Subrahmanyam Chandrasekhar.
Comment: Well, he did work on white dwarfs and also on black holes.
Subrahmanyam Chandrasekhar. Comment: Well, he did work on white dwarfs and also on black holes.
There is no evidence that such a thing as a "white hole" exists, or that it even can exist. The theory of what properties such a white hole would have is not on a firm foundation, either.
There is no evidence that white holes exist.
Since whit holes only exist mathematically, a black hole could not pull in a white hole.
It live in a hole
There is a theory that tells that when you fall in a black hole, you are not destroyed but you are "teleported" to a white hole. The wormhole is a inter-dimensional tunnel that connects a black hole to a white hole.
Yes, a white hole. It throws stuff out instead of sucking it in.
White Hole - Red Dwarf - was created on 1991-03-07.
The existence, or possibility, of white holes has not been confirmed. Any ideas about white holes are very speculative.
A white hole is a theoretical gap in space-time where matter and energy are ejected by its event horizon.
A white hole is a hypothetical object, that probably doesn't exist at all. If it does, it hasn't been discovered yet.A white hole is a hypothetical object, that probably doesn't exist at all. If it does, it hasn't been discovered yet.A white hole is a hypothetical object, that probably doesn't exist at all. If it does, it hasn't been discovered yet.A white hole is a hypothetical object, that probably doesn't exist at all. If it does, it hasn't been discovered yet.
Pretty much. While white holes are still only a theory, they are things that hypothetically allow mass and energy to escape but not enter. This is the opposite of a black hole which allows mass and energy to enter, but not to escape. Some theorize that the matter and energy escaping from the white hole may have gotten there from falling into a black hole but just missing the singularity and therefore escaping. I'm no expert on white holes, and as I said earlier they are still a theory. But from what I do know I think it is safe to say that yes, white holes are pretty much the opposite of black holes.