Author Topic: is it possible for the "laws" of physics to be broken by anything  (Read 1269 times)



If our physics were blockland physics, we'd be exploring the outer edges of the known universe by now.
YLYL quality

the only game i know that destroys physics is a game called blockland

so what if a star for say in relativity to a black hole is like oxygen in the atmosphere of earth to the 1000000000000x the density of the iron core of earth which is probably even more than that number
They need to do way instain mother.

Black Holes are mostly theoretical. You can only prove their existence and their effects on light and nearby objects. Everything on a deeper level is educated guesses dictated by other laws of physics, or basic speculation. The former is more common, though.

Black Holes are mostly theoretical.
Black holes are not "mostly theoretical" in any more significant a way than gravity is.

The laws of physics aren't absolute and perfect, by the way. There are still unexplained phenomena that don't exactly follow the laws of physics, so yes, there are.

well our laws of physics are just how we defined what we understand to be the defining laws of physics. they're not perfect.

as opposed to unordinary matter
Exotic matter is believed to be made from something called tachyons, which can travel faster than light. At this point, our only knowledge of exotic matter is purely theoretical.

Exotic matter is believed to be made from something called tachyons, which can travel faster than light. At this point, our only knowledge of exotic matter is purely theoretical.
If you're referring to dark matter, that's not theorized to be tachyons, it's actually theorized to be things called Weakly Interacting Massive Particles, or WIMPs for short. In other words, particles that only interact through gravity, and not electromagnetic forces (Which makes them incredibly difficult to detect; nobody's quite sure how to detect them yet even)