From black hole electrons to wormhole electron-positron pairs



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Topic: Science > Physics
User: "Ceriel Nosforit"
Date: 17 May 2007 04:12:31 AM
Object: From black hole electrons to wormhole electron-positron pairs
Black hole electrons are nice in the respect that they replace
something unfamiliar with something slightly less familiar, but to me
the whole thing strikes me about as effective as a sledgehammer-fly
supercollider. I think replacing the micro black hole with a micro
wormhole is better. One end of the tunnel is the electron, the other
the positron. The difference between them is that when we stick a rod
through through the hole and spin it around its own axis, one end of
the rod appears to be rotating for example clockwise and the other
counter-clockwise. (Bend space until the example makes sense.)
There's still a whole bunch of non-vital stuff in this incarnation of
the subject:
http://i8.tinypic.com/6ew2vsj.gif
We can reduce it to this:
http://i3.tinypic.com/54kdvyu.gif
Yup; one donut; two holes. - Perpendicular to each other.
I have little clue on how the math would work out, but I hear string
theorists aren't too picky about that sorta thing. *wink-wink nudge-
nudge* At any rate it seems a bit more elegant than the black hole-
thing, and you don't have to worry about them banding together and
swallowing the galaxy.
Maybe a string is a micro-wormhole in itself...?
Thank you for listening to the mad ramblings of a layman. Please don't
make me cry when you tell me how wrong I am.
Sincerely,
CN
.

 

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