Black Holes Every day we look into the night sky, wondering and dreaming what lies beyond our galaxy. Within our galaxy alone, there are millions upon millions of stars. This may be why it interest us to learn about all that we cannot see. Humans have known the existence of stars since they have had eyes, and see them as white glowing specks in the sky. The mystery lies beyond the white glowing specks we see but, in the things we cannot see in the night sky such as black holes. Before I begin to speak about black holes, I will have to explain what the white glowing specks in the sky are.
Without a star a black hole could not be formed. In the beginning of a star life a hydrogen is a major part of its development. Stars form from the condensation of clouds of gas that contain hydrogen. Then atoms of the cloud are pulled together by gravity. The energy produced from the cloud is so great when it first collides, that a nuclear reaction occurs. The gasses within the star starts to burn continuously. The hydrogen gas is usually the first type of gas consumed in a star and then other gas elements such as carbon, oxygen, and helium are consumed.
This chain reaction of explosions fuels the star for millions or billions of years depending on the amount of gases there are. Stars are born and reborn from an explosion of a previous star. The particles and helium are brought together the same way the last star was born. Throughout the life of a star, it manages to avoid collapsing. The gravitational pull from the core of the star has to equal the gravitational pull of the gasses, which form a type of orbit. When this equality is broken, the star can go into several different stages. Some stars that are at least thirty times larger than our sun can form black holes and other kinds of stars.
The Essay on Stars And Black Holes
By Beatrice A. Lopez Below you will read research on stars and black holes. Black holes are stars whose core has been crushed by gravity. In the text to follow you will see how a star forms, read about its life and how it becomes a black hole. Stars are composed of hydrogen gas and dust. Stars owe their existence to the force of gravity. Stars are created from the thinly spread atoms of dust and ...
Stars explode at the end of their lifetime, sometimes when they explode the stars leave a remnant of gasses and, dust behind. What the gasses come together to form depend on the size of the remnant. If the remnant is less than 1.4 solar masses it will become a white dwarf, a hot dead star that is not bright enough to shine. If the remnant is roughly 1.4 solar masses, it will collapse. “The protons and electrons will be squashed together, and their elementary particles will recombine to form neutrons”. What results from this reaction is called a neutron star.
The neutrons in the neutron star are very close together, so close the pressure prevents the neutron star to collapse onto itself. If the remnant of this giant exploding star is larger than three solar masses or ten times our sun, it becomes a black hole. A black hole is one of the last option that a star may take. In the 18th century scientists started to research the after effects of a large star such as a supernova exploding. What happens of the gas and dust left behind after such a big star died? The idea of mass concentration so dense that even light would be trapped goes all the way back to Laplace in the 18th century. The first scientist to really take an in depth look at black holes and the collapsing of stars, was a professor, Robert Oppenheimer and his student Hartland Snyder, in the early nineteen hundreds.
They came up with the basics of a black hole from Einstein’s theory of relativity that if the speed of light was the most speed over any massive object, then nothing could escape a black hole once in its grasp. These researchers showed that when a “sufficiently massive star” runs out of fuel, it is unable to support itself against its own gravitational pull, and it should collapse into a black hole. In general theory of relativity, gravity is a manifest of the curvature of the space-time. “Einstein general theory of relativity showed that light, though it does not react to gravity in the same way as ordinary matter, is nevertheless affected by strong gravitational fields. In fact, light itself cannot escape from inside this region”.(Internet Public Television family science show) Massive objects distort space and time, so that the usual rules of geometry don’t apply anymore. Near a black hole, this distortion space is extremely severe and causes black holes to have some very strange properties.
The Term Paper on Black Holes 3 Star Hole Light
... be thought of as the boundary of a black hole, called an event horizon because all events within RS are causally disconnected from the rest ... and Guseinov in 1964. If the black hole was in a binary system with another, normal star, the light curve of the system would ... of the intensity or Doppler-shift of light from the star versus time. Here the light curve of the visible companion can yield ...
A black hole is a region of space that has so much mass concentrated in it that there is no way for a nearby object to escape its gravitational pull. Afer a black hole is created, the gravitational force continues to pull in space debris and other type of dust to help add to the mass of the core, making the hole stronger and more powerful. Most black holes are spinning; The spinning of the black hole allows more debris to become a part of its ring which is called the Event horizon. The debris spins within the ring until it becomes a part of the center of the black hole adding to the mass of the core, making the hole stronger and more powerful. The event horizon is also known as the boundary. The event horizon is the point where the black hole’s gravitational pull begins.
Once you cross the event horizon, there is no turning back. The way that someone can escape a black hole’s event horizon once it has entered, is by exceeding the escape velocity. The escape velocity means moving faster than the speed of light. Since moving faster than the speed of light is impossible, so is escaping a black hole’s gravitational pull. So in order for the black hole to swallow something up, that thing will have to pass the event horizon. If someone were to fall into the event horizon, they will begin spinning around the center of the black hole at the speed of light.
As the person gets closer to the center, the “singularity” effect takes place. This theory means that once you are in the event horizon the gravitational pull at the center of the black hole is greater at your feet than your head. This singularity effect will stretch the person out to infinite thinness until you are torn apart, thus killing you. The time it takes a person to die depends on the size of the black hole. A smaller black hole means that its “singularity” is not far away from the core thus killing you faster. A larger black hole will allow you to stretch slower giving you time to look around the inside of a black hole.
The Report on What Is a Black Hole?
... event horizon" of a black hole? Answer: A black hole is a theoretical entity predicted by the equations of general relativity. A black hole is formed when a star ... of sufficient mass undergoes gravitational collapse, with most ... from the black hole's gravity is the speed of light. Black holes draw mass in through gravitational forces, but ...
If one were able to look around in the event horizon images would be distorted. And since light can go into a black hole, you can see outside images fine. But light won’t be able to bounce of you and go back, so no one would be able to see you. Even though it is impossible for someone to experience this, scientists speculate that this is what would happen. Basically you would be in a place where time does not exist and all of Einstein’s laws will fail. Even though we cannot see black holes scientist know they are really exist.
Scientists have not actually discovered black holes’ but, there are some speculations as to what they think black holes are. If there is a large quantity of mass in a small area, there is a good chance it is a black hole. A black hole emits radiation, and the energy to emit this radiation comes from the black hole’s mass similarly, to a star. Scientists are aware of this radiation field so, they use technological advancements for measuring such things like radiation. The core of the black hole appears to be purely black on all readings even through the uses of radiation detection devices. Another idea scientists use to speculate black holes’ exist stance, is by observing other stars.
Stars in the sky revolve around other stars and sometimes planets. Just like our planets revolve around our sun. Our sons’ gravitational force keeps our planets in their revolutions. Now imagine our son was a black hole. The black hole has the same characteristics of a star but you just can’t see it. So when scientists see a star revolving but, cannot see what is causing its evolution; This may be another sign that the star may be revolving around a black hole.
Just recently a major discovery was found with the help of a device known as The Hubble Telescope. This telescope has just recently found what many astronomers believe to be a black hole, After being focuses on a star orbiting empty space. Several pictures of various radiation fluctuations and other diverse types of readings that could be read from that area which the black hole is suspected to be in. Bibliography1, Jastow, Robert. Red Giants and White Dwarfs. Canada: George J. Mcleod,1990.
The Essay on Black Holes Hole Star Radiation
black hole, in astronomy, celestial object of such extremely intense gravity that it attracts everything near it and in some instances prevents everything, including light, from escaping. The term was first used in reference to a star in the last phases of gravitational collapse (the final stage in the life history of certain stars; see stellar evolution), by the American physicist John A. ...
2, Alter Dinsmore, Cleminshaw H. Clarence, Philips G John. Pictorial Astronomy. United States: Sidney Feinberg, 1963. 3, Folger, T. In the black.1993,Jan 4, Internet, Black holes, Newton’s Apple, Public Televisions Family Science Show.
5, Internet, search black holes at ask.com.