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John Titor
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<blockquote data-quote="Kairos" data-source="post: 180130" data-attributes="member: 10263"><p>A black hole, as I understand it, relates to the density of the matter and energy that forms it, not the total mass. Total mass is a really good way to create one, but not the only way.</p><p></p><p>If you compress the particles of a few collided atoms into one little micro-blackhole like he is talking about, it's mass shouldn't be more than mass that went into it. It's just very dense.</p><p></p><p>This has to do with space-time curvature, and I was terrible at that level of physics in college. I am a computer science guy. I can only relate what I remember from many moons ago. You need to learn tensors and then you can define fields that warp or something like that. A black hole relates to curvature, not directly to mass.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Kairos, post: 180130, member: 10263"] A black hole, as I understand it, relates to the density of the matter and energy that forms it, not the total mass. Total mass is a really good way to create one, but not the only way. If you compress the particles of a few collided atoms into one little micro-blackhole like he is talking about, it's mass shouldn't be more than mass that went into it. It's just very dense. This has to do with space-time curvature, and I was terrible at that level of physics in college. I am a computer science guy. I can only relate what I remember from many moons ago. You need to learn tensors and then you can define fields that warp or something like that. A black hole relates to curvature, not directly to mass. [/QUOTE]
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