elsewhere until so many posts are met. If you
would be so kind as to move this to where it should more appropriately go.
I have been doing some reading lately, in the area of physics. Specifically: black holes, the multiverse, and other various areas of theoretical
physics. Let me say this, I am not a physicist...only a thinker and what I wish to present are merely ideas, not something I expect to, necessarily,
be right.
From what I have been reading, scientists are noticing that matter in the universe seem to be flowing, not just expanding, but heading toward the same
general area. The theory that they have formulated for this phenomenon is that another universe is pressing up against our own bubble of a universe.
This seems to make sense to me, but then I began wonder what other things could possibly make matter rush toward one point? This brought me to a
thought I had as a teenager, the time when I first got into this stuff, and that was this: we have black holes in our universe, that much we are sure,
and we are sure that there must be parallel universes...existing in the multiverse next to our own. What does that mean, though? All universes are
bubbles floating on some pond? What could that pond be? What makes up the fabric of the multiverse? The only thing we really have to go on is our own
and what if that pond wasn't so different from our own? It was vary much like the space-time we have come to know and with that could be warped, just
like our own. Could it create black holes? There are no stars in this pond, that we can be sure of, but there are universes. What if the big crunch
held true, but instead of expanding after it crushes in on itself, it just condensed into an extremely dense singularity. The densest of anything we
could ever imagine, a universe worth of matter shoved into a single point...could it create something like a black hole? Maybe the biggest and most
massive one we could think of. If so, the death of a universe could mean a black hole in the multiverse. Maybe, dangerously close to our own
universe...causing matter to flow toward it.
Then I began to expand on this notion, thinking of Hawking Radiation and a holographic view. What would happen if a multiversal black hole was eating
information, little by little, from one universe and then expelling it through Hawking Radiation?
Or, instead of a black hole in the multiversal fabric, what if there were, indeed, another universe pressing against our own; but on the edge of that
universe, the same side pressing against ours, there was a black hole...just far enough not to gobble up our entire universe....but just close enough
to create a flow of information, toward its singularity?
Again, sorry if all of this sounds completely idiotic and uneducated; I am no physicist and the ideas I have are incredibly hard to put into words,
which makes it seem even more ridiculous.
Thanks for reading.
Mod Note: You Have An Urgent U2U- Click Here.edit on 4-7-2011 by elevatedone
because: (no reason given)