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381

What could possibly go wrong?

Seriously though, basically a "gravity bomb".

Archive: https://archive.today/aEHGn

From the post:

>Researchers have created the first laboratory analog of the 'black hole bomb', a theoretical concept developed by physicists in the 1970s. If there's one thing black holes are known for, it's their insatiable, inescapable gravity. Stuff goes into a black hole. You're not really going to get much out. From beyond the event horizon, this is, as far as we know, true. But from the space around a black hole, you might be able to get something. As Roger Penrose proposed in 1971, the powerful rotational energy of a spinning black hole could be used to amplify the energy of nearby particles.

What could possibly go wrong? Seriously though, basically a "gravity bomb". Archive: https://archive.today/aEHGn From the post: >>Researchers have created the first laboratory analog of the 'black hole bomb', a theoretical concept developed by physicists in the 1970s. If there's one thing black holes are known for, it's their insatiable, inescapable gravity. Stuff goes into a black hole. You're not really going to get much out. From beyond the event horizon, this is, as far as we know, true. But from the space around a black hole, you might be able to get something. As Roger Penrose proposed in 1971, the powerful rotational energy of a spinning black hole could be used to amplify the energy of nearby particles.
[–] 0 pt (edited )

a tiny black hole what could ever go wrong unless you've read a lot of scifi with the earth has a tiny black hole that is growing so fast the earth has like 5 days before the crust implodes. Since it's eating matter from the core as it fell with gravity straight down eating a hole as it decended faster and faster. It's size and gravity increasing the deeper it went. It's safe and effective trust us.