Thursday 12 February 2015

Every Black Hole Contains a New Universe










































Nikodem Poplawski displays a "tornado in a tube." The top bottle symbolizes a black hole, the connected necks represent a wormhole and the lower bottle symbolizes the growing universe on the just-formed other side of the wormhole. Credit: Indiana University
In this picture, spins in particles interact with spacetime and

endow it with a property called “torsion.” To understand torsion,

imagine spacetime not as a two-dimensional canvas, but as a flexible,

one-dimensional rod. Bending the rod corresponds to curving spacetime,

and twisting the rod corresponds to spacetime torsion. If a rod is thin,

you can bend it, but it’s hard to see if it’s twisted or not.

The

first is general relativity, the modern theory of gravity. It describes

the universe at the largest scales. Any event in the universe occurs as

a point in space and time, or spacetime. A massive object such as the

Sun distorts or “curves” spacetime, like a bowling ball sitting on a

canvas. The Sun’s gravitational dent alters the motion of Earth and the

other planets orbiting it. The sun’s pull of the planets appears to us

as the force of gravity.
















































Source Article from http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/AscensionEarth2012/~3/_bADGIryhE0/every-black-hole-contains-new-universe.html



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