Submitted by Confused-teen2638 t3_zjznwm in askscience
So my idea is that :
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Heat is just atoms vibrating
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Faster vibration means higher temperature
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When the speed at wich the atoms gets near the speed of light they will get heavier
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with enough mass a black hole is created
Is there something I am missing that makes it theoretically impossible?
Cloudberrymaster t1_j01x2rp wrote
You're not that far off.
Imagine you'd want to look at the tiniest possible scale through a microscope. The smaller the scale, the higher wavelength of light you need through your microscope. Imagine it as a light beam shining onto the particle you want to look at, mounted parallell to your microscope lens. You get to a certain point, let's imagine it's a particle, but you want even closer. You want to see what it is that this particle is made up of. When the thing you want to look at gets smaller than 10 to the minus 33 centimetres (the Planck scale), you will need a light with a wavelength so high that the energy it contains (energy = mass) actually creates a black hole. It may be hard to believe, but it is a fact. The light = energy = mass, and it gets that massive.