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Displaying 1—10 of 1000 matches for query "07._Will_we_run_into_a_black_hole" retrieved in 0.016 sec with these stats:

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  • "black" found 2122 times in 837 documents
  • "hole" found 1566 times in 555 documents



... great that there is very little chance of the Sun coming anywhere close to a neighborhood where a black hole would be found. ---- Answer provided by Jim Zebrowski Image:K2S logosmall.jpg Question and ... /For%20Kids/KidstoSpace.html Click here Category:Kids To Space Category:Kids To Space - BLACK HOLES
Unfortunately, once a star collapses beyond its Schwarzchild's radius and becomes a black hole, it effectively leaves our Universe. We can never hope to probe beyond the event horizon because the laws of our ... —space-time becomes so curved by gravity that matter is crushed into an infinitely tiny and dense point called a singularity. And Einstein's Theory of Relativity and the laws of ...
... in a warping or bending of space in their vicinity (according to Einstein's theory of relativity). In other words, objects coming close to a moderate-sized black hole would behave normally by going into orbit around it according to the force of gravity exerted by the black hole. Only if you came closer than a certain well ...
Our Sun will never become a black hole since it does not have enough mass to allow it to form a black hole. Only stars with a much greater mass than the Sun—eight to ten times the Sun's mass—have the possibility of collapsing into a black hole. The key is the mass of the core of the star at the end of its lifetime: if the core remaining after a supernova blast is greater ...
With our current state of knowledge and technology, there is no known way to survive a trip into a black hole or to even get close to one. ---- Answer provided by Jim Zebrowski Image:K2S ... /For%20Kids/KidstoSpace.html Click here Category:Kids To Space Category:Kids To Space - BLACK HOLES
... actually allow matter to escape into space. This is a white hole. Now, if there is a rotating black hole in space, there is a chance for an object to fall into a black hole at a certain approach angle that would allow it to miss the singularity in the center of the black hole and ...
You never get sucked into a black hole but scientists can use Einstein's theory of relativity to determine that if you come within three times its Schwarzschild radius, you will never break free of its gravity. Karl Schwarzschild was the scientist who first used Einstein's equations to mathematically determine that the radius to the event horizon of a black hole is ...
... star collapses to form a black hole, its effect on the matter around it will be exactly the same as before. All a black hole does is concentrate the mass of an object into an exceedingly tiny and dense point in space—all matter nearby will still ...
... not massive enough to produce a supernova explosion or form a black hole Remember, the end life of a star like our Sun, which has less than eight solar masses, will result in the star eventually swelling to its red giant phase and then an eventual collapse into a small hot object called a white dwarf. This will not begin to happen ...
... ? (A K2S Question) No, there is no evidence. Since science can offer no objective set of laws that work to describe what happens to matter in a black hole, we cannot offer any ideas about black holes or even if black holes could exist in other universes. Remember that the existence of black holes follows from Einstein's theory of ...

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