Probably the closest things to perfection are the huge absolutely empty holes that astronomers have recently discovered in space. If there's nothing there, how can anything go wrong?
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
The black holes of nature are the most perfect macroscopic objects there are in the universe: the only elements in their construction are our concepts of space and time.
You can find the entire cosmos lurking in its least remarkable objects.
Perfection doesn't exist.
There are holes in our lives that can never be filled - not really, not ever.
Science sent the Hubble telescope out into space, so it could capture light and the absence thereof, from the very beginning of time. And the telescope really did that. So now we know that there was once absolutely nothing, such a perfect nothing that there wasn't even nothing or once.
I'm interested in finding whether or not there is a really massive, what we like to call 'super massive' black hole at the center of our galaxy. And the reason this is interesting is that it gives us an opportunity to prove whether or not these exotic objects really exist.
My discovery that black holes emit radiation raised serious problems of consistency with the rest of physics. I have now resolved these problems, but the answer turned out to be not what I expected.
It's hard to know which stars in the sky will turn into black holes. And which ones will open up worm holes into entire new universes.
An ordinary black hole is thought to be the end state of a really massive star's life.
Everything is perfect in the universe - even your desire to improve it.