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Originally posted by surfup
My question is if gravity is related to time and the black hole's gravity effect on the stars increases as the black hole pulls the stars, as a result doesn't time become slower? If that is so, then couldn't there be an object that would have negative effects on the stars, therefore causing time to go faster, if not backwards??? I have read of white objects, which some say to be the opposite of black hole. Is that true?
Originally posted by jp1111
White holes are hypothetical and so there is no proof of their existence. I think it would be interesting to study an object that spits out matter out of nothing!
Originally posted by surfup
So Universe was a white hole before Big Bang, no it doesn't make any sense, Universe wasn't there before Big Bang, so therefore Big Bang came out of nothing, isn't that what whites holes are supposed to do? So are white holes are universe formers?
Originally posted by amantine
Photons don't decay, and since they move at the speed of light, they can't even decay. No time passes during movement for something that moves at the speed of light. Using the analogy of the first paragraph, a photon has put all of his 1 unit of movement into movement through space.
Originally posted by surfup
So when they say this light is from XX galaxy 10 million years ago, they are measuring how far the galaxy is and how much light travels in a year? So that photon could have just begun its journey, but we could think it is 1000 million years old?
Originally posted by surfup
So time exists everywhere?
Originally posted by amantine
We're talking about two different reference systems here. In our reference frame, the light did originate 10 million years ago and is therefore 10 million years 'old'. But because the photon travels at the speed of light, it experiences no time and the photon's moment of being created and being absorbed are the same in its own reference frame.