I see it all now - Pete is describing the "Big Crunch".
TNT - you may be the "informed, intelligent" physicist he is looking for! 😎...if for example the entire universe all of a sudden became a black hole? I mean if all matter were gathered together in one giant mass.
My unfounded theory:
Everything is a warpage of space-time. The only thing that exists we see as anything is just oscillations of space-time. All just a matter of frequency. This simplifies the universe as it reduces the number of things to one. The limit set by Asimov is only for a photon. What about smaller things? How fast is the resonance that manifests itself as a Quark?
So, is what the universe expanding into just space/time that is not rippling yet? Like a lake where the stone ripple has not made it yet.
We may never know. We seem to be, today at least, limited by the observable universe as it now is defined. Someday that may change.
Everything is a warpage of space-time. The only thing that exists we see as anything is just oscillations of space-time. All just a matter of frequency. This simplifies the universe as it reduces the number of things to one. The limit set by Asimov is only for a photon. What about smaller things? How fast is the resonance that manifests itself as a Quark?
So, is what the universe expanding into just space/time that is not rippling yet? Like a lake where the stone ripple has not made it yet.
We may never know. We seem to be, today at least, limited by the observable universe as it now is defined. Someday that may change.
Yes, but just throwing out random numbers wouldn't appease my appetite for knowledge.@KaffiMann 🙂D) the ‘saturation point’ of gravity is the singularity I believe.
Singularities were first predicated as a result of Einstein’s Theory of General Relativity, which resulted in the theoretical existence of black holes. In essence, the theory predicted that any star reaching beyond a certain point in its mass (aka. the Schwarzschild Radius) would exert a gravitational force so intense that it would collapse.
At this point, nothing would be capable of escaping its surface, including light. This is due to the fact the gravitational force would exceed the speed of light in vacuum – 299,792,458 meters per second (1,079,252,848.8 km/h; 670,616,629 mph).
This phenomena is known as the Chandrasekhar Limit, named after the Indian astrophysicist Subrahmanyan Chandrasekhar, who proposed it in 1930. At present, the accepted value of this limit is believed to be 1.39 Solar Masses (i.e. 1.39 times the mass of our Sun), which works out to a whopping 2.765 x 1030 kg (or 2,765 trillion trillion metric tons).
At the centre of a black hole, spacetime curves infinitely, gravity becomes infinite and the laws of physics as we know them cease to function.
I think this sums it up nicely:
According to the Penrose Singularity Theorem, which he proposed in 1965, a time-like singularity will occur within a black hole whenever matter reaches certain energy conditions. At this point, the curvature of space-time within the black hole becomes infinite, thus turning it into a trapped surface where time ceases to function.
The Hawking Singularity Theorem added to this by stating that a space-like singularity can occur when matter is forcibly compressed to a point, causing the rules that govern matter to break down. Hawking traced this back in time to the Big Bang, which he claimed was a point of infinite density. However, Hawking later revised this to claim that general relativity breaks down at times prior to the Big Bang, and hence no singularity could be predicted by it.
A gravity so immense, that the laws of physics turn to both cold slush, hot porridge, a cool deepwater fish, a Boeing 737 and blistering Chili Con Carne at the same time. Gravity so high that everything is permanently locked in a state of absolute mayhem.
Perhaps that's what happened, everything went horribly wrong simultaneously, and therefore - we exist.Neither general relativity nor quantum mechanics can currently describe the earliest moments of the Big Bang,[8] but in general, quantum mechanics does not permit particles to inhabit a space smaller than their wavelengths.
What Is A Singularity? - Universe Today
Gravitational singularity - Wikipedia
Edit:
Or... We can put on our tinfoil hats: It is not impossible, that we live in the matrix, inside a singularity!
Last edited:
We can put on our tinfoil hats...

Attachments
Like an iron piece inbetween two magnets cannot be pulled simultaneously by both magnets . Stronger will attract it . Iron piece cannot tell if the other megnet is there or not . Similarly we are matter in general is a subject of gravity . We cannot tell if there is sun or not . Well we can but with respect to gravity we cannot . Now my question is. If we have two magnets of attractive force equal to what of blackhole. Can they produce a magnetic wave .
I believe magnet doesn't behave like gravity . But isn't it need a negative gravity to make for the trough side of the wave . Or I missing something .
I believe magnet doesn't behave like gravity . But isn't it need a negative gravity to make for the trough side of the wave . Or I missing something .
Ah, you swallowed the big Blue pill. 🙂Yes, but just throwing out random numbers wouldn't appease my appetite for knowledge.
I think this sums it up nicely:
A gravity so immense, that the laws of physics turn to both cold slush, hot porridge, a cool deepwater fish, a Boeing 737 and blistering Chili Con Carne at the same time. Gravity so high that everything is permanently locked in a state of absolute mayhem.
Perhaps that's what happened, everything went horribly wrong simultaneously, and therefore - we exist.
What Is A Singularity? - Universe Today
Gravitational singularity - Wikipedia
Edit:
Or... We can put on our tinfoil hats: It is not impossible, that we live in the matrix, inside a singularity!
Or I missing something.
- The iron piece will be attracted to both magnets, but will move in the direction of the net or resultant force i.e. towards the stronger magnet.
- The fact that we can observe that the Earth is orbiting the Sun shows that the planet is experiencing a central-seeking or centripetal force. As Newton explained, this centripetal force is the force of gravity exerted on the Earth by the Sun.
- Two black holes produce gravitational waves when they collide. Two magnets moving together will not create purely magnetic waves. The creation of waves in the magnetic field automatically creates corresponding electric fields and leads to electromagnetic radiation.
- A gravitational wave compresses spacetime in one direction and stretches it the other direction - both at right angles to the wave's direction. In this sense a gravitational wave is regarded as a transverse wave comprising of both peaks and troughs.
Attachments
@ vishal raju
I'm no expert on gravitational waves, but questions like yours prompt me to learn more about them and share that knowledge with others in the thread.
I'm learning all the time thanks to this thread! 😎
I'm no expert on gravitational waves, but questions like yours prompt me to learn more about them and share that knowledge with others in the thread.
I'm learning all the time thanks to this thread! 😎
At first I thought you were implying that our friend KaffiMann suffers from a certain form of dysfunction!Ah, you swallowed the big Blue pill. 🙂
However, on researching, I find you are actually referring to The Matrix!
Red pill and blue pill - Wikipedia
Learning all the time! 😀
I'd have you know that I excel at being dysfunctional.
When you posted that stuff just now about gravity and black matter colliding etc, absolute first thought that popped up in my head:
"Wow! Imagine shooting black holes like with a magnetic accellerator! The force of it!"
Magnetic Accelerators | Magnetic Games - YouTube
When you posted that stuff just now about gravity and black matter colliding etc, absolute first thought that popped up in my head:
"Wow! Imagine shooting black holes like with a magnetic accellerator! The force of it!"
Magnetic Accelerators | Magnetic Games - YouTube
Nice demos! 😎
I remember the railgun being mentioned earlier in the thread.
In a railgun, the place of the permanent magnets is taken by the magnetic effect of a large electric current.
The US Navy has recently pulled the plug on railgun development.
The Navy's Railgun Is Finally Dead: What Happened to the Railgun?
I remember the railgun being mentioned earlier in the thread.
In a railgun, the place of the permanent magnets is taken by the magnetic effect of a large electric current.
The US Navy has recently pulled the plug on railgun development.
The Navy's Railgun Is Finally Dead: What Happened to the Railgun?
Attachments
Steve, and other fans of the "taxi number" 1729, may be interested to know that the biopic "The Man Who Knew Infinity" is showing on BBC2 at 10 pm tomorrow (Sunday).
The film tells the story of self taught Indian mathematician Srinivasa Ramanujan and his friendship with Cambridge academic GH Hardy.
The film tells the story of self taught Indian mathematician Srinivasa Ramanujan and his friendship with Cambridge academic GH Hardy.
A bonkers plan to give Mars a magnetosphere
An Absolutely Bonkers Plan to Give Mars an Artificial Magnetosphere - Universe Today
An Absolutely Bonkers Plan to Give Mars an Artificial Magnetosphere - Universe Today
I've seen that on whatever streaming service, as an amateur number theorist I really enjoyed it.Steve, and other fans of the "taxi number" 1729, may be interested to know that the biopic "The Man Who Knew Infinity" is showing on BBC2 at 10 pm tomorrow (Sunday).
The film tells the story of self taught Indian mathematician Srinivasa Ramanujan and his friendship with Cambridge academic GH Hardy.
Another good geeky biopic is "The Bit Player" about Claude Shannon.
Don't you mean "stark raving bonkers"? 😀A bonkers plan to give Mars a magnetosphere
I like the understatement at the end of the article:
"the engineering hurdles would be significant"
It does not violate the laws of physics. Do not dismiss a concept because the engineering looks difficult. We are surrounded by "impossible engineering"
I can see many other problems, like what low gravity does to our body. Someone living on Mars would become a Martian and no longer Earthling. Logic ( dangerous) might suggest the same for virtually all life forms.
I can see many other problems, like what low gravity does to our body. Someone living on Mars would become a Martian and no longer Earthling. Logic ( dangerous) might suggest the same for virtually all life forms.
My plan of an army of semi-automated robots to assemble matter in the asteroid belt does not seem that far fetched compared to making an artificial magnetosphere IMO. Make it happen 1 rock at a time.
Could be we could make both earth 2 and 3 with a bit of planning, careful assembly would perhaps help avoid making a molten sphere. I do think having a moon would be useful in maintaining the field, and tides are useful for helping the weather system and ocean currents.
Could be we could make both earth 2 and 3 with a bit of planning, careful assembly would perhaps help avoid making a molten sphere. I do think having a moon would be useful in maintaining the field, and tides are useful for helping the weather system and ocean currents.
- Status
- Not open for further replies.
- Home
- Member Areas
- The Lounge
- What is the Universe expanding into..