Wormholes and quantum entanglement aren’t just staples of science fiction, in fact they’re considered to be real by real scientists who didn’t get their Ph.D from a box of Cracker Jacks. Yet there’s a je ne sais quois in both phenomena captivating physicists like Leonard Susskind of Stanford University and journalists like Dennis Overbye, inspiring Big Ideas about the origin and nature of this universe. At the core of such a maverick theory is how information can not be destroyed, along with the comings and goings of particles around black holes leading us to Yvette Cendes to declare, “We’ve never seen anything like this before” as a Black Hole Spews Out Material Years After Shredding Star. According to Nadia Whitehead’s press release a black hole is having some ‘indigestion’ from Friday’s dinner on Monday morning, so to speak, rather than after the table’s been cleared in cosmic terms. Which leaves Yvette, Edo Berger, and the scientific community scratching their noggins. (CS)
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