RE: [Quranic Reflection]: the sound of hell.
April 18, 2023 at 4:38 am
(This post was last modified: April 18, 2023 at 4:41 am by Anomalocaris.)
(April 18, 2023 at 2:10 am)WinterHold Wrote:(April 18, 2023 at 1:07 am)BrianSoddingBoru4 Wrote: But a black hole is neither a 'blazing fire', nor is the sound of it 'fuming and growling.'
So, your further attempts at equating black holes with hell continue your unbroken streak of epic failure.
Boru
Black Holes are "scorching hot" on the outside but freezing cold in the inside:
https://www.asc-csa.gc.ca/eng/astronomy/...k-hole.asp
Quote:The more massive a black hole, the colder it is.
Stellar black holes are very cold: they have a temperature of nearly absolute zero – which is zero Kelvin, or −273.15 degrees Celsius.
Supermassive black holes are even colder.
But a black hole's event horizon is incredibly hot. The gas being pulled rapidly into a black hole can reach millions of degrees.
Matching this description of hell from the Quran:
Quote:Sura 11, The Quran:
https://quran.com/11?startingVerse=106
(106) As for those bound for misery, they will be in the Fire, where they will be sighing and gasping,
(107) staying there forever, as long as the heavens and the earth will endure, except what your Lord wills.1 Surely your Lord does what He intends.
The sighing and gasping of hell are the cold & heat.
1. black hole is as cold on the outside as it is on the inside. a naked blackhole is undetectable by heat precisely because it’s natural temperature would be a almost infinitesimal fraction of the temperature of coldest part of intergalactic space millions of light years from the nearest star. black hole is so cold it continuously sucks cold from space. the fact that black hole can be imaged is not because the black hole is hot, but because things are so eager to get into blackhole that they trip over eachother and compress eachother on their way in that they become incandescently hot.
2. black hole do not sigh or gasp, in so far as they may send what might be called sound waves into interstellar mediums, the pitch is so low you have to live tens to hundreds of million years to catch one complete oscillation of that sound wave.