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Published byIris Stevens Modified over 9 years ago
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Black Holes Pierre Cieniewicz
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What are they? A Black Hole (BH) is a place in space from which nothing can escape The reason for this is gravity Some things are so dense that even light cannot escape their gravitational pull
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Schwarzschild Radius The size an object must be in order to be dense enough to not allow light to escape its gravitational pull Example: What would the Earth’s Schwarzschild Radius be?
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Schwarzschild Radius G = 6.67 x 10 -11 N m 2 kg -2 M earth = 5.9736 x 10 24 kg
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Schwarzschild Radius G = 6.67 x 10 -11 N m 2 kg -2 M earth = 83.9 kg How big would *I* have to be to be a BH?
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Event Horizon This sounds a lot like the Schwarzschild Radius… The point at which light can no longer escape a BH’s gravity
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Event Horizon vs Schwarzschild Schwarzschild Radius is the maximum size R BH = R S : Schwarzschild Radius = Event Horizon R BH < R S : Schwarzschild Radius < Event Horizon
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Singularities The center of a BH where v=0 and there is infinite density
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Types of BHs Stellar-massIntermediate-massSupermassive
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Types of BHs Stellar-mass: Collapse of a supergiant star or rapidly rotating neutron star in a binary galaxy Intermediate-mass: Unknown Supermassive: Connected to the formation of galaxies
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Characteristics Only 3 properties: Mass Charge Angular Momentum
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Spacetime Frame Dragging Ergosphere: Area of space outside the BH which is forced into spinning Nothing can stay still in the Ergosphere
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Spacetime Frame Dragging ErgosphereBH
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Spacetime Frame Dragging ErgosphereBH
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Spacetime Frame Dragging ErgosphereBH
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Spacetime Frame Dragging ErgosphereBH V > c
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Hawking Radiation BH Black Holes can lose mass ~13 billion years E=Mc 2
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Hawking Radiation BH
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