THe story of black holes
...like a stretched balloon. Think of it like this, a planet (say, for example, earth), weighs many millions (or billions) of tons. Now, if you place this planet onto that stretched balloon, the planet would sink, creating a cone, which aims straight for the planet, right? What this means is that gravity isn’t powered seemingly by magic, it’s actually powered by weight alone. Can you believe how simple this is? If you still don’t get it, I’ll give you an example; here is a little coin chute, you just drop a coin down one side, gravity pulls the coin down, and this is kind of the same way gravity itself works, just on a more massive scale.My Theory’s Now, a black hole pulls in everything around it by using infinite amounts of gravity, but Einstein proved that gravity is caused by the objects own weight, which means that infinite gravity à infinite mass or infinite density. One very important law of physics says that everything runs out of energy sooner or later, no matter what, if this is true (and it most likely is, as spooky as it sounds), than black holes don’t actually pull things out, It’s more likely that things are pushed in. What I mean is, nothing really bends as many laws of physics in one shot as a black hole, so, until new information disproves my theories emerge, than here is what I’ve deduced. I think that the universes own weight is pushing itself out through a black hole, which means that the universe is like a balloon, a really heavy and large balloon. But this explanation only seems to evoke more questions, like “what’s beyond the universe?”, “do wormholes exist?”, or “how does it suck in light?”… I’m not supposed to be talking about it, but to the first question, there is nothing beyond the universe (We think), and I do mean absolutely nothing. For the second question, wormholes do indeed exist, but I doubt we can use them for space/time t...