Super Polymath Posted August 21, 2013 Report Posted August 21, 2013 (edited) Question: Lets say I had a perfectly cylindrical (if such a thing is possible) frictionless tube without oxygen or particles within it, just plane ole' empty space (quark-gluon plasma). This tube is open at the bottom somewhere between scattering galaxies, and heads upward without end. Think of this tube as a never-ending straw. Eventually the tube reaches distances exceeding our universe(10^80 atoms)'s edge, and the edge of all quark-gluon plasma, yet because it's open it contains some of our "space" at the bottom of it. This creates displacement: So; then, does it compel empty space to ride up in it like an elevator? Would it just automatically suck up all quark-gluon plasma? Kinda just sipping all empty space up like a straw, causing matter to sink and create enough entropic friction to collapse back to singularity form before vanishing? Refer to the Lambda LCM Model and Displacement for reference. Edited August 22, 2013 by Super Polymath Quote
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