Your theory has a minor problem Pat  the rotational speed of a black hole is
the speed of light..
Allan

On Mon, Apr 19, 2010 at 6:21 PM, Pat <[email protected]> wrote:

>
>
> On 16 Apr, 18:45, Matthijs <[email protected]> wrote:
> > Why would the matter only spew out on the poles and not in all
> > directions, if I may ask?
> >
>
> Due to the spin/rotation of the Black Hole being 90 degrees
> perpendicular to the accretion disc (the influx of matter) and the
> laws governing reflection.  That's the simpler answer.  The more
> complicated one might take 5 or 6 pages, so I'm hoping this will
> suffice.
>
> > On 16 apr, 17:44, Pat <[email protected]> wrote:
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> > > Hello All,
> > >      I was thinking about quasars this week and what they might be and
> > > stumbled across something interesting that I thought I might share
> > > with you.  Firstly, my thought was that a quasar might just be a black
> > > hole with a white hole at the centre.  Probably NOT a new thought, but
> > > it led me to work out what a white hole MIGHT be.  I thought that,
> > > perhaps, a white hole is an area of space that is completely filled.
> > > But how could that happen?  Well, if the pressures inside the black
> > > hole are strong enough to compress the energy inside to the smallest
> > > wavelength possible, that of the Planck length, then THAT would
> > > completely fill that area of space-time with tiny, but incredibly
> > > powerful photons.
> > >      SO, here’s some of the maths:  Start with the speed of light:
> > > 299,792,458 metres per second.  Now, divide that number by the Planck
> > > length of 1.616252^-35.  That comes out to a frequency of 1.8548621^
> > > +49 Hz.  ()  Now, assuming that area is a bog-standard “black body”,
> > > it would produce a temperature of 5.3749609522385^+39 degrees Kelvin.
> > > And THAT, my friends, is, technically, the hottest temperature
> > > allowable in this universe and, thus, the opposite end of the Kelvin
> > > scale.  Well, at least the highest temperature one could expect to
> > > find in THIS universe.
> > >      So, if a white hole, as described above, were to exist inside a
> > > super-massive black hole, when any matter from the black hole’s
> > > accretion disc fell into the black hole, it would approach the white
> > > hole and get thrown out at right angles (i.e., the matter would spew
> > > from the poles, as black holes are spinning) and THAT seems to fit the
> > > observations we see of what quasars do.  Any thoughts, anyone?
> >
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I_D Allan

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