Kracus wrote:I didn't say it didn't have to be large! You're basicly saying the same thing I am though. Except that you're saying it got crushed on it's own weight so that basicly no object that size can ever exist right? (whatever this size is supposed to be)Extremely massive stars will, after using up hydrogen in their core, swell to a red supergiant, fusing heavier elements until iron (most stable atomic nuclei - fusion requires instead of releases energy). These iron cores wil eventually supernova. If the remaining body is under 3 solar masses, it will form a neutron star (neutrons formed from the bombardment of protons by electrons). if it is over 3 solar masses, the core will collapse in on itself to form a singularity (black hole).
Well what if that collapse IS from gravity being so strong it collapses on itself? What happens to the gravity field outside? Why does it suddenly become a black hole?
The only thing that generates gravity is the bend in space. That bend causes a sort of tension in space which is directionaly focused in whatever shape it conforms to. So if that's the only thing causing gravity then the only thing that could cause such massive ammounts of gravity would be an ENOURMOUS object large enough to warp space, which now that I think about it a black hole may very well be OR a concentrated verision of that warp aroudn a planet.
I just explained black hole formation to you in 10th grade science terms, but you still aren't getting it. Again, you are sooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo wrong and misinformed about the basic tenets of everything from gravity to dirt that this is a pointless discussion.
There is nothing to discuss anymore.