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This is more of an inquiry than a post.
Our current understanding of black holes correct me if I am wrong is summarized into:
- When a massive enough stars core reaches iron after fusion from hydrogen, the star begins to collapse
- When the collapse is so great, it forms a black hole.
- A singularity is formed inside a black hole.
My questions: 1. Is there really a singularity being formed? 2. Does the singularity grow so dense and large that it would become as dense and large as the universe itself? 3. If number 2 is correct, does it mean that some distant future in the universe there will be a black hole so large it will threaten to absorb the universe itself? 4. If the first three questions are not true? What force or dynamic in the universe that seeks to regulate the growth of black holes and maintain the universe's balance and stability.?
Hoping for inputs here so that I can have a benchmark in understanding space and iits dynamics on matter and energy.
Thanks for the inputs everybody.
My surmise based on comments:
- If a singularity will be discarded, can it be interpreted that a black hole is a region in space that is so warped and compact, that light can't escape?
- If that region of space can be warped at such extreme, can it be also interpreted that space is not empty by definition, because you can't warp something that is empty.
- Given by the current observation on black holes that even though they can influence a part of the universe due to its strong gravity, it cant influence the whole universe, does this mean that space and the universe has a certain kind of structure in order for this to be allowed?
Thanks again for the inputs guys.
Given the current inputs here, it seems that one point of understanding arise:
This is the observation that space must not be treated as an empty region.
Space, if not empty, must have a structure.
Space What ever it's structure is, should be in such a way that it can accommodate the current dynamics of black holes as it's maximum distortion benchmark.
Is this observation of.mine correct?
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Current understanding and observation shows that every galaxy has a black hole in it's center correct me if I am wrong.