Today's theme: When a star dies it can turn into: #3 Black Hole - Part II/III
1. To an outside observer with a telescope, an object passing the event horizon will appear to slow down then freeze without ever seeming to pass through the horizon. This is because the light takes longer to escape its gravitational pull and light signals won't reach the viewer for an infinitely long time.
2. If a person was able to survive long enough to describe falling into a black hole, he would at first experience weightlessness as he goes into free fall, but then feel intense "tidal" gravitational forces as he got closer to the center of the black hole. In other words, if his feet were closer to the center than his head, then they would feel a stronger pull until he eventually is stretched and then ripped apart.
3. A Wormhole, known alternatively as a Lorentzian wormhole, Schwarzschild wormhole or Einstein-Rosen bridge, is a theoretical opening in space-time allowing a "shortcut" through intervening space to another location in the Universe. However, from the outside wormholes may exhibit many of the characteristics usually associated with a black hole and might be virtually impossible to tell apart.
4. Black holes don’t fill up because they are already essentially a geometric point, with effectively infinite density. There is no limit to the mass of a black hole.
5. All the matter in the Universe will not end up in black holes. Most stars in the Universe don’t have enough mass to become black holes at the end of their lives. Neutron stars and white dwarfs are much more numerous; this is what most stars end up as. Black holes are not cosmic vacuum cleaners, they will not suck up everything in the Universe, and they only suck up what crosses their event horizons.
6. The nearest black hole was believed to be not such a nearby object and was observed by observations of strong X-ray emissions from Cygnus X-1, located about 8000 light years away.
7. More recently (1999) we've discovered another black hole that lies just 1,600 light-years from Earth on the way to the center of the Milky Way in the direction of the constellation Sagittarius and is associated with a visible star called V 4641. It is being called a micro-quasar because it showed the brilliant behavior associated with quasars (Quasars are a particular model of black hole which will be discussed in tomorrow's list!).
8. When two black holes collide they don't actually impact each other in the physical way. They just merge and form a new black hole (or it might be the case that one of them "eats" the other one) which grows in mass and strength from their original constituents. The merging usually happens after the lighter black hole has orbited the heavier black hole for some time (between 50 and 100.000 years).
9. White Holes have been talked about but are very hypothetical. They are supposed to be what comes out from the other side of a black hole and where all the mass that goes into the black hole goes to. As I have already said a black hole tends to get bigger as more mass goes in, so really mass just gets added to the black hole and there is no real need for a White Hole. If White Holes did exist (and there’s nothing saying they don’t) then they could be a connection to a parallel universe (most likely scenario due to how a black hole interacts with the fabric of space time) or a distant region of space (it might even be possible that they link to a moment in the future, however that is unlikely). Mathematics does say that black holes and white holes could exist but they would only probably exist for a very short period of time. No White Holes have been observed until now in our Universe, however scientists working on this have recently claimed that this is because each Universe (as part of the Multiverse) has only one White Hole - the Big Bang! I.E. If this theory is correct, inside the core of each black hole there is a new Universe.