BLACK HOLE |
What Is a Black Hole?
A black hole is a place in space where
gravity pulls so much that even light can not get out. The gravity is so strong
because matter has been squeezed into a tiny space. This can happen when a star
is dying.
Because no light can get out, people can't see black holes. They are invisible. Space telescopes with special tools can help find black holes. The special tools can see how stars that are very close to black holes act differently than other stars.
Because no light can get out, people can't see black holes. They are invisible. Space telescopes with special tools can help find black holes. The special tools can see how stars that are very close to black holes act differently than other stars.
Could a Black Hole Destroy Earth?
Black holes do not go around in space
eating stars, moons and planets. Earth will not fall into a black hole because
no black hole is close enough to the solar system for Earth to do that.
Even if a black hole the same mass as
the sun were to take the place of the sun, Earth still would not fall in. The
black hole would have the same gravity as the sun. Earth and the other planets
would orbit the black hole as they orbit the sun now. The sun will never turn into a black
hole. The sun is not a big enough star to make a black hole.
Black holes are the cold remnants of former
stars, so dense that no matter—not even light—is able to escape their powerful
gravitational pull.
While most stars end up as white dwarfs or neutron stars, black holes are the last evolutionary stage in the lifetimes
of enormous stars that had been at least 10 or 15 times as massive as our own
sun.
When giant stars reach the final stages of their lives they often
detonate in cataclysms known as supernovae. Such an explosion scatters most of a star into the void
of space but leaves behind a large "cold" remnant on which fusion no
longer takes place.
In younger stars, nuclear fusion creates energy and a constant outward
pressure that exists in balance with the inward pull of gravity caused by the
star's own mass. But in the dead remnants of a massive supernova, no force
opposes gravity—so the star begins to collapse in upon itself.
With no force to check gravity, a budding black hole shrinks to zero
volume—at which point it is infinitely dense. Even the light from such a star
is unable to escape its immense gravitational pull. The star's own light
becomes trapped in orbit, and the dark star becomes known as a black hole.
Black holes pull matter and even energy into themselves—but no more so
than other stars or cosmic objects of similar mass. That means that a black
hole with the mass of our own sun would not "suck" objects into it
any more than our own sun does with its own gravitational pull.
Planets, light, and other matter must pass close to a black hole in
order to be pulled into its grasp. When they reach a point of no return they
are said to have entered the event horizon—the point from which any escape is impossible because it
requires moving faster than the speed of light.
Small But Powerful
Black holes are small in size. A million-solar-mass hole, like that
believed to be at the center of some galaxies, would have a radius of just
about two million miles (three million kilometers)—only about four times the
size of the sun. A black hole with a mass equal to that of the sun would have a
two-mile (three-kilometer) radius.
Because they are so small, distant,
and dark, black holes cannot be directly observed. Yet scientists have
confirmed their long-held suspicions that they exist. This is typically done by
measuring mass in a region of the sky and looking for areas of large, dark
mass.
Many black holes exist in binary star systems. These holes may continually pull mass from
their neighboring star, growing the black hole and shrinking the other star,
until the black hole is large and the companion star has completely vanished.
Extremely large black
holes may exist at the center of some galaxies—including our own Milky Way.
These massive features may have the mass of 10 to 100 billion suns. They are
similar to smaller black holes but grow to enormous size because there is so
much matter in the center of the galaxy for them to add. Black holes can accrue
limitless amounts of matter; they simply become even denser as their mass
increases.
Black holes capture the
public's imagination and feature prominently in extremely theoretical concepts
like wormholes. These "tunnels" could allow
rapid travel through space and time—but there is no evidence that they exist.
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