It depends if light can travel in it or not. If not, then it will be dark and nothing can go in.
If so, then it will look like space, or its surroundings, however bright or dark they are.
A wormhole, if you were to dive into it, can take you anywhere in space or time. So say the science-fiction delighters, who ignore the fact that you can't survive a leap into a wormhole. Wormholes are hypothetical, mathematically possible but unobserved and therefore hypothetical. If a wormhole were to take you back in time, it could only take you as far back as the age of the wormhole. A wormhole has two ends, an in and an out. Imagine the out end oscillating at the speed of light from the moment the wormhole forms. Time stops for that end of the wormhole relative to the in end which oscillates at a leisurely pace in this illustration. Imagine you leave the wormhole from its birth for a year and then leap into the in end. You would emerge from the out end a year into the past. Imagine leaving the wormhole for a century. You could jump in and emerge from the out end a century into the past. But you can't travel back to a time older than the wormhole.
no one ever seen a wormhole before. There is no evidence that a wormhole exist, but in the law of physics, a wormhole can possibly be exist.
Yes, there is a difference between a black hole and a dark hole. The black hole is that "monster of the universe" that is the remnants of a collapsed massive star. It is a place of extreme gravity, and gravity is so great that nothing, not even light, can escape. And because not even light can escape, it is "black" in there. It's a black hole. A dark hole is a term usually applied to something that is not illuminated well enough to see into, like a deep crater on the moon or another planet. This deep "hole" in the surface might be lit from the side, leaving the "inside" of it in darkness. The hole is "dark" inside, and we derive the name from that fact. No astronomer will apply the term "dark hole" to a black hole because of the differences.
No - In fact, the hypothetical concept of a wormhole is the pairing of black hole with a white hole to create a "shortcut" (tube or tunnel) through SpaceTime. Also known as an Einstein-Rosen Bridge, a wormhole is a hypothetical topological feature of SpaceTime, which, if it were even possible, would be too unstable to be maintained. Therefore a wormhole would not be "suck up" by a black hole, because the wormhole is an extension of a black hole. Rather wormholes would independently destabilize and evaporate, allowing the black hole to continue on into existence.
It is the light reaction. Then they moves to dark reaction
gas or potential wormhole is my guess.
I am pretty sure a wormhole is just bending the fabric of space and making a wrinkle and going through the wrinkle to the other side, if light were to follow you into the wormhole, it'd go faster than you, if it were not and depending on the span of the wormhole, you could theoretically beat the light by taking it as a shortcut
Through the Wormhole - 2010 Can We Travel Faster Than Light 2-8 was released on: USA: 27 July 2011
faster then the speed of light is possible in a wormhole
In the law of physics, wormhole can possibly exists, but no one ever found a wormhole or seen. there is no evidence that wormhole can exist.
In the law of physics, wormhole can possibly exists, but no one ever found a wormhole or seen. there is no evidence that wormhole can exist.
The concept of wormhole mass refers to the amount of mass needed to create and sustain a wormhole, a hypothetical tunnel-like structure in spacetime. In theoretical physics, understanding wormhole mass is important because it can help scientists explore the possibility of faster-than-light travel and study the fundamental principles of gravity and spacetime.
A wormhole, if you were to dive into it, can take you anywhere in space or time. So say the science-fiction delighters, who ignore the fact that you can't survive a leap into a wormhole. Wormholes are hypothetical, mathematically possible but unobserved and therefore hypothetical. If a wormhole were to take you back in time, it could only take you as far back as the age of the wormhole. A wormhole has two ends, an in and an out. Imagine the out end oscillating at the speed of light from the moment the wormhole forms. Time stops for that end of the wormhole relative to the in end which oscillates at a leisurely pace in this illustration. Imagine you leave the wormhole from its birth for a year and then leap into the in end. You would emerge from the out end a year into the past. Imagine leaving the wormhole for a century. You could jump in and emerge from the out end a century into the past. But you can't travel back to a time older than the wormhole.
Wormhole Chasers was created in 2007.
A wormhole is a theoretical tunnel-like structure that connects two separate points in spacetime. It is often depicted as a twisting, tube-like shape. A black hole, on the other hand, is a region of spacetime where gravity is so strong that nothing, not even light, can escape from it. Visually, a black hole appears as a dark, spherical object surrounded by a glowing accretion disk of matter being pulled into it. In contrast, a wormhole does not have a specific visual representation as it is a hypothetical concept.
In the law of physics, wormhole can possibly exists, but no one ever found a wormhole or seen. there is no evidence that wormhole can exist. Though if wormhole exist, it is like having a shortcut; you can go to other universes and also you can use it as a time machine.
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