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Make Your Own: Black Hole Fabricator!!

Step 7Fire the Laser

Fire the Laser
Carefully fire the laser at the reaction bead. When done properly, it should explode, creating a temporary star. The computer should then fire the carbon launcher, taking all the hydrogen away from the star. This will supernova the star, and tear a sizable hole in the matter of space-time, creating your very own black hole.

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18 comments
Sep 28, 2011. 5:34 PMjbouffard says:
IMMa FIRINg MAH LAZOR...
BLAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAARRRRRRRGGGGGGHHHHHHHHH!!!!!
Jan 2, 2011. 2:21 PMJ2aper says:
Why would one ever want to create a black hole ??
Dec 18, 2009. 3:37 PMHalopwner85 says:
a black hole is like one of those things you throw coins in to see which is faster. A object is floating around the atmosphere and when it gets close enough it gets sucked in in a spiral fashion. When it gets to the middle it pops out somewhere or sometime else
Oct 1, 2009. 11:53 AMarchistrage says:
(sigh) Why does everyone always get this wrong. A Black hole doesn't tear a hole in the universe. It creates a point in which all mass that passes over the event horizon, is compacted into infinite density, until the mass is no longer able to sustain a physical state, and collapses back into the ground state, which is zero point energy. However the kinetic energy that sustained the physical state is emitted in the form of Hawking Radiation.
Nov 27, 2009. 10:15 AMarchion says:
Do you even know what "zero point" energy is?
Just to clear up the commonly overused TV term "zero point energy":
"zero point" is the state of matter when the mass reaches the coldest possible temperature 0-Kelvin, (absolute zero). "zero point energy" refers to the fact that ALL atoms still vibrate violently even though they have stopped spinning completely (absolute-zero). matter still exists, it is not changed in to some magical new energy. And it has absolutely nothing to do with black holes.
Jan 2, 2010. 9:36 PMfoxtrot4697 says:
Glitch, poking stick.
Oct 18, 2009. 11:13 PMJackOfSpades says:
 I'd rather use a black hole for time traveling.
Aug 16, 2010. 10:27 PMseamaas says:
you couldn't the black hole would squish you into a human pancake
Sep 25, 2010. 5:59 AMALogan97 says:
and then squish the pancake into a tiny ball the size of an atomic particle or smaller
Oct 8, 2009. 7:53 PMFoaly7 says:
What if one were to find a way to travel away certain exact spatial coordinates at light speed and come back to make a black hole there. Going at light speed you can travel centuries into the future. If someone made a black hole "after" this black hole was made at the exact same location and there was no black hole when they make one, but there is a black hole in the future there, what would happen? Would one possibly just overpower the other, or perhaps rip apart the Universe? My theory is that it would cause a two-way dimensional rift/ "portal" into the future.
Jul 6, 2010. 1:31 PMCodeKid1001 says:
Scientists have proven that the faster you go, the slower clocks tick. eventually, it will start ticking backwards. won't you go centuries into the past?
Mar 31, 2012. 7:11 AMShadowDemon says:
The faster you travel, the slower your particles move, which means you can slow down time. The world, then, views time at a normal rate while you essentially "freeze" and time progresses. You don't actually travel to the future, as much as it may seem so.
Oct 29, 2009. 9:56 AMJavin007 says:
If going light speed causes you to travel centuries into the future, why doesn't it take centuries for me to see the light when I turn on my flash light?  I can only assume the light is traveling at light speed, so thus, should go centuries into the future...
Jan 19, 2011. 11:50 AMBasta says:
Aaaaaahhhh...
The brain pain.
Mar 25, 2010. 8:03 PMFoaly7 says:
You can't go the speed of light in any human space technology. But a few advances, and you can go as close to it as possible. Going this fast will cause time to actually slow down for you, and the rest of the world will continue on, you aging slower than someone else. Even with twins, one would end up older on earth if one of them went this fast in space, then the space traveler would be younger, and the earthbound one would be like 80.
Mar 25, 2010. 7:55 PMamoliski says:
 If you were to put a saddle on the light, and ride it, thanks to relativity, you would be in the future. You would also be dead from, you know, going the speed of light.
Apr 26, 2010. 11:41 AMDoubleblades85 says:
Yeah... the G-force would be so intense you would be smashed flat in a heart beat....
Oct 3, 2009. 8:41 PMsmtgr14 says:
In theory if 2 black hole within close proximity of each other in hyperspace, the gravitational pull may cause a wormhole but the hyperlength (4th spatial dimension) must be less than a few miles.
Oct 19, 2010. 7:17 AMmoeman54545 says:
you do know that that comment has no grounding in any scientific field in the world and is completely wrong. i will explain your stupidity in parts.

1. black holes absorb each other when they are in close proximity. they do NOT create a wormhole. that is not true.

2. hyperspace is not real. period.yes, there is 4 dimensions, but they are as listed: 3 of space (spatial dimensions) and 1 of time. the fourth dimension is not a spatial dimension.


3. hyperspace is not real. period.

4. neither is hyperlength. you just took length and space and added a hyper to them.

and there you are. everything you said was wrong. you, my good sir, are stupid
Mar 31, 2012. 7:07 AMShadowDemon says:
Hilarious! And true. I don't see how sooo many people think the possibility of humans traveling at the speed of light in a physical vehicle makes any sense. If anything, I'd bet more money on turning our particles into light and becoming a beam, which sadly, involves death and puts me nowhere in the future. :)
Jan 19, 2011. 1:26 PMJavin007 says:
Some people just need to the heck...
Feb 26, 2010. 11:01 PMwbmcirvin3 says:

No offense, but I have a Question? Hyperspace exists in.... movies. In real life what is hyperspace?
Oct 1, 2009. 1:40 PMgatorfrlf says:
yes, and the only part u can actually see is the mass spiraling around the "hole" into the "point of no return"( of the unbelievable pressure of gravity
Oct 28, 2009. 11:21 AMlumocus says:
in sssssssspppppppppppppppaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaacccccccccccceeeeeeeee
Sep 27, 2009. 7:09 PMDELETED_Haon says:
(removed by author or community request)
Sep 27, 2009. 8:00 PMKryptonite says:
He said this is theoretical.

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Author:007dna(Robotdna)
Enjoy engineering, astrophysics, violin, and skiing. Also: visit my website!