File: Falling Into a Black Hole .swf-(2 KB, Loop)
[_] Anonymous 10/06/12(Sat)20:19 No.1779360
Marked for deletion (old).
>> [_] Mr. Kidnapper !VANVANPVIU 10/06/12(Sat)20:48 No.1779386
Well that was interesting. Glad people are using my player.
>> [_] Anonymous 10/06/12(Sat)20:56 No.1779395
well fuck
>> [_] Anonymous 10/06/12(Sat)21:01 No.1779402
I would like to die inside a black hole. Seems like the most interesting death you could ever have
>> [_] Anonymous 10/06/12(Sat)21:39 No.1779431
What if you point your engines to go into the central singularity? If pointing it away gets you
further in the singularity, then pointing it in to the singularity must get you OUT, right?
>> [_] Anonymous 10/06/12(Sat)21:42 No.1779432
>>1779431
If you paid attention, the idea was that every direction points IN, no matter what.
And that's the direction of the event horizon. The only way you could get out would be to point
towards "The Past", however it's kind of impossible to point your engines towards a concept.
>> [_] Anonymous 10/06/12(Sat)21:42 No.1779434
*definition of event horizon
>> [_] Anonymous 10/06/12(Sat)21:51 No.1779443
Nope: The Narrative
>> [_] Anonymous 10/06/12(Sat)21:56 No.1779446
This is awesome
God physics is fucking weird.
>> [_] Anonymous 10/06/12(Sat)21:56 No.1779448
That was pretty good I liked that
>> [_] Kamina 10/06/12(Sat)22:04 No.1779456
Go beyond the impossible and kick reason to the curb!
>> [_] Anonymous 10/06/12(Sat)22:04 No.1779457
>>1779432
Well, if you've got your magical infinite acceleration engine you might be able to do some crazy
shit with bending spacetime. Isn't that basically what gravity relies on? 4D distortions of space?
>> [_] Anonymous 10/06/12(Sat)22:07 No.1779460
>>1779402
You'd be torn apart before you reached the event horizon.
>> [_] Anonymous 10/06/12(Sat)22:08 No.1779462
>>1779460
I think that's pretty much what he meant
>> [_] Anonymous 10/06/12(Sat)22:17 No.1779473
What if we bounced a beam of anti-gravitons and chronoton particles off the main deflector dish?
>> [_] Anonymous 10/06/12(Sat)22:32 No.1779478
What if it was a long spaceship, with the engines on the front, and the ship entered the event
horizon in reverse so that only half of it was inside of the event horizon. A person in the back
should be able to walk to the front, out of the event horizon, right? The front of the ship would
also have a bearing out of the black hole, so it should be able to pull the back end out.
>> [_] Anonymous 10/06/12(Sat)22:37 No.1779483
>>1779473
It's eh no use cap'n th ship can nae hold so much praysure!
>> [_] Anonymous 10/06/12(Sat)22:37 No.1779484
So yes, you *can* see forever.
>> [_] Anonymous 10/06/12(Sat)22:47 No.1779489
>>1779431
YOU SIR!
ARE a FUCKING GENIOUS!
but it does not work in reverse you are just in, and all "out" directions are simply in the past,
meaning not there
>> [_] Anonymous 10/06/12(Sat)23:03 No.1779502
robotrollcall was the greatest redditor of all time. Her leaving the site was the beginning of
the end.
>> [_] Anonymous 10/06/12(Sat)23:05 No.1779506
>>1779478
That's an interesting thought.
If part of the ship were to be on the inside of the event horizon, where every single direction
is facing towards the singularity, while the other were to be on the outside, what would happen?
We know that black holes break things down by the atoms, so would the part of the ship that is
outside of the event horizon escape with only the atoms that weren't on the event horizon? Or,
would the entire ship go down? Or, for a third possibility, would the entire ship escape
unscathed? If the first two options are true, you would die in this situation, maybe. I have to
send this question to the top physicists of the world and get an answer from them.
A great contribution to science, you have truly made.
>> [_] Anonymous 10/06/12(Sat)23:07 No.1779509
Stop trying to discuss this. You are doing terribly and make my brain angry.
>> [_] Anonymous 10/06/12(Sat)23:13 No.1779516
No. There is important brain think go on now, so tell your brain to go sit in the corner until it
learns to behave itself.