Is it yet known if it is supermassive black holes that are at the very center of a galaxy's nucleus? Could I get some clarification on the subject?
If it were not a black hole, what else could be powering a nucleus? What exactly comprises a nucleus anyhow?
Thanks for any answers -- this is something that I have been pondering lately.
Basic Black Hole Question
Welcome to the Forums, peter.
To answer your question. Yes, there is a super massive back hole at the center of our galaxy, or at least we are >99% certain at this point unless some other answer presents it self.
Below is a link that should give you a quick over view of what a super massive back hole is.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Supermassive_black_hole
To answer your question. Yes, there is a super massive back hole at the center of our galaxy, or at least we are >99% certain at this point unless some other answer presents it self.
Below is a link that should give you a quick over view of what a super massive back hole is.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Supermassive_black_hole
- LordFerret
- Posts: 737
- Joined: 24.08.2006
- Age: 68
- With us: 18 years 2 months
- Location: NJ USA
Hi Peter_89
Have you seen this video yet? I found it on Google a long time ago. Very Interesting
http://video.google.com/videosearch?q=S ... 0&filter=0
(It's the Discovery Channel Video )
Ozark
Have you seen this video yet? I found it on Google a long time ago. Very Interesting
http://video.google.com/videosearch?q=S ... 0&filter=0
(It's the Discovery Channel Video )
Ozark
OZARK
Celestia 1.5.0
Windows XP Home Edition
Pentium 3.4 ghz E.E
2GB ddr Ram
Radeon 9550 AGP 256 mb
Celestia 1.5.0
Windows XP Home Edition
Pentium 3.4 ghz E.E
2GB ddr Ram
Radeon 9550 AGP 256 mb
There is also a black hole in every dryer......
What confuses me about black holes is that 1) nothing can escape the gravity well, and yet 2) Black holes produce xrays which stream away from the event horizon.
Now how are the xrays able to do this one?
What confuses me about black holes is that 1) nothing can escape the gravity well, and yet 2) Black holes produce xrays which stream away from the event horizon.
Now how are the xrays able to do this one?
We are all born as molecules in the hearts of a billion stars.
- t00fri
- Developer
- Posts: 8772
- Joined: 29.03.2002
- Age: 22
- With us: 22 years 7 months
- Location: Hamburg, Germany
Growler wrote:There is also a black hole in every dryer......
What confuses me about black holes is that 1) nothing can escape the gravity well, and yet 2) Black holes produce xrays which stream away from the event horizon.
Now how are the xrays able to do this one?
How about reading a book by Stephen Hawking or googling for "Hawking Radiation". Black holes emit a black-body spectrum /termally/...
Bye Fridger
-
- Posts: 132
- Joined: 07.12.2003
- With us: 20 years 11 months
- Location: San Francisco http://www.gravitysimulator.com
Growler wrote:There is also a black hole in every dryer......
What confuses me about black holes is that 1) nothing can escape the gravity well, and yet 2) Black holes produce xrays which stream away from the event horizon.
Now how are the xrays able to do this one?
Nothing can escape after crossing the event horizon. But prior to crossing the event horizon stuff is moving so quickly that it produces x-rays, and that is what we detect, x-rays just outside the event horizon.
- LordFerret
- Posts: 737
- Joined: 24.08.2006
- Age: 68
- With us: 18 years 2 months
- Location: NJ USA
There is a new theory that is floating around that seems interesting to me, and it deals with the information paradox of black holes. In a nut shell the theory goes that nothing ever makes it past the event horizon. If nothing passes the even horizon then there is no information paradox. where is all the mass that is forming this beast? Well all the mass is not in the singularity but rather in the shell that forms the event horizon. the reason why no light is emitted is because even photons are broken down when it interacts with the shell, but the particles themselves are never able to pass though it.
This is still 100% speculative at this point, but it does make sense and it does not violate any known physics unlike the idea of the singularly.
This is still 100% speculative at this point, but it does make sense and it does not violate any known physics unlike the idea of the singularly.
-
- Posts: 3
- Joined: 21.07.2007
- With us: 17 years 3 months
Hi universe_facsination
Some one may correct me if i am wrong, however before you would even enter the Event Horizon your body would be stripped apart in a process called "Spaghettification" literally stretching you in to a strand of atoms..
So no you would not survive.
Some one may correct me if i am wrong, however before you would even enter the Event Horizon your body would be stripped apart in a process called "Spaghettification" literally stretching you in to a strand of atoms..
So no you would not survive.
OZARK
Celestia 1.5.0
Windows XP Home Edition
Pentium 3.4 ghz E.E
2GB ddr Ram
Radeon 9550 AGP 256 mb
Celestia 1.5.0
Windows XP Home Edition
Pentium 3.4 ghz E.E
2GB ddr Ram
Radeon 9550 AGP 256 mb
You only will become spaghettified with normal size black holes. With super massive black holes there is less of a tilde force working against you before you pass through the event horizon.
Edited for gamer and spelling
Edited for gamer and spelling
Last edited by MKruer on 28.07.2007, 04:53, edited 1 time in total.