Black holes do a damn good job of swallowing everything. Then, why don't they just keep on expanding and expanding and simply swallow the Universe? A bit of a mind boggling question, isn't it?
Sometime ago the well known Stanford Physicist Leonard Susskind, who is one of the fathers of the "String Theory" provided an explanation.
He suggests that black holes expand by increasing in complexity inwardly – a feature we just don't see connected while watching from afar. In other words, they expand in, not out.
Weirder still, this hypothesis might have a parallel in the expansion of our own Universe, which also seems to be growing in a counterintuitive way.
Black holes aren't like ordinary space, so we can't expect ordinary rules to apply.
Details can be found on his "Three Lectures on Complexity and Black Holes" on the internet and also a printed book with the same name. Not for the average people though.
Sometime ago the well known Stanford Physicist Leonard Susskind, who is one of the fathers of the "String Theory" provided an explanation.
He suggests that black holes expand by increasing in complexity inwardly – a feature we just don't see connected while watching from afar. In other words, they expand in, not out.
Weirder still, this hypothesis might have a parallel in the expansion of our own Universe, which also seems to be growing in a counterintuitive way.
Black holes aren't like ordinary space, so we can't expect ordinary rules to apply.
Details can be found on his "Three Lectures on Complexity and Black Holes" on the internet and also a printed book with the same name. Not for the average people though.
