All the water in the universe:

All the water in the universe:

Science

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s
Fast and Curious

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04 Nov 21

If in one place together, would it make a black hole?

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04 Nov 21
2 edits

If black holes are just based on mass, weight, gravity etc ...then yes I believe it would create a black hole but I don't know the particulars on what can and cannot start a black hole as far as material elements are concerned.

Maybe a big ball of Ice is stronger than the power of a black hole 🤔

We would also be assuming there is a lot of water out there.

Aren't black holes former stars?
And don't they need fusion to be stars?
So a ball of water would need cold fusion to become a star...to then become a black hole...?

Cold fusion is a myth.

I don't know...outer space stuff makes me feel like we really don't have a reason to even exist so I try to stay away from outer space questions.

They boggle the mind too much.

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06 Nov 21

@contenchess said
If black holes are just based on mass, weight, gravity etc ...then yes I believe it would create a black hole but I don't know the particulars on what can and cannot start a black hole as far as material elements are concerned.

Maybe a big ball of Ice is stronger than the power of a black hole 🤔

We would also be assuming there is a lot of water out there.

Aren' ...[text shortened]... n to even exist so I try to stay away from outer space questions.

They boggle the mind too much.
You would still have to compact it into an incredibly small area in order for it have the same effect as a supernova generated black hole. I thought they were what happens when massively dense object occupies a relatively very small area of space.

s
Fast and Curious

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07 Nov 21

@kevcvs57
Yep, that's how they work. Now they are talking about maybe finding black holes from the very early universe. Primordial black holes still sticking around, interesting if they can find some.

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07 Nov 21

@sonhouse said
If in one place together, would it make a black hole?
I assumed you knew the answer and was just asking us. 🤔

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@kevcvs57 said
You would still have to compact it into an incredibly small area in order for it have the same effect as a supernova generated black hole. I thought they were what happens when massively dense object occupies a relatively very small area of space.
True but as far as I understand ...the size and weight is what causes that massive gravity and then eventually it's too much and then it becomes a black hole?

So if all of the water was in one place I imagine it would have severe gravity....

I don't know. 🤷‍♂️

MB

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09 Nov 21
1 edit

@sonhouse said
If in one place together, would it make a black hole?
https://www.space.com/858-study-stars-size-limit.html

https://www.universetoday.com/13507/what-is-the-biggest-star-in-the-universe/

s
Fast and Curious

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11 Nov 21

@Metal-Brain
It is amazing that stars can get to be as large as our solar system, gravity holding the stuff together even though the 'surface' is a billion miles from the center.