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Black Holes Black holes are one of the more bizarre and intriguing
predictions of Einstein's theory of gravity. Surprisingly, there is now a great
deal of observational evidence that black holes do exist, both in binary star
systems and at the center of most galaxies, including our own. Although we are
gaining more knowledge of black holes, they still remain one of the strangest
things anyone has ever heard of, and we may never know what exactly one of these
things are and can do. It is impossible to manufacture black holes in a
laboratory. The density of matter required is too great. In order to make a
black hole the size of a baseball, you would have to pack all the matter in and
on the Earth into a volume the size of a fist. Nature can make black holes,
however.
Matter naturally collapses unless there is some other force to hold it
up. The objects in a room are kept from collapsing by electromagnetic forces.
The gas in an active star is held up by thermal pressure. However, once a star
uses up its thermonuclear fuel, it starts to collapse, and if there is enough
mass to overcome other, microscopic forces, it collapses into a black hole.
According to Einstein's theory, if we could pack enough matter into a small
enough volume, the thing created inside will get so deep that the matter inside
can never escape. A circle of no return forms. Any matter that passes the point
of no return can no longer escape to the outside world. It necessarily keeps
collapsing, moving towards the center. It gets deeper and deeper until finally a
hole is literally torn in the fabric of spacetime: the density of matter at the
center becomes essentially infinite. Thus, what is meant by a hole in the fabric
of spacetime is: a tiny region of space where the known laws of physics break
down.
A black hole is a region of space so tightly packed with matter, that
nothing, not even light can escape. Hidden at its center is a tear in the fabric
of spacetime. Stephen Hawking showed in the mid-seventies that black holes
aren't actually black. They glow in the dark. They emit radiation via
microscopic processes that occur just outside the horizon. This means black
holes ultimately evaporate. In reality, though, a solar mass black hole will
take many times the lifetime of the Universe to evaporate. In some sense, a
black hole marks a boundary to spacetime: a horizon beyond which no one can see
without travelling through it. This radius of no return is called the event
horizon of the black hole. All the bumps and wriggles of the matter from which
they were formed are smoothed out as the matter contracts, so that the final
shape of the horizon is always perfectly smooth and round.
This is where
everything gets really weird. To a distant observer, events near the horizon
appear to slow down. If you drop a clock into a black hole it appears to tick
more and more slowly as it approaches the event horizon. Time actually appears
to stop right at the horizon. The clock's motion towards the black hole also
slows down and to a distant observer it takes literally forever to fall through.
If you fell in the event horizon with the clock, you would be sucked into the
singularity in no time. As you fall, time and space become jumbled, and you
can’t control your falling to the center as much as you can’t help yourself
falling into the future. Black holes are definitely one of the most bizarre
things anyone has ever heard of. We will never totally understand everything
about them. They make up only a small part of our mysterious universe, though.
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