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And before I go any further with this one, we're getting into Star Trek territory here with this. Wormholes, as opposed to white holes. Wormholes, it's a region of space that's able to connect two areas of space, two regions of space-time together, resulting in some very short distances between two. If you could create a wormhole by bending it from space-time, you could theoretically travel across one end of the universe to the other in a much shorter period of time. You wouldn't be travelling necessarily a linear distance at that point, like you would from point A to point B, driving a straight line. A wormhole would actually curve that area of space where point A and point B are now not separated by a distance of, let's say, 10 miles. But now the space-time is being compressed and curved, and so those two points A and B are now within inches away. So that is basically how a wormhole works, what a wormhole is. A white hole is a little bit different. This is sort of the opposite, or the good twin, you might call it, of a black hole. Instead of sucking matter in from the universe, it actually sticks it out. And some theory that a white hole might connect a black hole to a... a wormhole may connect a black hole to a white hole, and therefore information gets spewed back out into the universe. All right, so let's get into this one.

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