How realistic is the concept of wormholes for space travel?

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Wormholes are theorized as passages through spacetime that could allow for faster-than-light travel, typically described as a ring within an event horizon. The discussion highlights that spinning black holes may create a toroidal singularity, potentially facilitating such travel if they possess sufficient mass and spin. However, significant challenges exist, including the need for a black hole to spin rapidly and the manipulation of its properties. The conversation suggests consulting astrophysics literature, such as Kip Thorne's "Black Holes and Time Warps," for deeper insights. Overall, while the concept of wormholes is intriguing, practical implementation remains highly speculative.
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So a wormhole is a ring within the event horizon. The idea is you go in at the right angle and you won't hit anything in the middle so you go into the hole. So where does it go? It comes out another one. That's the idea.

There seems to be many flaws in how this could possibly work so first before I try to prove wormholes couldn't exist I'd just like to confirm that everyone agrees that this is how wormholes are thought to be.
 
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Hello Thedonk,
This question is better suited for an Astrophysics expert. I am moving the thread for this reason.

Thanks,
Ivan
 
From what I hear, wormholes are spherical. What you must be describing is a spinning black hole. If a black hole is spinning fast enough, the singularity of said gravitational mass will envelope the event horizon, which is the barrier where gravity is strong enough to prevent light from escaping. The faster the black hole spins, the more contained it's event horizon is.

A Schwartz'- (Bah, I cannot spell the rest of his name.) black hole has no spin, so it's event horizon reaches much farther. The end result of the spinning is a ring-shaped singularity. Apparently the effects of the toroid-singularity are tears in space, which could be used for long distance travel. Unfortunately, the black hole would have to spin swiftly, and have immense mass. The larger a black hole is, the weaker it's tidal forces. Thus, a large black hole is needed. Then, you have to spin the damn thing! Perhaps you could give it an electric potential, and then use electromagnets to manipulate the 'hole to your will.

You know, I am typing this a day after I checked out a copy of Kip Thorne's "Black Holes and Time Warps: Einsteins Outrageous Legacy". How coincidental can this be? Hope this helped. I'd suggest finding a replica of the of the book.
 
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