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  1. Is it insanely hot? Cause of so much gravity?

  2. Is it close to absolute zero? Cause the matter is so closely packed, there is hardly any space for particles to move?

  3. Is it room temperature? Cause Cooper didn't die in Interstellar when he went into a Black Hole?

Eubie Drew
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Dumbledore
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  • We don't know anything about what's in a black hole. 2) Don't think that everything in Interstellar is scientifically correct or even plausible.
  • – HDE 226868 Jan 05 '16 at 00:58
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    Interstellar reference was a joke!! – Dumbledore Jan 05 '16 at 01:32
  • Inside ... we don't know. But we might be able to assign a temp to the event horizon using "black hole thermodynamics" http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_hole_thermodynamics – Eubie Drew Jan 05 '16 at 03:23
  • It might depend where inside the black hole. It's possible that after falling inside a supermassive black hole you wouldn't even notice the event horizon and the inside might be similar to empty space. It's also possible that the massive gravity stretches and tears space time so much that there's some exotic things going on. It's also possible that inside the black hole is an infinitely dense singularity. Densely packed particles tend to be hotter not colder, but packed into a singularity, temperature doesn't make sense. I think, "we don't know" is the best answer. Fun question. – userLTK Jan 07 '16 at 05:28
  • @userLTK Thank you for the explanation, sir/madam. – Dumbledore Jan 07 '16 at 13:28