Black holes are probably
one of the most mysterious objects in the universe. Scientists have been
working on black holes. They are
trying to study black holes deeper
and deeper. Black holes are so
massive. Black holes are massive
enough that they can trap even light or your underpants without letting them
escape with the help its powerful gravity. A black hole is a
gravitationally collapsed enormous mass are turning into highly dense
singularity. Nothing can escape from a black hole’s gravitational field, once
it enters into the gravitational field or the event horizon of a black hole. A great legend, Albert Einstein, first predicted black holes, using his General Theory
of Relativity (GTR).
How black holes were discovered?
In
early 1915, Albert Einstein developed his theory of general
relativity, having previous shown that gravity does influence light's motion.
Only a few months later, Karl Schwarzschild found an answer to
the Einstein field equations, which describes the gravitational
field of a point mass and a sphere-shaped mass. The thought of a
body so massive that even light could not escape was briefly proposed in a few
words by astronomical pioneer and English clergyman John Michel in a
letter published in November 1784.
What are the types of black holes?
Black holes can be so huge, too small, tiny, and
super-massive and so on, but scientists have classified black holes in three man categories according to their mass, size,
and other factors. The three types of black
holes are:
1.
Stellar
black hole
2.
Super-massive
black hole
3.
Intermediate
black hole
·
Stellar black hole:
A stellar black hole is also known as stellar-mass black hole. They have masses ranging from about 5 to some tens
of solar masses. It was discovered by LIU Jifeng in China. He spotted a stellar-black hole which was 70 times
more than the mass of the sun in National Astronomical Observatory of China.
·
Super-massive black hole:
As its name, super-massive black hole comes under the black holes which has so
mass or is so massive. A super-massive black hole is kind of the largest type
of the black hole which contains thousands to billions of times the mass of the
Sun. They are massive enough to eat the whole Solar System or galaxies like the
Milky Way.
· Intermediate
black hole:
Intermediate black hole is also a kind of black
hole. An intermediate black
hole is a class of black hole with mass in the range 10^2
to 1^5 solar masses: much more than stellar black holes but
less than the 10^5 to 10^9 solar mass super-massive black holes.
How does a black holes form?
In this universe nothing is immortal or in simple words nothing will
last forever. As a star also have to die one day. A black hole is the result of a dead star. A star has a very huge
amount of energy in it which converts hydrogen in to helium and continues its
process until it reaches iron due to nuclear fission and fusion. The star
explodes in a fraction of a second due to some super power and mysterious
phenomena or super nova explosion. After explosion the star will be formed in
either a neutron star or a black hole. If the mass is so high then
the star will be formed in a black hole.
How
does a black hole look like?
A black hole is so massive so that even the light can’t escape its
gravity once it entered which makes it not possible to observe, but there are
some theories which say black hole is sphere, collapsed by so many atoms. As
light can return from it that is why it is said to be BLACK hole. It is
surrounded by its event horizon which is also known as the point of no return.
What is inside a black hole?
Black holes are so mysterious as well as
massive. Singularity is breakdown in space time. It has only one dimension. We
cannot understand black hole if you don’t understand the nature of singularity.
In singularity the mass and the gravity are infinite; we can’t calculate its
mass and gravity in simple methods. It is a point of space time where all the
laws of physics break down.
What does a black hole suck?
BLACK HOLES SUCK
EVERYTHING IN
Maybe the most prevalent myth about black holes is that they ‘suck’
matter towards them, like truly powerful vacuum cleaners. Don’t worry! They’re
not going to ultimately consume everything in the universe, and you don’t need
to be afraid of them … unless you plan on travelling VERY close. Why?
Well, even though black holes are extreme in many ways, they don’t have endless
mass—and it’s mass that determines the force of their gravity. Some black
holes—known as stellar
black holes—have about the quantity of mass that very
massive stars do. So, just as objects can orbit massive stars without falling
in, the same is true of black holes. You could cheerfully orbit a black hole
forever. Once you get close enough, the story’s different, and gravity will
pull you in. But that’s the same as any massive thing, like a planet or star.
What is the event
horizon?
The 'event horizon' is the limit
defining the region of space around a black hole from which nothing (not even
light or your underpants) can escape. In other simple words, the escape
velocity for an object within the event horizon exceeds the
speed of light.
What if you cross the
event-horizon?
Since
gravity rapidly gets more powerful the nearer you get to a black hole, a person
who (supposedly) travels feet-first towards a black hole could have their feet
pulled faster than their head, and their sides compressed inwards. As they
continue to travel towards the black hole, the effect would be amplified until
they are eventually ripped into a string of individual atoms in a process
called spaghettification. While scientists think that spaghettification is a
real phenomenon, there tends to be a popular perception that it always happens
at the event horizon of every black hole. But the point at which
spaghettification happens varies, depending on the size of the black hole. For
the biggest supermassive black holes, you could easily pass the event horizon
without being spaghettified … and you might not even understand you’ve
crossed the event horizon! According to these cases, spaghettification wouldn’t
happen until you’re already well beyond the event horizon.
These are some information about black holes. Comment down some interesting facts about the black hole that I've not mentioned above.We love space, do you?
Thanks for information
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