Topic: Argument for a black hole beneath our feet | |
---|---|
Laymans argument: cosmological physics
If it could be argued that whether the Earth was solid or hollow, or that it indeed had descended from star status into a cooled and solid planet. It still would posess star like qualities. Unfortunately one of the qualities or possibilities of a star is black holes. Often science looks for the possibility of black holes out in space without ever considering the possibility of it beneath their feet. In fact, the Earth it's self is not considered, because one is literally walking on the cooled surface of a star, at least in my theory. Is it possible then to infer a relation between, black holes, stars, brown dwarfs and cooled planets. I know its a big leap in cosmological faith and logical argument, but why not. If the Earth has a fusion core, somewhat like a brown dwarf star but smaller, doesn't that put it in line with black hole technology? If such a leap in deduction can be made, is it essentially possible for a miniture black hole to exist at the centre of our own earth star? |
|
|
|
if the earth were a burnt out star it would never possess the elements necessary to support life, a black hole forms when a star of significant size goes supernova and collapses in on itself (layman terms)....earth has an iron core hence our magnetic fields...I'm not seeing a relation between the functions of fusion and a black hole....there is no black hole beneath u because u wouldn't be there...for example...an event horizon of a super massive black hole can span millions of solar masses and possess the density of the entire human race on earth per cubic centimeter...hard enough to imagine that but try to imagine the amount of gravitational pull such a thing has....how are u going to stand on that?
|
|
|
|
There is a black hole right here on Earth & at a specific time it will open up & hideous creatures will come through
|
|
|
|
Obviously no one knows for certain, since childhood I always like astronomy, as a teenager I studied physics, although I was crap at it. And now I combine all these with internet studies today.
Anyway, what came to me from what you were saying is, perhaps there is a lower order of holes besides black holes which are the absolute. This would be considered a brown hole, which has far less gravitational power than a black hole, and requires far less a massive a star in order to create it, but is possible from a star the size of a brown dwarf. Therefore a brown dwarf star would be capable of gravitational collapse into a brown hole, there by implying a link between brown dwarf stars, cooled earth-star and low gravity brown holes. Just another cosmological theory. |
|
|