Jump to content

Wormholes

Featured Replies

10-20 eV is an absurdly small mass, and this should be proof enough for anyone. There are other good reasons for expecting the photon to be masses, e.g. it is the gauge boson of an unbroken local symmetry.

I may disagree of your comment.

You cannot rely on unproved' date=' you can have faith on the unproved but you cannot trust in it.

As Kekule said.

" Sueña, tal vez encontrarás la verdad pero abstente de publicar tus ideas antes de ponerlas a prueba con la mente despierta"

The translation would be like this:

" Dream, you may find the truth but avoid publishing your ideas without having them test them before with the awakened mind"

Its not narrow minded, but you should understand that about the things we dont see we dont know, we just can dream. and we cannot disprove what it is not proven first.

So in order to do the things right, first prove it.[/quote']

 

Thales was correct in his statement. I do not rely on these ideas, I just like to talk about them and think about them. That is what some of science is about. I know there's a chance they may not exist, but I cannot forget that they can exist. As said before they are interesting, and should be discussed.

10-20 eV is an absurdly small mass, and this should[/b'] be proof enough for anyone. There are other good reasons for expecting the photon to be masses, e.g. it is the gauge boson of an unbroken local symmetry.

 

i thought electron volts were energy units, not mass.

i thought electron volts were energy units, not mass.

 

Rest energy = mc^2, so it is entirely consistent to give 'mass' units of energy infact the natural units of relativity c is taken as 1 and unitless (as time is measured in the units of distance).

i thought electron volts were energy units, not mass.

 

10-20 eV/c2 if you insist.

  • 2 weeks later...

Back to the original question, I once heard that a worm hole can be created by the fusing of a black hole and a white hole. White holes supposedly are the opposite of black holes, spitting out matter. However, unless all white holes are joined to black holes, (thus forming a worm hole) the mere idea of white holes goes against the Law of Conservation of Matter.

Oh, and by the way, 123rock, can you support your arguments with facts?Because your babbling and making your-self look bad.

Back to the original question, I once heard that a worm hole can be created by the fusing of a black hole and a white hole. White holes supposedly are the opposite of black holes, spitting out matter. However, unless all white holes are joined to black holes, (thus forming a worm hole) the mere idea of white holes goes against the Law of Conservation of Matter.

 

If it's transportation via 2 universes i see no law breaking! We now of blackholes too be a mather of fact. White holes on the other han is still just constructs of our thoughts, i haven't read about any discovery yet. But please direct me to the article where they have! :)

Let's go back in circles and repeat things that have already been done in this thread, only this time let's be more vague!

 

Hurrah, hooray.

Archived

This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.

Important Information

We have placed cookies on your device to help make this website better. You can adjust your cookie settings, otherwise we'll assume you're okay to continue.

Configure browser push notifications

Chrome (Android)
  1. Tap the lock icon next to the address bar.
  2. Tap Permissions → Notifications.
  3. Adjust your preference.
Chrome (Desktop)
  1. Click the padlock icon in the address bar.
  2. Select Site settings.
  3. Find Notifications and adjust your preference.