KingMerv00
Penultimate Amazing
And both are incredibly dense.
Both stretch things out beyond all recogition?
Both are surrounded by clouds of hot gas?
Both bend reality?
Both make simple acts go on forever?
Both demand to be fed at all times?
And both are incredibly dense.
I wasn't looking at your avatar, I was looking at your posts. However, if you claim not to believe in Sky Daddy, I will be suprised, but I will take you at your word.
In a sense, the term "Black Hole" is a made up item. Before "black holes" they were called other names. But they were all theoretical objects. Made up due to theory.
As opposed to something that was discovered, then given a name.
The invisible objects that stars rotate around might be what we think of when we say "black holes", but so far it isn't like we have photographic evidence that there are black holes.
They could be neutron stars, or something we don't know about yet. Same for the massive objects causing all those huge jets of matter and energy to go shooting across the Universe, at almost the speed of light.
We call them "black holes", but from a super skeptical point of view, they are what they are. Black Holes is what we made up to call them.
Just like we make up names for all kinds of invisible objects. Sometimes we make up names before we even have evidence that something exist, then later find that there is something, just like was predicted.
But it is true, that Jerome did not say "Black Holes do not exist", which makes the topic title misleading. Of course some people will say this is all semantics, or nitpicking, or something. People say all kinds of things.
So what? What I don't get is why a few people get so emotional and insulting over the matter. It isn't like Jerome ran over your cat.
As the thread just keeps getting longer and longer, it is educational. If you want to really get some skeptics riled up, and have a really long thread, just say something like, "Neutrinos don't exist", or "There are electric currents in outer space".
For some reason that gets way more attention than trying to discuss sound science in a logical and rational way.
A wedge world at the galactic center?
The orbital period p = 2πr/sqrt(GM/r). If the mass forms a circular wedge that tapers to a point at the center, M = πr^3dw (where d is the density, w is the width proportional to r). For any distance from the center, p = 2πr/sqrt(Gπr^3dw/r)*and the r's cancel leaving p = 2π/sqrt(Gπdw) so the wedge will rotate as a solid. Given the parameters of R=4.5AU, M=3.7e6 solM and d=5.5e3 kg/m^3 (the average density of the earth), we can find the wedge factor w = 1.4e-6 (a very shallow slope), the maximum width is 9.4e6 m, the orbital period is about 57 days and the maximum velocity is under 0.03 c. The gravity normal to the surface is just over 2g near the outer edge and tapers to 0 at the center.
My slide rule is a little rusty and it's possible that I slipped a factor here or there so these numbers should be verified.
Well it doesn't really matter, if there where something like that, it wouldn't last long as it collapses into a black hole.My slide rule is a little rusty and it's possible that I slipped a factor here or there so these numbers should be verified.
Well it doesn't really matter, if there where something like that, it wouldn't last long as it collapses into a black hole.
Paul
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For the same reason that the rings of Saturn are not solid, the same is true for a solid disk of that size, it would be extremely unstable.Well, I think the point is, that if it had the correct, improbable, density distribution, that the acceleration due to gravity would be balanced by centripetal acceleration.
Whether it lasts doesn't really depend on the balance of forces but whether it is stable with perturbations. If it were it wouldn't collapse, although my intuition is that it would be unstable.
For the same reason that the rings of Saturn are not solid, the same is true for a solid disk of that size, it would be extremely unstable.
Paul
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Ah, well that makes more sense than 45 AU. I was thinking about trying to find some time to do the integral, if I get a chance, I'll do a double check.
Thanks for all the info. (-:
Well that is pretty much that. Guess it isn't happening.45 AU is correct. My spreadsheet says 4.50e1![]()
Does a world need a sun? This would be the ultimate solution to global warming where the climate is balanced between the power generation needs and the black body radiation. We of course would see very little radiation from the wedge since it would be edge on from our perspective.
Does a world need a sun?
I don't think a wedge world would be a natural formation. There is nothing to stop a central mass from accumulating and the rest of the mass would probably tend to break up into individual planets. But unlike Ring Worlds, Dyson Spheres, and other advanced habitats, material strength is not an issue with a wedge world. Construction is simply a matter of accumulating debris, transporting it to the rim and dumping it there.
All the energy the inhabitants of the wedge world need could be generated internally by controlled fusion (which is much more efficient than energy produced in a star that mostly escapes as radiation and probably easier on the nerves than waiting for the day your sun decides to go nova). Most energy produced will eventually be released as heat and all the heat will eventually radiate into space. The balance between the energy produced and the thermal radiation into space will determine the average temperature of the world. The world would also not be dark as all of the suns in the galactic core would be shining on this world.

This is insane and all to common here.
The reader defines the words that are written and when corrected by the writer the reader tells the writer he is wrong.
This is insane.
ETA: Maybe I should try this. I could go about and redefine anything that I disagree with and ... THIS IS INSANE!!!
Well done, would you like a biscuit?I introduced the word!!!
It certainly is in this thread.This is insane and all to common here.
That depends on whether the writer is deliberately using, or pretending to use, words in an unexpected way or with an entirely new definition.The reader defines the words that are written and when corrected by the writer the reader tells the writer he is wrong.
I think you've established that already.This is insane.
Maybe you should try this: when you use a word with a meaning which should be obvious given the context, but which you have decided has an entirely different definition, you could link to the definition you wish to use. This would remove any misunderstandings and save you from having to not tell use anything more than once.ETA: Maybe I should try this. I could go about and redefine anything that I disagree with and ... THIS IS INSANE!!!