Слайд 2The Copenhagen Interpretation
Слайд 4Circular Definition
Janna Levin from Barnard College/Columbia University in a short excerpt from
The Illusion of Time:
“We would like to corner time as a thing, but it defies that completely by being momentary. By only having definitions that harken back to the notion of time itself.”
Слайд 8Black Hole Scalar Distribution
Nasa.gov:
“Black holes can be big or small. Scientists think
the smallest black holes are as small as just one atom.”
“The largest black holes have masses that are more than 1 million suns together.”
“Scientists think the smallest black holes formed when the universe began.”
Слайд 19Rotational and Irrotational Vortices
Слайд 21Space to Time Transition Across an Event Horizon
“One thing that happens to
an observer crossing the event horizon is that once it is crossed the singularity lies in the future. To the outside observer, the black hole (and inside it, the singularity) forms a world-tube -
a world tube traces out a three-dimensional volume for every moment in time.
- but to the inside observer, the singularity is now a hypersurface (in your future).”