Aayush Thakur
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- TL;DR
- In science fiction, we often see wormholes shaped like an hourglass. But what I have learned so far about exotic matter, negative mass density, wormholes and their stability conditions. I came to a conclusion that a wormhole should not look like an hourglass.
A region of negative energy density hints a little towards negative mass. So the throat of wormholes have very powerful attractive gravitational forces. So in order to stabilize a wormhole we think of using a region of negative energy to create a strong repulsive force that can keep the throat open. If we look at a wormhole from outside then it should look like a giant sphere, no hourglass shape. But if we visualise its geometry, like how it would curve the fabric and connect to different points, then its look something like a "fat or bloated cylinder". Something like ( ) not ) ( .
The hourglass shape leans more towards the throat being pinched due to attractive forces but since we have used negative energy region, there are repulsive forces that cause the throat to widen. This is just what I thought of.
Please correct me wherever I am wrong.
The hourglass shape leans more towards the throat being pinched due to attractive forces but since we have used negative energy region, there are repulsive forces that cause the throat to widen. This is just what I thought of.
Please correct me wherever I am wrong.