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What happens if black holes fall into wormholes?

Duration: 08:14Views: 871Likes: 37Date Created: Nov, 2020

Channel: Matrix Disclosure

Category: Science & Technology

Tags: albert einsteingravitaional wavesexotic matterspaceligowhat happens ifblack holesastronomersblack holespacetimewormholesspace-timewormholegravitationalwhat ifspaceshipfacts about spacegravityhypotheticaluniversenegative massgravitational waveseinsteintimeevent horizongravitational-waves observatory

Description: Singularities – also known as black holes – are so powerful that even light cannot escape their grasp. But what happens when a black hole meets something even stronger, like a wormhole? Wormholes are only hypothetical so they’re at a disadvantage against black holes – which we’ve actually observed. However, that might be the black hole’s only advantage. What happens if black holes fall into wormholes? Astronomers think they might be able to detect black holes falling into wormholes using ripples in spacetime known as gravitational waves, but only if wormholes actually exist and such a scenario ever happened, a new study finds. A wormhole is a theoretical bridge between two universes or two distant places within the same universe. If wormholes exist, and it was possible to traverse them, you could fly a spaceship into one side and near-instantly pop out on the other side where you could be in a completely different universe. According to Einstein, who first predicted the existence of gravitational waves in 1916, gravity results from the way in which mass warps space and time. When two or more objects move within a gravitational field, they produce gravitational waves that travel at the speed of light, stretching and squeezing space-time along the way. Gravitational waves are extraordinarily difficult to detect because they are extremely weak, and even Einstein was uncertain whether they really existed and if they would get discovered. After decades of work, scientists reported the first direct evidence of gravitational waves in 2016, detected using the Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory (LIGO). #wormhole #blackhole #matrixdisclosure

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