I can't wait! Flip the switch already!
I don't think humans should have the right to do these kinds of things...
Undecided
The effects are still incredibly minimal at relatively small distances. Bear in mind that any black holes created wouldn't actually have a mass greater than Earth, and the difference in force caused by the inverse square law that we experience because of the length of our bodies on Earth itself is very tiny. |
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Ha! Google has a LHC themed logo today. |
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- Are you an idiot?
- No sir, I'm a dreamer.
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He also said they would be tiny. |
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I meant that there gravitational force would be tiny. |
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Last edited by Sandform; 09-10-2008 at 11:20 PM.
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Things are not as they seem
I'm just answering/correcting your points. I assumed you didn't know that much because your string example was so inappropriate, but if you do then hey. |
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Could you have a black hole of several hundred pounds? I always thought they needed enough mass to create a gravitational field strong enough to 'suck in' light. Unless with a several hundred pound black hole, it just had a really small event horizon. |
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"Above All, Love"
~Unknown~
As I said, black holes only have large masses in nature because that is required to make a star shrink to zero size. |
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That's exactly right. The radius of the event horizon is a function of mass. And if you plug in the numbers, you will see that it's very small indeed. Actually, let me do that. |
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Last edited by drewmandan; 09-11-2008 at 12:24 AM.
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