There's literally nothing wrong with information being 'lost' inside a black hole.
Light in a black hole
That video is fucking amazing, the sound blows your mind
I think most physicist would disagree here.
It's one of the big debates about Hawking radiation - whether it results in information loss, thus violating thermal dynamics. SFAIK there's still no adequate solution, and even Hawking threw his hands up at it, though it's generally assumed said radiation still happens, only some of the details such as "cosmic censorship", or lack thereof, have yet to be worked out.
Better hope it's a thing, or those tinfoils might have been onto something when they were screaming about CERN - though I suppose we wouldn't find out until the century was out... And, yeah, all those cosmic rays hitting the atmosphere would have tossed those whole planet into a pit of no return some billions of years ago.
>Implying SERN didn't get away with it and destroyed countless worlds to conduct their experiments
/joke
I do remember reading about how a ring of black holes with overlapping event horizons, or rapidly spinning black holes, might theoretically create a temporary naked singularity, capable of emitting light.
Can't seem to find the original article, but Wikipedia seems to make reference to something related:
en.wikipedia.org
That's the plot of Steins;Gate
We just need to create a form of matter that's a gravitic dipole and pump it into a black hole until the gravity is weakened enough to see inside.
Back to your thread, Mr. Titor.
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