The article explores the Rubber Band Instability Hypothesis of White Hole Decay, proposing a new perspective on black holes and white holes.
Black holes are regions in space with intense gravity, where nothing, not even light, can escape.
White holes, on the other hand, hypothetically expel matter and light, acting as the reverse of black holes.
The article uses a hydraulic press analogy to explain the concept of black holes and their extreme density due to gravitational collapse.
It discusses the theoretical existence of white holes as the counterparts of black holes, expelling what black holes consume.
The article delves into the thermodynamics problem, suggesting that white holes may violate known physical laws by reducing entropy.
A rubber band metaphor is introduced to explain the potential instability of white holes, stretching the fabric of spacetime in reverse.
It questions why white holes have not been observed, theorizing that they could snap out of existence quickly due to their unnatural characteristics.
Speculative ideas are presented, such as the existence of white holes in alternate realities or dimensions and the possibility of the Big Bang originating from a white hole explosion.
The article concludes by emphasizing the speculative nature of the hypothesis and its independent development by the author.