- #1
Robin
- 16
- 1
Why doesn't dark matter fall into black holes ?
Assuming it doesn't of course.
If it did then surely huge amounts would have fallen into black holes.
By now they'd be full of the stuff & more massive than they are.
So I'm assuming for some reason dark matter doesn't fall into black holes.
In which case it doesn't obey the normal laws of gravity like ordinary matter which falls towards centres of mass thus forming clumps that we call planets, stars, black holes etc.
Why is this ?
Assuming it doesn't of course.
If it did then surely huge amounts would have fallen into black holes.
By now they'd be full of the stuff & more massive than they are.
So I'm assuming for some reason dark matter doesn't fall into black holes.
In which case it doesn't obey the normal laws of gravity like ordinary matter which falls towards centres of mass thus forming clumps that we call planets, stars, black holes etc.
Why is this ?
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