NASA Black Hole Short
NASA Black Hole Short
NASA Black Hole Short
Most people think of a black hole as a voracious whirlpool in space, sucking down everything around it. But thats not really true! A black hole is a place where gravity has gotten so strong that the escape velocity is faster than light. But what does that mean, exactly? Gravity is what keeps us on the Earth, but it can be overcome. If you toss a rock up in the air, it will only go up a little ways before the Earths gravity slows it and pulls it back down. If you throw it a little harder, it goes faster and higher before coming back down. If you could throw the rock hard enough, it would have enough velocity that the Earths gravity could not slow it down enough to stop it. The rock would have enough velocity to escape the Earth.
NASA, Dana Berry
For the Earth, that velocity is about 11 kilometers per second (7 miles/second). But an objects escape velocity depends on its gravity: more gravity means a higher escape velocity, because the gravity will hold onto things more strongly. The Sun has far more gravity than the Earth, so its escape velocity is much highermore than 600 km/s (380 miles/s). Thats 3000 times faster than a jet plane! If you take an object and squeeze it down in size, or take an object and pile mass onto it, its gravity (and escape velocity) will go up. At some point, if you keep doing that, youll have an object with so much gravity that the escape velocity is faster than light. Since thats the ultimate speed limit of the Universe, anything too close would get trapped forever. No light can escape, and its like a bottomless pit: a black hole.
single huge star which exploded to create a black hole, and then accumulated more material (including other black holes). Astronomers think there is a supermassive black hole in the center of nearly every large galaxy, including our own Milky Way.
Stellar-mass black holes also form when two orbiting neutron stars ultra-dense stellar cores left over from one kind of supernova merge to produce a short gammaray burst, a tremendous blast of energy detectable across the entire observable Universe. Gamma-ray bursts are in a sense the birth cries of black holes.
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illio n s of The gravity you feel from an object gets stronger the closer you get. As you approach a degrees stellar-mass black hole feet-first, the force of gravity on your feet can be thousands of times stronger than the force on your head! This has the effect of stretching you, pulling you apart like taffy. Tongue-in-cheek, scientists call this spaghettification. By the time you reach the black hole, youll be a thin stream of matter many miles long. It probably wont hurt though: even falling from thousands of kilometers away, the entire gory episode will be over in a few milliseconds.
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You may not even make it that far. Some black holes greedily gobble down matter, stealing it from an orbiting companion star or, in the case of supermassive black holes, from surrounding gas clouds. As the matter falls in, it piles up into a disk just outside the hole. Orbiting at huge speeds, the matter in this accretion disk gets extremely hoteven reaching millions of degrees. It will spew out radiation, in particular high-energy X-rays. Long before the black hole could rip you apart youd be fried by the light. But suppose you somehow manage to survive the trip in. What strange things await you on your way down into forever? Once you pass the point where the escape velocity is faster than light, you cant get out. This region is called the event horizon. Thats because no information from inside can escape, so any event inside is forever beyond our horizon. If the black hole is rotating, chaos awaits you inside. Its a maelstrom as infalling matter turns back on the incoming stream, crashing into you like water churning at the bottom of a waterfall. At the very core of the black hole the seething matter finally collapses all the way down to a point. When that happens, our math (and intuition) fail us. Its as if the matter has disappeared from the Universe, but its mass is still there. At the singularity, space and time as we know them come to an end.
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EXIST
The Energetic X-ray Imaging Survey Telescope (EXIST) is a proposed NASA satellite that will look at the energetic X-rays emitted from black holes and other exotic astronomical objects. It is a strong candidate to be the Black Hole Finder Probe, one of the three Einstein Probes in NASAs Beyond Einstein Program. EXIST could be launched early in the next decade, and, with unparalleled sensitivity, will be used to study black holes of all sizes.
SSU NASA E/PO, A. Simonnet
There are probably millions of stellar-mass black holes in our own Milky Way Galaxy, but only one supermassive black hole, right in the center, tipping the cosmic scales at 4 million times the mass of the Sun. But dont worry at nearly 30,000 light years away, its too far away for us to fall into it.
Glossary
Accretion Disk: A disk of matter that forms when a large amount of material falls into a black hole. The disk is outside the event horizon of the black hole. Friction and other forces heat the disk, which then emits light. Escape Velocity: The velocity needed for an object to become essentially free of the gravitational effect of another object. Event Horizon: The distance from the center of a black hole where the escape velocity is equal to the speed of light. Gamma-ray Burst: A titanic explosion of high-energy light, thought to be due to the formation of a black hole. Gravity: The attractive force of an object which depends on its mass, and your distance from it. The more massive an object, or
the closer you are to it, the stronger the force of its gravity will be. Mass: The quantity of matter that makes up an object. Supernova: An exploded, or exploding, star. Wormhole: A theoretical shortcut through space caused when a black hole punches through the fabric of spacetime. While possible mathematically, in reality they probably do not exist.
References: EXIST Main Page: http://exist.gsfc.nasa.gov SSU E/PO: http://epo.sonoma.edu
Credits: Black Holes: From Here to Infinity was developed as part of the NASA EXIST and GLAST Education and Public Outreach (E/PO) Programs at Sonoma State University, CA under the direction of Professor Lynn Cominsky. Written by Dr. Philip Plait. Layout and Design by Aurore Simonnet. Additional help by Dr. Kevin McLin, and EXIST Principal Investigator Prof. Josh Grindlay.
www.nasa.gov