From: Vincent Cate (vince@offshore.ai) Subject: Black Hole exploding is a Big Bang? Newsgroups: sci.space.science, sci.astro.research Date: 2004-04-08 18:08:21 PST I am trying to think of any existing experiments that might contradict my theory below. Can anyone think of any? If we could show that photons had gravitational interaction with other photons, that would cause problems with my exploding black hole theory. But the forces would be so weak I am sure we could not detect the effect. It seems like normal matter (non-photons) particles (electrons, positrons, etc) could be made from a standing wave. So the idea that at some density normal standing-wave matter can no longer maintain a standing wave seems plausible. It also seems plausible that only standing-wave matter generates gravity. If there were some violation of conservation of energy/matter then that would be a problem for the theory, but it seems things could be such that they work out. We know that photons are attracted to gravitational bodies, so it seems reasonable to assume that such bodies are attracted to the photons for conservation reasons. While it is reasonable to guess that photons have gravitational interaction with other photons, it does not seem like this can be concluded for sure. If they don't, then it seems a black hole could explode. And if they do explode, it seems like it would be a Big Bang. -- Vince vince@offshore.ai (Vincent Cate) wrote in message news:<9186edb5.0403100213.759f9eb@posting.google.com>... on sci.space.science "Purpose of a Black Hole in an Organized Universe" > Space is infinite in size and goes back infinitely in time. Our > "known universe" is the result of one big-bang but there are > an infinite number of others. Black holes are natures way of > fighting entropy by concentrating matter and energy. A black hole > collects until it reaches a limit where matter and gravity break > down and the energy explodes outward making another "universe". > When we get telescopes good enough, we will see the other > universes nearby ours. Because of this black-hole/big-bang > cycle, entrophy does not equalize everything in space even over > billions of billions of years. > > -- Vince