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Anonymous
i found this floating around the net, some people have to much time on their hands
>> Anonymous
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I like this one.
>> Anonymous
>>1078647
whats at the end it seemed like a pop out mute screamer
>> Anonymous
sorry no pop screamer
>> Anonymous
Who cares about any of this. The new issue of Scientific American shows that in 100 trillion years the universe will collapse into itself in a all encompassing black hole. So WHO CARES were all going to become inert gas eventually.
>> Anonymous
>>1078756
congrads, cause in 100 Trillion years, you will have been dead, and still even after the funeral, and in 100 trillion years. no one will care.
>> Anonymous
>>1078756
crystal bal.. oh shi?
>> Anonymous
>>1078637
>>1078637

Moar liek this. Nao.
>> Anonymous
>>1078756
Even black holes have life spans. Eventually, the black holes explode like a supernova, and the whole universe will restart in one giant big bang.

It's better than everything coalessing and just...stopping.
>> Anonymous
Yes Black Holes have life spans, even there is "nothing" that can escape a black hole!
But there is something called the Hawking Radiation, that comes from a black hole.
So even a black hole that isn't "feeding"
and feds never again, would eventually disappear sometimes...
>> Anonymous
i love these gifs that make me feel insignificant on a universal scale. the only way to see other life is to break through space and time. otherwise we are stuck with our lame ass solar system.
>> Anonymous
lol but y do u say dat b cuz we are de only species lol!1

i hate it when people think we're the only intelligent life forms. impossible on a scale that large. it's just a big world out there. we ain't but a flea on the flea x 10^100 of a flea on the left atom on the left ass of the universe.
>> Anonymous
>>1079161
it doesnt actually "come" from the black hole itself, its simply the interaction between particles immediately outside the black hole.

particles and antiparticles appear from the energy around the black hole and the antiparticles get sucked into the black hole. the positive one escapes resulting in a loss of energy. eventually the black hole fizzles away.

>>1078756

where did you read that? as far as i know no supporting evidence has been found to support that. we are still looking for more evidence of dark matter/energy. more likely if we dont find that evidence, the universe will simply keep expanding resulting in eventual heat death. interesting stuff.
>> Anonymous
I believe that the universe's existence begins and ends, then begins again, with the universe (1) being divided by zero (0). And since we cant comprehend what would happen if we divided by zero , let me break it down for u, 1/0=SHOOP DA WHOOP!
>> Anonymous
>>1079064

you mean to say that the universe will reboot?
>> Anonymous
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I love these sort of gifs, after watching them you feel so fucking insignificant. All of that out there doing what it does for billions upon billions of years... and we will never even glimpse a tiny fraction of it. It just makes the brain want to rupture trying to encompass the enormity of the universe and why it exists, most of it so desolate and seemingly pointless.
>> Anonymous
who was the faggot that named our galaxy "milky way"?
>> Anonymous
my bad
>> Anonymous
ppl writing books about such stuff can tell us anything... we cant bring a proof of failness like we can here. so gtfo u nerds and let my gif be pure porn again :D
>> Anonymous
Contemplating the immensity and foreign-ness of the universe always makes me go "wow." Something as immense and alien as that star, burning itself out in the black like a lighthouse for eons, and I'm a relatively tiny lump of matter stuck together for a few moments that can actually look at it and, amazingly, be conscious of it. As majestic and terrifying as that star is when I look on it, is any of that reverence possible without a mind looking at it? It may be pointless to think so, it may be foolish, too, but it makes me feel lucky. Then I think how one day I will die, and how I probably wont be aware of stars or a mind or reverence, and I am sad. Maybe no one will ever look at it again exactly as I did.
>> Anonymous
>>1078756

Present evidence suggests the universe is approaching either a heat death or a Big Rip, not a Big Crunch.

As the heat death scenario presently stands, star formation will end in about 100 trillion years, but the universe won't actually end, and it'll be much, _much_ more than 100 trillion years before a significant amount of matter decays (last I checked, the lower bound for the half-life of a proton was around 10^32 years. That's a lot), and black holes will still be around for mind-bogglingly long after all free matter is gone. And there's presently no telling what happens to spacetime once the black holes evaporate, leaving nothing but photons.

>So WHO CARES were all going to become inert gas eventually.

Not sure how you think inert gas figures into Big Crunch scenarios.

>>1079064

Black holes don't explode.

>>1079161

Nor does anything escape them. Well, not really.
>> Anonymous
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There is so much goddamned old repetitive porn on /gif/ that it's like goddamned banner ads and you just sort of tune it out.

This was a pleasing change of scenery, there should be more. Better seeing it than some old fucking porn that has been recycled 4,532 times.
>> Anonymous
>>1079580Black holes don't explode

You can never say never when dealing with a theoretical hypothesis.

There are some who assert that it is a possibility that extremely large singularities may possess the ability to 'explode', though that is a very simple term.

To say a singularity is incapable of spontaneous expansion carries with it a great deal of importance when it comes to the current standing theory of a 'Big Bang'.
>> Anonymous !mFK66iWE8c
>>1078756
even if this is true, the human race will be long extinct by then
>> Anonymous
>>1079591There are some who assert that it is a possibility that extremely large singularities may possess the ability to 'explode', though that is a very simple term.

>>1079064the black holes explode like a supernova

Also,

>theoretical hypothesis

Furthermore, cocks.
>> Anonymous
The "rebooting" universe theory has been disproven by the existence of dark matter and dark energy. Essentially the universe will continue to expand--defeating gravitational pulls--until everything is frozen and lifeless.
>> Anonymous
>>1079207
i know, what i am saying is that the stars we see a millions and billions of light years away, as in, even if we traveled at the speed of light it would still take us that long to get there. we are stuck within our own solar system as places that we could ever possibly travel to within our lifetimes and even then the odds of life surviving on a gas planet are pretty slim. maybe one day we will have traveling space colonies and people will be able to see things like that. until then the night sky is pretty fascinating. nothing can really go on forever, so sometimes i think that the universe is like a cell and that there are billions of them that make up something much bigger that we cant even begin to comprehend.
>> Anonymous
>>1079628

You do realize dark matter _slows_ or reverses the universe's expansion, yeah? The accelerated rate of expansion is due to dark energy (whatever that may be. Still no confirmation that scalar fields exist), not matter.
>> Anonymous
>>1079628

That would mean the destruction of energy, which isn't possible.

Oh snap, I proved it wrong.
>> Anonymous
>>1079697i am an idort

Fixed. No, it wouldn't involve the destruction of energy, just the isotropic, homogeneous distribution thereof.
>> Anonymous
>>1079690
Dark matter provides the universe with a frame while dark energy forces the universe to expand. Yes, I understand all of that. But numerous researchers have stated that dark energy will eventually overcome all gravitational fields and put everything into an eternal deep freeze.
>> Anonymous
the contents of this thread are exactly what I use as my theory to disprove religion entirely.
>> Anonymous
>>1079754
you use black holes to disprove religion?
or just the age of the earth compared to the rest of the universe and the fact that it would be improbable that we are the only intelligent life in the universe?
>> Anonymous
>>1079064
LOL black holes don't explode faggot they evaporate into hawking radiation get you're shit together