On Friday, November 14, 2014 9:14:42 AM UTC, pol.science kid wrote:
i dont care much for the dialogue and a few plotholes.. but the visual experience was great...I would see it again for the water filled planet and the rocky icy one .... i wouldnt want to watch it on a laptop... plus despite what people say , Hans Zimmer"s music works for me.. the only scene i found extremely funny was when Dr Mann Attacks Cooper in the middle of nowhere But then finally carelessly opens the door of the shuttle and dies... thats dumb for a man who would brawl on some remote planet just to get back to Earth...On Thu, Nov 13, 2014 at 10:40 PM, archytas <nwterry@gmail.com> wrote:Looked a bit soppy to me Pol. Too much of that humanity rubbish. Only seen the first half of a youtube knock off.
On Wednesday, November 12, 2014 11:51:56 AM UTC, pol.science kid wrote:Interstellar.. awesomeOn Tue, Nov 11, 2014 at 11:27 PM, pindleton <pindleton@gmail.com> wrote:--I have a general "what if" question.
Do you guys think that it could be possible that individual universes lie within black holes?
I ask this because to me, it seems a very logical possibility. Our universe began with a "big bang." Could this big bang have not been the creation of a black hole within another universe?
Within our universe, we predict that black holes should exist. Yet, even if they do, we cannot look into them, and the data from within a black hole is unintelligible. Light cannot escape the gravitational forces of a black hole, and therefore, no data can escape. That means a black hole, is, at least in my mind, a self contained universe.
Some physicists have said that black holes can die, and that energy does escape black holes (in the form of unintelligible radiation) . They also say that there is this force called "dark matter" which should comprise a huge % of our universe, yet is somehow undetectable. On top of that it appears that our universe is expanding faster than the speed of light.
Is it not then possible that the dark matter that we believe to exist is the data surrounding our "black hole" that is being pulled into our universe, and that the reason that we observe faster than light growth of our universe is because our black hole is expanding (a.k.a. feeding).
What I mean to say, is that if we are indeed a black hole within another universe, anything that our black hole feeds upon, when it enters our black hole universe would be unintelligible "dark matter," and since our black hole would theoretically grow bigger, wouldn't this mean that our universe would HAVE to expand?
I'm no physicist, but I just want to know what you guys think....
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