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A white hole in the universe would appear as a bright, glowing object emitting energy and matter outward, opposite to a black hole which pulls everything in. It would stand out against the dark backdrop of space, potentially surrounded by a halo of light and radiation.

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What would happen if a black hole and a white hole collided?

If a black hole and a white hole were to collide, it is theorized that they would cancel each other out, resulting in the release of energy and potentially creating a new type of cosmic event. This collision could have significant implications for our understanding of the universe and the laws of physics.


What would happen if a white hole and black hole collided?

When a white hole and black hole collide, it is theorized that they would cancel each other out, resulting in the release of energy and potentially creating a new type of cosmic event. This collision could have significant implications for our understanding of the universe and the laws of physics.


What would happen if a white hole and a black hole collided?

When a white hole and a black hole collide, it is theorized that they would cancel each other out, resulting in the release of a burst of energy. This event is purely hypothetical as white holes have not been observed in nature.


What would happen if a black hole collided with a white hole?

When a black hole collides with a white hole, it is theorized that they would cancel each other out, resulting in the release of energy and potentially creating a new type of cosmic event.


What happens if a white hole and a black hole collide?

When a white hole and a black hole collide, it is theorized that they would cancel each other out, resulting in the release of energy and potentially creating a new type of cosmic event. This collision is purely hypothetical as white holes have not been observed in nature.

Related Questions

Who is the most powerful thing in the universe?

a black and white hole


If travel to another universe was possible how would you know you were actually in another universe?

1.how would you get there? if you went through a black hole, you would come out of a white hole incredibly fast. Our universe has no white holes, and another has no black holes. There is a way right there. 2.You could travel to 'earth" and take a look around. Is there life, How are things going, who is the president, are there humans, does anyone know you?


Was it a singularity or a white hole that created the universe?

We do not know how the universe began, or what the exact sequence of events were.


What would happen if a black hole and a white hole collided?

If a black hole and a white hole were to collide, it is theorized that they would cancel each other out, resulting in the release of energy and potentially creating a new type of cosmic event. This collision could have significant implications for our understanding of the universe and the laws of physics.


What would happen if a white hole and black hole collided?

When a white hole and black hole collide, it is theorized that they would cancel each other out, resulting in the release of energy and potentially creating a new type of cosmic event. This collision could have significant implications for our understanding of the universe and the laws of physics.


Can your universe just be at the end of a black hole and can the big bang just be the birth of that black hole?

Actually one interpretation of the big bang is as a white hole, the inverse of a black hole.


What are different ways of when the universe was created?

My theory is that the universe was created by the opposite of a black hole. A white hole if you will. That would mean that the universe, instead of being pulled in like a black hole, it would be pushed out. That explains the universe moving away from us. Scientists, you may be wondering how it would hold itself together? Well it wont. And it would rip a big circle in the center of the universe, therefore making the universe bagle shaped as steven hawking thinks. So it is foolproof. At the moment.


How strong is a white hole?

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.


How is a white hole even plausible wouldn't all that gravity just suck things in like a black hole instead of spitting things out. And what exactly would connect the back hole to the white hole?

May I say first, that no one has ever found a white hole. This is because of M-theory, which has an aspect dealing with parallel universes. Our universe was formed when two other universes collided, and produced a singularity, which rapidly expanded. Each of these universes are different, for example, in one such universe Napoleon won the battle of Waterloo. In another Elvis lives. In a few, there are no black holes, but white holes. Falling into a black hole will transport you into another universe through a wormhole. Another Answer: Theoretically white holes are the "other end" of black holes where it is like a tunnel. Black holes are where you go in where white holes are at the other end of the tunnel. If they actually exist, white holes would be powered by "Anti-Gravity" which pushes things apart. The black hole would simply crush things into a marble. An AsideQuestion: One. If your theory that our universe came from another universe colliding with another universe where did those universes come from? Second I forgot the theory, but if it is true there would not be an infinite universes but only a countless amount because there are just so many possible choices and events that it is countless not infinite. And unless there is a universe made out of almost nothing but antimatter I would have to think that a white hole still could not form. And also, you would not be transported to another universe but instead trapped in between this universe and the other universe trapped in some timeless reality.Because a white hole is pouring out energy and mass at a high rate of speed the mass disperses faster than it can attract other objects. Think of a hose - it puts out a large amount of mass (bunches of water) and yet other things around are not drawn to it - the water passes through so fast and so furious, and then disperses, that the force of it is far stronger than the force of gravity from other objects to the water. Now the energy/matter that flows through may collect in a disk depending on the objects nearby and that might collect critical mass and "cap" the white hole. Capping being the process where a disk (or even rings?) becomes dense enough to choke off the white hole, like a kink in the hose. A strong enough kink and no water flows. Of course all of this is theoretical but if we're gonna walk on the wild side, might as well walk totally on the wild side. As to connecting the black hole to the white hole - think of your sink drain: the part in the upper portion of the sink (that water is held in) is the black hole and at the end of the pipe that connects the sink to the wall is the white hole: matter goes into the black hole and the same matter (as matter and energy, the laws of thermodynamics say any process will reduce order and create some amount of heat energy) comes out of a white hole. So - the black hole and white hole don't actually need a 'tunnel' or 'tube' they can be like the 2 faces of a coin - part of a flat planar construction.== == Other Question Aside: What exactly would the white hole be made out of because anti matter and matter would blow each other up and all the other forms do not have the correct make up to actually create a black hole? And on top of that, as soon as the wormhole was created it would instantly be destroyed. And for any response for this please do not use the infinite universe theory because 1 a black hole does not have the juice to rip a hole in the universe. And 2 because there are not an infinite amount of universes because there are just so many possibilities that could happen. == == Since a white hole is the 'outlet spout' of the black hole, it's most likely pure energy would be coming through - the black hole having perfectly reduced matter to energy. Quantum fluctuations would certain cause some of this energy to coalesce into matter but the largest part would still be too 'hot' to calm down and settle into mass. It would radiate out as ultra-high energy in electromagnetic waves. As to matter/antimatter - the only difference in the two is charge; since the energy coming through is likely to have no coherence {no directionality} it would depend on the environment near the white hole as to what was created, matter or antimatter. In some cases there would be pair annihilation, but since it all will have such high energy and spouting in all directions radially from the white hole, there wouldn't be near the interaction if it was much cooler; some re-collision would occur but not much in relation to what is pouring out.The physics says a white hole is possible because the inverse of a black hole is just as possible as a black hole: if energy in a black hole is actually conserved, then it has to go somewhere - the white hole is just the answer to the singularity. Energy cannot just disappear; a white hole is the place it appears. A 'rip' in the universe in these examples is nonsensical: it assumes a lack of conservation of energy - that enough energy can be turned into a doorway to another universe. If it only requires large amounts of energy to tear 'holes' in the universe, then supernovas, quasars and pulsars should open at least partial 'holes.'Then the question of where did the energy of the doorway go when the black hole goes into radiation death? Why wasn't there a very large hole in the universe right after the big bang happened? Since we are now expanding, then the energy and matter were so much more compressed then - the same 'requirement' for a doorway: why didn't all the mass in our universe eject from our universe through the hole into the other? If it was cooler on the other side and our side was hot enough to open a doorway, the super hot energy/matter should have flowed like a blast of hot air into the other universe. There should be double and triple echoes of the electromagnetic field of the universe - the initial concussion then the collision and cooling of our universe with the other universe then finally the hole slamming shut.A black hole is not a material, not made of blackholium; it is an event. It's a process, like plants planted, growing,then dying; the exact material involved doesn't matter, it's the conversion that's important. It's the ultimate in matter to energy conversion. Other question: Assuming your theory is true then what process would exactly cause the rip in space-time allowing pure energy to escape? Also the tunnel from the black hole to the white hole would have to leave behind some residual energy because the walls to the tunnel would have to be made out of something otherwise it would not even exist, plus wouldn't there be fewer white holes than black holes because the black holes would focus on the weaker parts of space-time and be attracted to it like a magnet (so to speak). And also assuming your theory and using the same logic then the big-bang would have created another big-bang in our same universe especially considering the fact that black holes do not contain remotely the same amount of matter as the big-bang. A white hole is entirely plausible. A black hole could connect to one such white hole, hence a wormhole. A wormhole is a fold of space which is held open by antimatter. As black holes suck in things, these things would then be transported through the wormhole and then come out of the white hole.One theory we can consider on the basis of the theory above, is that some universes may be connected. Therefore a black hole could suck matter from one universe and transport it to another universe through the connection of the black hole and the white hole that is a wormhole. However, most things would be ripped apart going through a black hole, as they are very powerful. Other Question: if so then the antimatter and the matter would destroy each other destroying the wormhole and a black hole is not power full enough to rip a hole in time and space only to bend it to a certain point. A white hole is a theoretical construct. It arises from "the mathematics" of a black hole and a point of infinite (or really high) gravity. Because of the nature of the relationship between gravity and time, the concept of the white hole centers on recursive time where time is said to move backward. The key is that the mathematics that express conditions within the black hole include a time component (per Albert Einstein). It turns out that the time component can solve the equation where that time is "moving forward" as we normally understand it. But with time "moving backward" in the equation, it will still solve. This is the key to what a white hole is. The black hole is a really, really deep gravity well because of the huge mass of material that is super-compressed down in the bottom. The black hole is a "thing" in that light. The white hole is not a "thing" like a black hole. It is a mathematical possibility that speaks to how things might work inside a black hole. The extension of the idea of a white hole is that it is the opposite of a black hole and should spit out matter. What matter? Can it take matter from a black hole? And where does that matter go? I certainly cannot escape the black hole's gravity. The nature of the white hole is a running debate that sprouts from the mathematical idea that time could move backward in a black hole. Does it? The black hole is a "thing" in space, and it can only be viewed indirectly because not even light can escape the massive gravity well in which it resides (or which it has created, the more correct view). As a result of the "intensity" of the gravity, spacetime is "compressed" and time slows down. The black hole is sometimes described as being a ball of highly compressed matter with a huge mass, or a point called a singularity. The point has no dimensions. It gets confusing. The idea of the white hole is a concept that will continue to be kicked around until more data are forthcoming. Certainly even if there was a black hole next door (and aren't we lucky that there isn't!), we still have no means to directly observe the phenomenon because the gravity well of the black hole is "bottomless" for investigations we might conduct with current technology. There are as many questions as answers here. Apologies. Blame your local astrophysicist and fund his (or her) projects to sort things out. Or live in ignorance, or, like the scientist and the curious person, puzzlement. We've come a long way in our understanding of the universe in which we live. And to some, probably many, it only illustrates how far we have to go. The white hole isn't like the black hole. The black hole is a "thing" and the white hole isn't anything material. It is a puzzle springing from the "collision" of expressions of spacetime and of intense gravity. Links are provided below to relevant posts.


What would happen if a white hole and a black hole collided?

When a white hole and a black hole collide, it is theorized that they would cancel each other out, resulting in the release of a burst of energy. This event is purely hypothetical as white holes have not been observed in nature.


What would happen if a black hole collided with a white hole?

When a black hole collides with a white hole, it is theorized that they would cancel each other out, resulting in the release of energy and potentially creating a new type of cosmic event.


Can a black hole suck in the universe?

Unlikely. The universe is a very big place, even next to the largest black holes we know. For a black hole to suck in the entire Universe, it would need to be nearly as massive as the universe itself. There is no way that such a black hole could form.