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  2. Wormhole - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wormhole

    A wormhole is a hypothetical structure which connects disparate points in spacetime. It may be visualized as a tunnel with two ends at separate points in spacetime (i.e., different locations, different points in time, or both). Wormholes are based on a special solution of the Einstein field equations. [1]

  3. Are Wormholes Real? We Unraveled the Truth Behind the Sci-Fi ...

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/wormholes-real-unraveled...

    News. Science & Tech

  4. Black holes in fiction - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_holes_in_fiction

    [3] [5] Black holes and associated wormholes thus quickly became commonplace in fiction; according to science fiction scholar Brian Stableford, writing in the 2006 work Science Fact and Science Fiction: An Encyclopedia, "wormholes became the most fashionable mode of interstellar travel in the last decades of the twentieth century".

  5. Outline of black holes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Outline_of_black_holes

    Wormhole – hypothetical topological feature of spacetime that would be, fundamentally, a "shortcut" through spacetime. Quasi-star – hypothetical type of extremely massive star that may have existed very early in the history of the Universe. Black hole neural network

  6. Wormholes in fiction - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wormholes_in_fiction

    Bill & Ted's Excellent Adventure is a 1989 American science fiction–comedy buddy film and the first film in the Bill & Ted franchise in which two metalhead slackers travel through a temporal wormhole in order to assemble a menagerie of historical figures for their high school history presentation.

  7. Quizlet - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quizlet

    Quizlet is a multi-national American company that provides tools for studying and learning. [1] Quizlet was founded in October 2005 by Andrew Sutherland, who at the time was a 15-year old student, [ 2 ] and released to the public in January 2007. [ 3 ]

  8. Event horizon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Event_horizon

    In 1958, David Finkelstein used general relativity to introduce a stricter definition of a local black hole event horizon as a boundary beyond which events of any kind cannot affect an outside observer, leading to information and firewall paradoxes, encouraging the re-examination of the concept of local event horizons and the notion of black ...

  9. Geon (physics) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geon_(physics)

    Since general relativity is a classical field theory, Wheeler's concept of a geon does not treat them as quantum-mechanical entities, and this generally remains true today.