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| Particle Acceleration |
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| Wedge:
--- Quote from: Flea on June 20, 2007, 01:09:16 PM ---Well the problem is a black hole doesn't release radiation. When matter is pulled in it releases forms of radiation such as x-rays. By knowing this we can detect black holes, by the x-rays matter gives off when sucked in. Plus when it comes to black holes, and what they can do its all theories. So even a small black hole probubly amounts to nothing anyways. Watch black holes focus light into a stream of light patricles so small that no one can actualy see the light, and turns all forms of energy into light. O.O' --- End quote --- When matter is sucked into a black hole, it increases its mass. Over time, it gives off a small amount of radiation, a single photon at a time. If it isn't increasing its mass, the radiation eventually leads to the dissipation of the black hole. In stellar size black holes, this takes many times the age of the universe. In the micro-black holes that can theoretically be created in modern day particle accelerators, it is entirely different. The black holes dissipate almost instantly, through their radiation. Before the black hole has enough time to suck anything through its event horizon, it has already evaporated. |
| MrPickle:
What if you put a lump of uclear waste in the thing? |
| Wedge:
I don't know. I guess you can't, because it doesn't exist long enough for you to push anything into it. |
| MrPickle:
Dont they suck stuff in, So couldnt you just put the nuclear waste in the machine? there ready for when its created. |
| Wedge:
No, because it still doesn't exist long enough for it to suck anything in. Even if the black hole and whatever you wanted to put inside of it were right next to each other, we are talking about an elementary particle sized black hole (probably smaller), and it doesn't have enough gravity to pull anything the 3 picometers it needs to suck it in before it dissipates. |
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