Nine Facts about Black Holes
1. The gravitational pull of a black hole can greatly slow down time itself,
according to relativity. If you could take a spaceship to a black hole,
orbit around it for awhile, and then fly back to Earth, you would have
successfully traveled to the future.
2. Some equations suggest that every black hole contains a universe — which would mean our universe is inside a black hole right now.
3. While black holes are most definitely real, they have theoretical opposites called white holes,
which would endlessly spew matter into the universe. They were thought
to be purely hypothetical, but an unusual gamma ray burst observed in
2006 is turning out to be a potential candidate for a real-life white
hole.
4. Supermassive black holes likely exist at the centers of
most galaxies. And since galaxies sometimes collide, that means black
holes do too, and when that happens, it’s thought that one black hole ‘kicks’ the other out of the galaxy.
5. Black holes are black because their gravity is so strong that not even light can escape. But they do emit radiation, usually called Hawking Radiation, after Stephen Hawking, who first theorized its existence.
6. The Milky Way has a supermassive black hole in its center,
and it seems to have exploded about 2 million years ago in an event
known as a Seyfert flare. The radiation from the black hole would have
been 100 million times more powerful than it is now; the explosion may
have even been visible from Earth.
7. Black holes can emit material at nearly the speed of light.
Using an array of radio telescopes, a team of scientists looked at a
galaxy 1.5 billion light-years from Earth and found a black hole doing
just that. The jet is so powerful that it’s blowing gas right out of the
galaxy.
8. Black holes are the densest objects in existence. If you made a black hole with the mass of the entire Earth, the black hole would be 9 millimeters across.
9. Black holes can form when stars collapse in on themselves after death.
They keep growing by eating the dust and gas around them. No one’s
really sure how the biggest ones, called supermassive black holes, are
born.
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