
My mother told me 'you didn't say anything, you were dead'.

I remember speaking and being angry because nobody would answer me. Although their gravity is stronger, the stretching force is weaker than it would be with a small black hole and. No white lights, no dead relatives, nobody telling me to go back, but I was definitely able to see things that were in no way visible from where my body was. The good news about massive black holes is that you could survive falling into one. "When I coded, I don't remember a sensation of floating, but I was able to recall things in detail that happened while I was 'dead' on the other side of the room. In short, black holes are massive pits of gravity that bend space-time because of their incredibly dense centers, or singularities. "I see a vivid "flashback" of myself in the ambulance being taken to the hospital and I am stood in the ambulance looking down on myself / others in the ambulance." I wordlessly agreed, and I was instantly pushed (into?) my body." He told me that I couldn't go yet, that I have to keep trying, and if I promised not to give up, he'd see me back on Earth. A black hole is a true hole in space: Anything that crosses the edge of the hole - called the horizon of the hole - is swallowed forever. There was a fog all around me, and I saw my best friend (who at the time I'd been fighting with and he'd stopped talking to me) come out of the mist. The next memory I have is waking up in the hospital." Kind of like putting your eyes 6" from a fluorescent lightbulb. It stretched up, down, left and right as far as I could see. It actually proves nothing of the kind."I was standing in front of a giant wall of light. Remember, M87 is supposed to be *proof* of black holes. See if you can hee-haw yourself out of that one. Black holes are heavier, and far smaller than this monster, whatever it is. That thing by your own reasoning cannot be a black hole. If you were falling into a smaller black hole, say one that weighed as much as the Sun, tidal forces would start to make you quite uncomfortable when you were. It's not a great way to die, but there's one consolation: In space, no one can hear you scream. Anything that passes this point will be swallowed by the black hole and forever vanish from our. In a matter of seconds, you're a goner, reduced to a string of disconnected atoms that march into the black hole's singularity like ants disappearing into a colony. The event horizon of a black hole is the point of no return. To send anyone or anything into a black hole is utterly futile. We don't send astronauts on suicide missions. You would be stretched and shredded to the subatomic level and then crushed to quantum paste. To go into a black hole is an absolute death sentence. Your theory is not confirming observations here. The same thing happens to your torso, of course, until each half snaps a second time. One cannot go through a black hole, only into it. If it's the size of a solar system, the number of stars it must have eaten to get to that size exceeds the number of stars in M87 by a factor of a 100, so that cannot be right either, since it's still there.Īlso the black hole would be an incredibly lot heavier than now if it had, so the stuff swirling around it would be whipping around it a lot faster than the measly 1/3 of lightspeed, as you say. Care to explain why black holes are balloons? Can't remember Hawking mentioning it.

It is at *least* a 1000 (actually far more than that, but let's be conservative) times bigger than its weight allows for. Norman, your supermassive black hole in M87 by your own reasoning should be hollow.
