Thomas Mulligan

What would be the coolest theoretical space object to find?

2 weeks ago | [YT] | 4,332



@U.P.O.Overseer

It depends on the definition of "cool" used here. If you use cool as in "Hey, that's extremely good for us and convenient!" then it would be wormholes. If you use it as in "That's extremely interesting and may revolutionise science as a whole" then it's baby universes. All of these options are extremely interesting, though

2 weeks ago (edited) | 1,300

@3c4ts

The Manhole cover

1 week ago | 412

@tracebuffalow9189

White hole only getting 9% is wild like imagine an infinitely small point in space spewing out matter on an immeasurable scale, also not to mention that it could also be a gateway to learning about different or parallel universes

1 week ago | 487

@DragonTheButcher

A white hole would open up many possibilities like black holes being warp jump type of things or even a connection to another universe. I think itโ€™d be one of the more interesting things to find mainly because I would actually like proof of a multiverse of there is one

1 week ago | 65

@Mc.Knight

Detecting any of these irl would throw our scientific community in a frenzy for decades.

1 week ago | 2

@cougar02000

What would be cool, was finding an abandoned alien spaceship.

2 weeks ago | 1,600

@vanillity4719

The Force

2 weeks ago | 196

@SpicyRamens

Mini universes would change eeeverything

2 weeks ago | 200

@Vini.JR_edits179

Teleporting through wormholes would be so good

2 weeks ago | 98

@DrakeDenney-nd3go

Wormholes seem cool on the surface until you realize that they're basically just portals with extra steps

1 week ago | 2

@kirtimaniyar4646

Bro, if there are wormholes then there are white holes too and vice versa

2 weeks ago | 36

@courier6_2281

To me I think it would be wormholes because they can literally bypass the speed of light issue which is very interesting for me, because I always used to think there is no bypassing the speed of light and there is no way we will be able to colonise other planets outside of our solar system aside from things like generation ships and such because of the speed of light issue. However, current models for THEORETICAL wormhole travel require a matter with negative energy which is not known to exist but isn't scientifically impossible either.

1 week ago | 2

@ManuuGHG

I find it interesting how humans have found countless of black holes, which are the darkest objects in space and thus must be the most invisible, but not a single white hole, which would have to be the brightest object (and therefore the most visible) in the entire universe.

1 week ago | 1

@DarkStarGazer.

Which one am I gonna pick? I can't tell...

1 week ago | 1

@maderian7129

My dad that left the house to go buy some milk

1 week ago | 7

@jepa470

I only know what wormholes are so that

1 week ago | 1

@arnamawasthi5403

Baby universe having one is cool ๐Ÿ˜Ž

1 week ago | 3

@squeggit1511

In theory, the tiny universe could contain all of these

1 week ago | 4

@ZenyattaSerisMain

Wormholes could actually cause us to invent time travel or teleportation, and my second choice would be a white hole because if we find something that's the opposite of the black hole it might change the way we view light

1 week ago | 1

@NedstarYouTube

If a white hole is just a black hole with no event horizon, then looking at an infinitely small point of infinite energy would be really freaking cool

1 week ago | 9