MikeG wrote:That's quite interesting. I haven't heard of black holes being referred to as "points" before, but that would make sense, and be consistent with big bang theory (as I understand it anyway).
scott fairbrass wrote:i think im right in beleiveing that a blackhole is what is left behind after a super nova?
if thats the case does the size of a blackhole relate to the size of the sun that was before it?
and does a blackhole have a life span?
The largest black holes have silly numbers associated with them that I tend to take with a pinch of salt... numbers like billions of solar masses make for nice startling headlines but that level is beyond me.
The Beige Avenger wrote:Radius = (2 x Gravitational constant x mass)/(c.c)
gravitational constant, G, is 6.67300 × 10^-11 (m^3 kg^-1 s^-2)
the speed of light in a vacuum, c, is 3 x 10^8 (m s^-1)
So all you need to do is plug in the value of mass... lets take a conservative estimate of 3 solar masses for the minimum mass needed in order for a dead star to collapse inside its Schwarzchild Radius.
1 solar mass = 2 x10^30 Kg
therefore 3 solar masses = 6x10^30 Kg
therefore an object of 3 solar masses has a Schwarzchild radius (event horizon radius) of ~8900 km... a wee bit bigger than Planet Earth (~6400 km).
The largest black holes have silly numbers associated with them that I tend to take with a pinch of salt... numbers like billions of solar masses make for nice startling headlines but that level is beyond me.
M Paul Lloyd wrote:I think its because black holes have so much mass in such a small space that they effectively bend spacetime around them which creates a point beyond which nothing can escape and this is called the 'event' horizon.
Or so I believe..
Isee wrote:Nice! thanks TBA, so even the smallest one's horizon is bgger than earth, cool!
I am not clear one one thing though, why does a black hole of 3 sun masses have an event horizon
yet a star of the same mass doesn't?
I mean if the gravity and the total mass are the same is this effect achieved simply by compounding gazillions of atoms into one dot?