Warning : This story contain Dark Humor, Fantasy Violence , Suicide Thought, Self-Inflict, Self Conflict, Death and Drama. So please read with caution.
Warning :Some of my SCP may difference from the original.
Warning : This stunt is performed by an immortal being. DO NOT TRY THIS AT HOME...
SCP-1437 is known to kill "living organisms" on traversal.
Considering SCP-682's history, it can be considered 99.5% certain that it does not fall into this category and 100 - 1e^-18 % certain that killing SCP-682 is not possible by throwing it into SCP-1437.
The likeliest outcome therefore is for SCP-682 to emerge from SCP-1437 in a parallel universe which is unprepared for the arrival of SCP-682's threat and containment level in this location at the time of arrival.
The likeliest outcome of this scenario is that containment will be restored under considerable expense of funds and the containment of SCP-1437 to be significantly strengthened. Target universe is then likely to retaliate by one or several of:
1. Throwing SCP-682 back into SCP-1437 2. Throwing their version of SCP-682 into SCP-1437, which might or might not exhibit increased threat levels compared to our version. 3. Throwing any combination of dangerous SCP as well as conventional biological or nuclear weapony indo SCP-1437 to reduce the threat of further attacks from parallel universes.
As these hostile acts are likely to affect other parallel universes, which might react in similar way, this scenario could lead to an unbounded escalation with the result of increased emergence of highly hostile and dangerous SCP from SCP-1437.
It is therefore advised to delay this kind of experiment until SCP-1437 itself has been rendered safe, for example by launching it via ████ ██████ on an escape trajectory from the solar system. Disposal into the sun has been discussed but dismissed by ██ ██████ for the risk of the star going supernova if a parallel universe were to <redacted>.
SCP-1437 is known to kill "living organisms" on traversal. Considering SCP-682's history, it can be
The other option being that they throw SCP-682 in and they end up hovering over SCP-1437. Only because SCP-1437 doesn't want it's reputation tarnished for not killing SPC-682.
The other option being that they throw SCP-682 in and they end up hovering over SCP-1437. Only becau
That would be amusing ;P But I don't think SCP-1437 cares about reputation. The killing of biological life-forms seems to be a purely technical side effect. SCP-682 isn't a biological life-form specifically because it cannot be killed. There's other experiments with other SCPs that have more specific effects that treat SCP-682 also as "not-alive". You can throw both alive and dead stuff into SCP-1437 and nothing ever hovers, so why would SCP-682 hover?
What I wonder though is why no one ever tried to slowly lower something into SCP-1437 with a rope to see how long it takes until contact is lost and/or it becomes non-retrievable.
That would be amusing ;P But I don't think SCP-1437 cares about reputation. The killing of biologica
That actually works well - to a certain point. SCP-1437 does no such thing, but there's various ways to deconstruct SCP-682. The issue is, the speed at which SCP-682 reassembles itself (and develops resistance to the deconstruction method) is directly proportional to both speed and percentage of SCP-682's deconstruction. Any means of deconstruction, no matter how effective, as such eventually reaches equilibrium with SCP-682's regeneration.
There's some interesting theories what would happen if SCP-682 were to be thrown into a singularity such as a black hole. The predominant theory suggests that the black hole would shed the majority of its mass and energy in form of a massive gravitational wave - similar to the effect observed when two black holes are colliding, yet significantly stronger - leave only a remnant of degenerate matter in its wake from which SCP-682 slowly reforms.
Calculating the amount of released energy, the shockwave released from a stellar black hole would disrupt nearby stars and potential trigger core collapse (type II supernova) in distances of up to 20 lightyears, while rendering star systems sterile in a distance of up to 400 lightyears. However if SCP-682 were to be disposed into a supermassive black hole, such as typically found at the center of a galaxy, the energetic event is likely sufficient to literally blow up the galactic center and severely affecting nearby galaxies. Suddenly missing the attraction force of the central black hole in combination with the acceleration from the gravitational wave and the light pressure of exploding main sequence stars would annihilate and drive apart a region of space at least 10 million light years across.