View Full Version : Big Bang caused by explosion of black hole?
thefountainhed
07-20-03, 04:36 AM
Could it be that the big bang was caused by explosion/extension of a black hole due to too much condensation of matter--gravity pull finally broken? Matter so condensed would produce a uniform distribution of matter --cosmological principle, and radiation. It would also provide a cause for the effect, but no cause for the cause of the effect, and so on. Just a thought...
thefountainhed
07-22-03, 09:34 PM
well?
shoelessjoe20
07-22-03, 11:40 PM
correct me if im wrong but doesnt a black hole have to exist in a universe and not just empty space. And if the big bang created the universe i dont see how a black hole could be there prior to the universe being created. Thats my theory, correct me if im wrong
thefountainhed
07-23-03, 10:06 AM
correct me if im wrong but doesnt a black hole have to exist in a universe and not just empty space.
This is from original quote: It would also provide a cause for the effect, but no cause for the cause of the effect, and so on. Meaning, that there would be parrallel universes but would not explain how the first got there. The big bang explains an effect and not a cause. Mine explains an effect and no cause, while extending further the notion of parrallel universes. In effect, a big bang created our universe-- the big bang being the explosion of a black hole that had too much concentrated mass.
And if the big bang created the universe i dont see how a black hole could be there prior to the universe being created.
My contention is not that the big bang as is currently accepted, created the universe.
fadingCaptain
07-23-03, 11:07 AM
too much condensation of matter--gravity pull finally broken?
At what point do you think this would happen? Do you think at some point gravity reverses itself? Also, how would this affect/explain the increasing expansion rate of the universe?
2inquisitive
07-24-03, 02:28 AM
This Cornell University professor claims that the more massive
a black hole is, the LESS dense it is. I think he is speaking of
the total size of the black hole including event horizon divided
by the total mass to arrive at the statement that more massive
black holes are less dense. He has the maths, too.
A link:
http://instruct1.cit.cornell.edu/courses/astro101/lec25.htm
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