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AllatRa by Anastasia Novykh 2 www.allatra.org

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<strong>AllatRa</strong> <strong>by</strong> <strong>Anastasia</strong> <strong>Novykh</strong><br />

<strong>Anastasia</strong>: Please specify whether the term “accretion zone” is used here in the same<br />

meaning as understood <strong>by</strong> contemporary scientists. You mean the accretion disk as a<br />

powerful source of radiation, which revolves around the black hole and forms during the<br />

fall (accretion) of matter of a neighbouring star or of interstellar gas on this object under<br />

the influence of its gravitational field? Is this correct? In other words, does matter,<br />

having collided with a black hole, begin to orbit it, forming this rapidly rotating disk?<br />

Rigden: Yes. A very important development happens during such “matter grinding”.<br />

The force is such here that it simply pushes information building blocks away from one<br />

another so that they no longer remain in their strictly given position, and that is why they<br />

break away from their information order. As soon as the information order, thanks to<br />

which matter was created as such, disappears, information gets reset from the material<br />

structure, and matter disappears. There is a paradox here because the black hole itself<br />

does not influence information building blocks, yet it directly affects matter. The latter is<br />

drawn with a great force, and information building blocks are pushed off from each<br />

other, in consequence of which matter disappears.<br />

<strong>Anastasia</strong>: It means that matter is not destroyed. Matter is created based on information,<br />

and, once information is reset, matter ceases to exist.<br />

Rigden: Correct. If we describe this entire process using the associative example of our<br />

conventional experiment, we will have the following. Imagine that you have built a<br />

castle of invisible foam plastic building blocks, thus making it invisible. Next, you<br />

carefully lift it up and simply throw into the aquarium filled with water. What will<br />

happen? Naturally, having collided with the water, the castle will fall to small pieces. In<br />

our case, it will shift to another state: matter will disappear, and only information will<br />

remain in the form of those primary invisible foam plastic building blocks, which will<br />

remain floating on the water surface. The question is: “Where will the castle itself<br />

(matter) disappear?” It is clear why my question brings a smile to your face. You’ll say:<br />

“To the same place where the doughnut hole disappears once you eat the doughnut”.<br />

And you will be perfectly right.<br />

Now, imagine that the aquarium is a bit bigger, and there are at least ten people like you<br />

standing above it with castles in their hands. Suddenly, all of you, almost<br />

2<br />

<strong>www</strong>.<strong>allatra</strong>.<strong>org</strong>

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