'White Holes' May Be the Secret Ingredient in Mysterious Dark Matter
'White Holes' May Be the Secret Ingredient in Mysterious Dark Matter
Arden Jansen
A white hole is just as it sounds. It is the direct opposite of a black hole. A black hole is when the gravitational field is so strong, no matter can escape. This makes a white whole a celestial object that emits energy in a time reversed black hole. There are studies that have shown that white holes could constitute a major portion of the mysterious dark matter. While these researchers also believe that they might predate the Big Bang.
Scientist have beliefs that when black holes die, they turn into white holes. Stephen Hawking calculated that all black holes should evaporate mass by emitting radiation. The black holes that vanish are said to be the holes that lose more mass than they gain. The local density of dark matter is one percent of the mass per human parsec. One tiny white hole is equal to the density of half of inch of an human's hair.
We are unable to see the white holes today because they are far smaller than a wave length of light. Not even a telescope or the highest quality technology could physically show you this. If a proton did not simply impact one of these white holes, it could simply bounce away.
There are many ways that this field can branch of in. I think that we will be able to further investigate this topic in the future. One of these ways being to use technology to tell us about it. Although we may not be able to see the hole with our eyes, technology could put it in words for us.
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