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Rex
If as the 'new model' suggests and there was no Big Bang, wouldn't Black Holes have eaten everything by now?
They would have to release everything they eat somehow, maybe in the form of gravitons or this quantum soup they refer to.
3 AnswersAstronomy & Space6 years agoWhy aren't there more black holes?
In the early universe, when the density was much thicker and stars where forming and exploding with enough regularity to form all the heavy metals we see today, why didn't it fill the universe with a lot more black holes than we have found so far?
6 AnswersAstronomy & Space8 years agoWhat's your thoughts on Dark Flow?
Just spent the day googling and reading everything I could find on Dark Flow. Interesting stuff. Would like to know what your thoughts on it are.
2 AnswersAstronomy & Space8 years agoRed shift differences?
Is there anybody and if so who, making a study of the red shift of galaxies and there differences? In other words is anybody looking to see if our universe is accelerating faster in different directions?
3 AnswersAstronomy & Space8 years agoAre there any plans to build a telescope the size of our solar system?
Like putting half a dozen linked dishes in a roughly plutonian orbit?
8 AnswersAstronomy & Space8 years agoDuring Global Warming, as ice melts, hugh amounts of weight are being redistributed onto the Earth's surf?
Surface? Can this be calculated? (estimated?) What effect will this have on Plate Tectonics. Are we heading for a period of increased earthquake and volcano activity?
I ask this here because I'm looking for answers along the redistribution of weight study. Is anybody studying this? If so, what's the latest.
4 AnswersAstronomy & Space8 years agoWhat evidence do we have that our universe created space/time at the Big Bang?
And not just expanding into an already existing multi-verse?
8 AnswersAstronomy & Space8 years agoIf Dark Matter has a mass of 40GeV, could it have caused the Big Bang?
This assumes that Dark Matter existed before the Big Bang and filled the Multi-verse. However, If it has mass and is pulled by gravity then its collapse to the singularity would have left a 'dark matter vacuum' that is now causing the universes acceleration.
Also, if other singularities exist, wouldn't the universes acceleration be greater toward those directions and not constant?
5 AnswersAstronomy & Space8 years ago