全 8 件のコメント

[–]Dinierto [スコア非表示]  (2子コメント)

Unfortunately you're not the only one to have this theory. I think it was in the new series of Cosmos that NDGT mentioned the theory that white holes could be big bangs, with each one creating its own universe

[–]Eddie_shoes [スコア非表示]  (1子コメント)

Funny how he even admits to watching lots of those types of programs, and now claims an idea like that as his own.

[–]Dinierto [スコア非表示]  (0子コメント)

Hey, his description is a hit off so either he didn't understand the shows or he genuinely thought of it. I'm going to give him the benefit of the doubt. When I was a kid I thought of all kinds of extra dimensional theories that turned out to be shared by actual scientists, so it's obviously possible.

[–]TheFuzzofMuzz [スコア非表示]  (0子コメント)

Alright little man, take physics as one of your high school options, learn as much as you can refine your theory. Find some evidence that backs up your theory. I look forward to seeing PointlessSmurf's theory of creation through "white holes".

[–]RSwordsman [スコア非表示]  (3子コメント)

I think you're off-base by saying white holes are analogous to "new" big bangs. The whole point of calling it a "Big Bang" is that there was only one and from it came everything.

Someone correct me if I'm wrong, but (in my similar layman's understanding) a white hole is a theorized region where information taken into a black hole elsewhere is instead projected out. There can be more than one that exists within the universe, and we have no reason to believe more entire universes come out of them. White holes output matter and energy; the Big Bang generated space itself. It's not a matter of simply expanding our perspective.

It would be nice to hear from a physicist who knows more about these things though. :)

[–]PointlessSmurf[S] [スコア非表示]  (1子コメント)

I may have been unclear, but I just used The Big Bang for a lack of better term, what I was trying to say is the Big Bang we know now is just one of many "white holes"

[–]RSwordsman [スコア非表示]  (0子コメント)

That does tie in nicely to the theory of a "foamy" multiverse, where several universes exist in a higher-dimensional parallel like soap bubbles. But I think if so, space would get extremely weird in the vicinity of white holes, should we find one. I guess as always, the answer to a scientific proposal is "find a way to test it." :)

[–]phys1cstothemax [スコア非表示]  (0子コメント)

BS in Applied Physics and MS in Astrophysics here and there are quite a few issues with this theory of yours,
A) While it is true that black holes dissipate through hawking radiation, and they do release a violent burst of gamma radiation in the last moments of it's "life" but your statement 'This explosion will release all the mass and light it's collected through the years' is completely off base. If the black hole has been losing mass through Hawking radiation how could it's final explosion contain all the mass that it has absorbed in it's lifetime? It has been releasing that mass through Hawking Radiation over that ridiculous timeframe. The final explosion contains a very small(relatively) amount of mass/energy.
B) White holes have largely been discredited by the discovery of Hawking Radiation