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Jan 11 at 11:09 comment added Charles Rockafellor @itmakesmefeelgr8 , That postulate is unnecessary, unless you're writing a Star Trek script. In real life, one can cross a bridge with skyscrapers on one side of a river without expecting the other side to be skyscrapers rather than countryside, or cross 40,000 light years and be surrounded by stars or intergalactic void. Similarly, if one could cross a black hole to another universe, there is no requirement (outside of comic books) for a "parallel" universe to carry duplicates or near-duplicates of anything (beyond combinatorial statistics).
Jan 25, 2015 at 16:10 comment added random_pixel510 and wat bout my secont ques ther needs to be an existence og a parellel solar sys. , earth etc know
Jan 7, 2015 at 0:45 comment added user66432 @itmakesmefeelgr8 I did not assume that our universe is 2D. I just made an analogy because you need an extra dimension to make a bridge. Thus if our universe is 3D we would need two universes parallel to each other in a fourth dimension, but most people cannot visualize this. That is why an analogy that reduces the dimension of the universe is useful (for some people)
Jan 6, 2015 at 16:43 comment added random_pixel510 but my point is your assumptionor imagination that universe is 2 dimensional sheet is wrong it is a 3 d object and if the universe is parellel so ought to be the other celestial objects in it right
Jan 5, 2015 at 19:12 comment added Jim It's not a traversable wormhole, but it's a wormhole nonetheless that connects two universes and starts and ends on a black hole
Jan 5, 2015 at 19:05 comment added user66432 @Jim my understanding is that Einstein-Rosen bridges,or Schwarzschild wormholes, are vacuum solutions. Are you sure the result still holds if you have matter falling in one end? where would the incoming matter go?
Jan 5, 2015 at 18:25 comment added Jim The other end of a wormhole need not be a white hole. If the wormhole is an Einstein-Rosen bridge, for example, the other end is also a black hole; the same black hole
Jan 5, 2015 at 18:15 history answered user66432 CC BY-SA 3.0