they look like worm holes but even bigger.
they are in space
Yes, it's possible but we really just don't know.
It is really big, and is still growing. Black holes and white holes may join to form tunnels called wormholes - scientists believe this maybe the secret to time travel ..
Wormholes, aka "Einstein-Rosen bridges," were once thought to connect quasars and black holes. It is now known that quasars ARE black holes, and there is no evidence they are connected to anything. Black holes are pinched off spaces of our universe, exotic and strange, but not mystically mysterious. It remains theoretically possible we could manufacture connections to other points in space-time or other dimensions (universes) through "wormholes," or something like them, however what is possible is sometimes also unlikely. Wormholes are not particularly likely.
Wormholes are hypothetical constructs; it is not known whether they actually exist, or whether the laws of physics even allow them to exist (if they do, artificial wormholes might be created).
1) It isn't known whether aliens (in the sense of extraterrestrial life) exist. 2) It isn't known whether wormholes exist. 3) No aliens are required to explain black holes; black holes form quite naturally as a result of the collapse of a massive star.
no. worms live in holes in the ground that they dig in the dirt after it rains. wormholes are something in space.
Wormholes open up holes in space that once you enter one it could take you to another place in the galaxy or time. Hence the name wormholes.
No one knows but people have said that wormholes may exist inside a black hole that can transport you to another place in space and time.
Probably not. The existence of black holes can be considered to be confirmed; the existence of wormholes is highly speculative, that is, they probably don't exist at all. According to String Theory, worm hole does exist. However black holes are not warm holes. Even if you did found a wormhole, it probably going to be only about 1 atom small.
Probably not. Or let's just say that wormholes are very speculative. You'll encounter them more in science fiction stories (where it may suit a particular story plot!) than in serious science.
Maybe, maybe not!
Not exactly, he was not an astronomer. However his theory of general relativity predicted the existence of black holes (which has since been confirmed) and wormholes (still unconfirmed)