๐งต If a white hole existed and fell into the sun would we be able to tell?
Anonymous at Tue, 12 Nov 2024 11:39:02 UTC No. 16471857
I'm not suggesting that the white hole was created in the star. I'm saying that it seems like the perfect place to hide one.
Anything exiting a white hole would be glaringly obvious in any other circumstance. But if it were in the sun, we might assume that the light was just coming from the normal sun sources.
Can you think of any way to test that?
Anonymous at Tue, 12 Nov 2024 12:33:15 UTC No. 16471888
>>16471857
Kinetic impactor made of material that won't be disintegrated by the heat, and would only be morphed by gravitational force.
Have relays display the morphology as it dives into the sun as deep as possible.
If stars work how we think they work, we should be able to map the morphological changes expected during this process.
If it's a white hole, we would expect gravitational variation outside of simulated expectations.
This has precision limitations and limitations depending on the actual influence radius of the white hole itself, which would vary based on the expected dimensions of said white hole, if your postulation has any salt to it.
Beyond that, you've got me, we would have to experiment with changing the makeup of our star, and I'm not willing to do that.
You have a neat thought process though, here's one I'll throw you, a nice little curveball.
What if... Stars... ARE... Von Neumann Probes?
Hmm?
They could be.
Tell me which aspects they don't fulfill. I'll wait.
Anonymous at Tue, 12 Nov 2024 12:44:02 UTC No. 16471893
>>16471888
Mkay, cool, i might be able to built that.