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What Would Happen If You Traveled Through A Black Hole

How could you possibly travel through the black hole itself

By tahamina tabassumPublished 13 days ago 4 min read
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What Would Happen If You Traveled Through A Black Hole
Photo by MW on Unsplash

As the distance between you and the White Hole increased, you would also see all the light from our current universe that came along for the ride. But, Black holes are enigmatic entities that devour everything in their path, tearing apart anything that

surpasses their Event Horizon, but what further consequences may arise if you fell into one of these monsters?

This is what if and this is what would happen if you traveled through a black hole: how could you possible travel through the black hole itself? Where would you end up if you emerged on the other side?

Except from being extremely dense at their center, which is essentially an endlessly small location where all of their stuff is compacted, black holes aren't all that different from any other mass-containing object in the universe. The more matter that's packed into a black hole, the more similar it is to

The stronger the gravitational force of a black hole, the closer it gets to its singularity.

We don't know exactly what happens to something beyond the event horizon because once something is past it there's no way to send a message back, but chances are gravity would rip you apart. Black holes have a lot of gravity because some of them are the remnants of stars with more mass than our sun. Every black hole has an event horizon, which is the point at which there is no way out and you wouldn't be able to escape it unless you traveled at the speed of light.

From Adam to Adam

If you were lucky enough, you wouldn't be stepping into the unknown unless there was a route out.

You would be traveling through the Event Horizon of a Charged Black Hole, which is equipped with a one-way Wormhole connecting the black hole with a white hole. White holes are unique in that, unlike black holes, they only spit stuff back out into space; nothing can enter one. Therefore, you wouldn't just travel through the Event Horizon and emerge on the other side. Instead, you would be experiencing one of the most astounding experiences the universe has to offer.

When you were getting ready for the once-in-a-lifetime journey, you would see stars coiled around a

the ideal circle of darkness

Unfortunately, there wouldn't be much time to take in the scenery before this gravitational monster began enticing you in its direction. We don't want that to happen to you just yet, so let's say you fall into a wormhole right before the black hole rips. The gravitational pull of a black hole is so strong that it would turn you into spaghetti if you were falling feet first. Your legs would feel the pull of the black hole much more intensely than your head, stretching your body into oblivion.

you apart and keep in mind that you would be passing through a charged black hole rather than just any old one.

In addition to having a wormhole lurking inside it, this black hole would also have two event horizons. However, as you were falling through the gap between the two points of no return, you probably wouldn't realize what had happened; instead, you would be in free fall. If the black hole was as big as the one at the center of the Milky Way, this would take around 20 seconds, and given the excruciating shock you would be going through, those 20 seconds would seem to last forever.

however, the black hole would seem to stop spreading as you got closer to the inner hole, and then unexpectedly it

would appear to shrink, almost as if you were starting to fall away from it. For a little period, you could believe that you have cleared it, but this is merely an optical illusion, and you are still in free fall.

Relativistic beaming, which causes this optical illusion, works by compressing what you see in front of you to give the impression that the black hole is getting smaller and the light from the outside world is getting brighter at its boundaries.

however, that wouldn't be the only light you would see at this time until you eventually passed the inner horizon.

overwhelmed by a powerful, bright burst of light—and not just any boring burst of light—that revealed the entirety of the universe's history as seen through the black hole's singularity within the inner Event Horizon. If you thought being stretched was bad enough, think again—you would be trapped in an incredibly unstable phenomenon—the black hole's enormous gravitational forces would threaten to destroy the wormhole at any moment.

Another energizing flash of light would appear when you crossed the second Event Horizon, but this time instead of

Eventually, you would be spewed out by a white hole into a completely different Universe from your own. keep in mind that this wouldn't be the future of the universe as you know it and you wouldn't just be passing through the singularity of the black hole and out the other side

Congratulations! You would be the first person to investigate a completely new universe.

But hey, you just traveled through a black hole, so how much better could it get? Unfortunately, the news might not be all that great. You might be stuck having to follow laws of physics that are entirely different from the ones we know, such as gravity being weaker, stronger, or nonexistent. There could be so many amazing things for you to discover. You might find yourself in a parallel universe.

Moreover, dark matter or antimatter could make up the fundamental elements of matter.

It would be fatal if ordinary matter and antimatter, like What You're Made Of, came into contact with each other. Worst of all, you wouldn't be able to simply turn around and go home because you couldn't jump back into the white hole because it doesn't suck anything into it. I hope it was enjoyable while it lasted. Maybe it would be nicer if you could see into a black hole before

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