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Re: Good pointPosted by snarfo_99 on January 24, 2003 at 15:32:47: In Reply to: Good point posted by mboyce1 on January 24, 2003 at 11:37:09: You definately get what I'm saying here. The instant the singularity is created it has already stretched spacetime to infinate length within the event horizon. Whether the singularity remains or not, it doesn't matter - it's irrelevent and essentially virtual. At that moment, all the infinate spacetime at the very center is now replaced by an expanding bubble of uncontracted spacetime moving outward which will continue said expansion forever. Currents or rivers or pieces of uncontracted spacetime we now refer to as "dark matter" are mixed up with the bubble of uncontracted space, greatly effecting matter. A zone of super contracted spacetime should be attractive toward matter, bend light and otherwise behave exactly like any other gravity source - except it doesn't have to be spherical (like a planet) and it doesn't contain mass - the mass that originally created it is virtual, but it's effects are eternal. Outside the event horizon, everything appears just as it did at the instant the singularity was first formed and all those stars orbiting the center of the black hole at the center of our galaxy are moving to the tune of a gravity source that lost it's "first cause" the instant after it's creation, the "first cause" being the singularity. Said singularity exists for merely an instant and could thus be called an "Instanton". Follow Ups: (Reload page to see most recent)
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