What is Black hole: Definition and 1000 Discussions

A black hole is a region of spacetime where gravity is so strong that nothing—no particles or even electromagnetic radiation such as light—can escape from it. The theory of general relativity predicts that a sufficiently compact mass can deform spacetime to form a black hole. The boundary of no escape is called the event horizon. Although it has an enormous effect on the fate and circumstances of an object crossing it, according to general relativity it has no locally detectable features. In many ways, a black hole acts like an ideal black body, as it reflects no light. Moreover, quantum field theory in curved spacetime predicts that event horizons emit Hawking radiation, with the same spectrum as a black body of a temperature inversely proportional to its mass. This temperature is on the order of billionths of a kelvin for black holes of stellar mass, making it essentially impossible to observe directly.
Objects whose gravitational fields are too strong for light to escape were first considered in the 18th century by John Michell and Pierre-Simon Laplace. The first modern solution of general relativity that would characterize a black hole was found by Karl Schwarzschild in 1916, and its interpretation as a region of space from which nothing can escape was first published by David Finkelstein in 1958. Black holes were long considered a mathematical curiosity; it was not until the 1960s that theoretical work showed they were a generic prediction of general relativity. The discovery of neutron stars by Jocelyn Bell Burnell in 1967 sparked interest in gravitationally collapsed compact objects as a possible astrophysical reality. The first black hole known as such was Cygnus X-1, identified by several researchers independently in 1971.Black holes of stellar mass form when very massive stars collapse at the end of their life cycle. After a black hole has formed, it can continue to grow by absorbing mass from its surroundings. By absorbing other stars and merging with other black holes, supermassive black holes of millions of solar masses (M☉) may form. There is consensus that supermassive black holes exist in the centers of most galaxies.
The presence of a black hole can be inferred through its interaction with other matter and with electromagnetic radiation such as visible light. Matter that falls onto a black hole can form an external accretion disk heated by friction, forming quasars, some of the brightest objects in the universe. Stars passing too close to a supermassive black hole can be shred into streamers that shine very brightly before being "swallowed." If there are other stars orbiting a black hole, their orbits can be used to determine the black hole's mass and location. Such observations can be used to exclude possible alternatives such as neutron stars. In this way, astronomers have identified numerous stellar black hole candidates in binary systems, and established that the radio source known as Sagittarius A*, at the core of the Milky Way galaxy, contains a supermassive black hole of about 4.3 million solar masses.
On 11 February 2016, the LIGO Scientific Collaboration and the Virgo collaboration announced the first direct detection of gravitational waves, which also represented the first observation of a black hole merger. As of December 2018, eleven gravitational wave events have been observed that originated from ten merging black holes (along with one binary neutron star merger). On 10 April 2019, the first direct image of a black hole and its vicinity was published, following observations made by the Event Horizon Telescope (EHT) in 2017 of the supermassive black hole in Messier 87's galactic centre. In March 2021, the EHT Collaboration presented, for the first time, a polarized-based image of the black hole which may help better reveal the forces giving rise to quasars.

As of 2021, the nearest known body thought to be a black hole is around 1500 light-years away (see List of nearest black holes). Though only a couple dozen black holes have been found so far in the Milky Way, there are thought to be hundreds of millions, most of which are solitary and do not cause emission of radiation, so would only be detectable by gravitational lensing.

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  1. sevenperforce

    Stellar-mass black hole formation sequence

    I feel like this could go in quite a few of the Physics subforums (Quantum Physics, Beyond the Standard Model, Special and General Relativity, or High Energy, Nuclear, Particle Physics) instead of Astronomy and Cosmology, but hopefully this will work. This is my first question I've posed here...
  2. O

    How is light affected by the gravity of a black hole?

    Hello! I am new to this forum, but I'll give it a shot. It is my understanding that photons have no mass- but that light is still pulled by the gravity of a black hole. How can something without a mass, and therefore, gravity, be pulled by the gravity of another object? Any insight would be...
  3. S

    Falling Into a Black Hole: Time Dilation & Survival

    So for an outside observer it appears someone falling into is slowing down and then gets redder and redder. But what about for the local observer? From the perspective of the person falling I would imagine that the universe would appear to speed up tremendously. Is it possible you could survive...
  4. P

    Gravity around small black holes

    If a black hole had a mass similar to the Sun (I know black holes tend to be at least three times larger but let's assume an unusual series of events) how far would the are of extremely distorted bent gravity around it be could it cause closely orbiting bodies to be pulled or pushed out of orbit...
  5. P

    Witness Life of Universe from Black Hole Event Horizon

    I know there are many threads about falling into black holes and I'm sorry for posting another one. I have a specific question and couldn't find the answer in prior threads, although it's possible that it's there somewhere. If A is outside the supermassive black hole and B falls into it, I know...
  6. G

    How to stop a black hole forming?

    Hello there! I just made this account today because I figured this place would be a good way to get some answers to things that have bugged me for years. I'm not particularly sure how this would even work, so bare with me here. There is a critical density at which a black hole forms, which...
  7. A

    How can a black hole be infinitely small?

    Hi everyone. First post here! It's an odd thought and relax I'm expecting to be wrong but the more I think about this the more interested I get.. Let's say you're chilling in the centre of earth, you feel no (little) pull because the gravity of Earth cancels out in all directions. If a black...
  8. S

    B Can a Black hole also be a wormhole?

    Can a Black hole also be a wormhole ?? is it possible
  9. S

    Black hole smaller than a neutron star?

    OK so some stars evolve into neutron stars which I assume are so small (10's of kms) because ALL empty space is removed between the atoms.. absolute highest density possible? Now.. is a black hole larger (massive and in diameter) than a neutron star and called a black hole only because the...
  10. M

    What if there was a black hole in the middle of a nebula?

    I was wondering, if there was a black hole in the center of a nebula, then would there be a possibility that the nebula would be eaten from the inside out before any stars could be born? It'd be something interesting to observe over time.
  11. Ellie Snyder

    Black hole calculations, the "Event Horizon Telescope"

    Homework Statement Soon astronomers will be imaging the “shadow” of light from the event horizons of black holes. Since black holes are very small, this achievement seems impossible. Nevertheless, it is possible for three reasons: 1. Supermassive black holes have large event horizons. 2. Radio...
  12. W

    Hawking radiation no change to black hole mass?

    have read numerous times about Hawking radiation. don't understand how that can lead to black hole evaporation in so much that wouldn't as many matter as anti-matter particles fall in thus balancing out over time to the growth and evaporation of black holes thus leaving the mass of the balck...
  13. Multiple_Authors

    Insights Is the Universe a Black Hole? - Comments

    Multiple_Authors submitted a new PF Insights post Is the Universe a Black Hole? Continue reading the Original PF Insights Post.
  14. valentin mano

    Observer Falling Into a Black Hole -- What do they see?

    If we have an infalling observer through the event horizon,will she see the end of the Universe?
  15. G

    Gravitational effect of a black hole based on distance

    Hi, I have often read that at large enough distances, the gravitational effect of a black hole is no different than the gravitational effect of a star or other body of the same mass. But that at close distances the difference shows up, for example the notion of the photon sphere at 1.5 times...
  16. Grogbor

    Unpredictable Outcomes: What Happens When Falling into a Black Hole?

    I was watching a video about how an observer outside a black hole would watch someone slow to a halt at the event horizon and I don't question it, as that makes sense. My first question to the Astrophysicists out there is what the observer falling into the black hole would see. It would make...
  17. N

    Observer dependent event horizon for Schwarzschild black hole

    Hello. In oral exams my professor likes to ask if Alice and Bob can communicate, if Alice ist just above the event horizon of a schwarzschild black hole and Bob ist just below. He wants to hear: Communication is possible, because the event horizon is observer dependent. Only an observer...
  18. D

    I Does continuous acceleration eventually create a black hole

    The following equation equates relativistic mass to rest mass http://scienceworld.wolfram.com/physics/RestMass.html Does the mass caused by high velocity have gravity?
  19. T

    Humans Move Before Becoming Black Hole

    The question kind of says it all. How fast fast could a human move before Relativistic mass made him collapse into a black hole(the answerer can choose whatever mass and volume that they want for the equations).
  20. A

    I What's the fate of neutrons in black hole formation?

    I understand how the neutron stars are formed, and why the electron degeneracy pressure collapses as electrons are absorbed by protons, by photo disintegration. However, I'm struggling to grasp what happens when the gravity is large enough to overcome neutron degeneracy pressure. Apparently a...
  21. D

    Why can't light return from a black hole?

    So if light is "pulled" into a black hole by following the curvature of seriously bent space time. Then i question, why does it not eventually come back out the other side? If its not literally being dragged in then shouldn't it ride through the whole thing and eventually come back out? From...
  22. E

    Something escapes the corona of a black hole

    http://www.blastr.com/2015-11-4/nasa-just-saw-something-come-out-black-hole-first-time-ever Saw this article and thought I'd share :) This is going to be a silly question, I'm sure, but what is the corona of a black hole? I tried to google it, but the first few pages were nothing but articles...
  23. Smattering

    Time dilation at the event horizon of a black hole

    Dear all, As far as I understand, for a distant observer, time stands still at the event horizon of a black hole, right? In particular, nothing will ever pass the EH. Instead, everything that approaches the BH will get stuck at the EH and stay there forever from the perspective of the distant...
  24. Brunolem33

    Where does the mass of a black hole come from?

    I have some difficulty understanding how a black hole can have both size and mass. Inside a black hole, space is infinitely warped and matter crushed into oblivion. Thus, if there is no space inside a black hole, what exactly separates the event horizon, or the black hole external boundary, from...
  25. Z

    The Infalling Traveler's Perspective on Time and Mass in a Black Hole

    Consider a black hole with a radius of one light hour (as measured from outside, stationary observer), non rotating, having singularity in center, is radiating hawking radiation, and has no outside interference. Assume standard mathematical theory. Traveller A is falling towards hole from...
  26. Z

    Calculate the Gravity of a Black Hole

    Can I bring an old thread back to life? The last post in Gravity for a stellar black hole was in Mar-2008, but I have been looking for That Thread since 2000! Unfortunately for me, it raised more questions than answers. Thanks SamT Woops. The Username "SamT" is already taken, but it's been my...
  27. Green dwarf

    Quantum observation of black hole?

    [Moderator's note: this discussion has been spun off from another thread.] This is probably a silly idea, but I haven't got any reputation to preserve, so I'll mention it anyway. My very limited (and probably very wrong) understanding of quantum theory tells me that until something is...
  28. P

    Observing the event horizon of a black hole

    For an observer far away, nothing ever seems to actually cross the event horizon of a black hole, but to "freeze" right at the event horizon. Does this mean that if we could observe a black hole, we would be able to still see everything that has ever entered the black hole? Would every object...
  29. J

    Collision of massive star with black hole

    I saw somewhere a thread about a cow falling into a black hole. I don’t know why a cow, perhaps the OP was thinking about the Milky Way. With the cow example it is not clear to me what we are supposed to see when an object falls towards the event horizon. If time slows to infinity, does the...
  30. Nemika

    Mass of a Black Hole: Answers & Questions

    OK, so we know that there is a supermassive black hole at the center of every galaxy. But I want to ask where is the mass of a black hole actually. When the black hole is formed and if there is a supernova or hypernova then much of the mass is ejected out then how can we says black hole has a...
  31. J

    Why the Delay? Uncovering Black Hole Reactions

    Let's say I'm towing a black hole by using a spaceship, and a rope, and a mass that is attracting the black hole near its event horizon. Let's say the mass unfastens at some moment, and I'm watching everything carefully. Obviously I will notice that the mass has unfastened only after a long...
  32. MTd2

    Removing Static Black Hole Singularity without QM (paper)

    I thought of posting this on astrophysics or general relativity forums since it seems completely classical, but given the extraordinary claim, I am posting here. Note that one of the guys is a notable string theorist. http://arxiv.org/abs/1510.03396v1 Journey Beyond the Schwarzschild Black...
  33. J

    Why doesn't the vertical light beam get out of a black hole?

    For this we need a thought experiment: imagine you're on a gedanken planet manning a gedanken laser cannon, and it's pointing straight up. The light doesn't curve round, or slow down as it ascends, or fall down. It goes straight up. Now let's keep you safe in a bubble of artistic licence, and...
  34. Mark Lees

    Why does a black hole get bigger when it consumes mass?

    My very basic understanding of black holes leaves me with a question about why black holes increase in size, or rather, why does the event horizon increase in size. As I understand it, a black hole is a large amount of mass condensed into a such a small space that the amount of gravity produced...
  35. alphaj

    Relating Newton's Force to Black Holes (Calculation?)

    Homework Statement Muscle can be torn apart by a force of 100,000 N applied across an area of 1 m2. A 10 cm2 muscle therefore will be torn by a force of 100 N. If a student of average size were being lowered into a black hole of 1 solar mass, at about what distance from the hole's center will...
  36. Green dwarf

    I Where is the matter in a black hole?

    I understand that, as matter approaches the event horizon of a black hole, according to the time frame of someone outside the black hole, it would slow down and, after an infinite time, stop completely at the event horizon. So, if we could observe it, all this matter would be accumulating just...
  37. J

    Witness the Sky of an Accelerated Black Hole

    Let's put an observer hovering near the event horizon of a charged black hole. As the black hole is charged we can change its velocity from zero to 10 m/s in one second. But we can not send a message to the observer in one second. So the observer does not know that the black hole that he is...
  38. N

    How does gravity get out of a black hole?

    Forgive me if this is a dumb question. If nothing gets out of a black hole, how does the gravity get out?
  39. stevebd1

    Insights Time Dilation and Redshift for a Static Black Hole - Comments

    stevebd1 submitted a new PF Insights post Time Dilation and Redshift for a Static Black Hole Continue reading the Original PF Insights Post.
  40. J

    Mechanism to Prevent Mass Increase from Information Dumping into Black Holes

    Let's say I encode all the information in some book in a light beam. Then I put a black hole in the way of the beam. Mass and information of the black hole increase as the beam plunges in the black hole. But what if the black hole is moving very fast parallel to the beam? In this case the rest...
  41. RealTwistedTwin

    What happens to matter when it enters a black hole?

    There are many videos and articles about this topic (what it looks like if you fall into a black hole). I remember hearing that, inside the event horizon of a black hole, time has essentially stopped for an outside observer. However, if you fell into one that would mean that any amount of time...
  42. Harel

    A problem with polar coordinates and black hole

    Hey, I know that one doesn't work with polar coordinates (t,r,θ,φ) because they don't behave well in the event horizon. But my problem is with raidal null curves, if we take ds2=0 and dφ, dθ = 0 so we have When, if I'm correct, the + sign determine that it's outgoing and the - infalling, so...
  43. P

    Diameter in AU of a black hole with given mass?

    Homework Statement The Galaxy has a black hole with about 3 x 10^6 M☉. What is its diameter in AU? Homework Equations Not sure. The Attempt at a Solution 3,000,000 solar mass, but not sure how to figure out the diameter in AU. Let's see...diameter of the sun is 1,000,000km 3,000,000 x...
  44. J

    How can light be trapped in a black hole?

    I have learned that light has a constant speed of 299 792 458 m / s or C and that this speed cannot be changed by anything, how can a black hole "trap" light if this speed cannot change? Is it because time is also trapped, so a second lasts infinitely long?
  45. bcrowell

    Is caustic surface of an astrophysical black hole one event?

    MTW, p. 924, defines a caustic as a point where a null geodesic originating from the external universe enters a black hole's event horizon, remaining in the horizon afterward for some finite affine interval. (A null geodesic of this type is called a generator of the horizon.) They introduce this...
  46. Stephanus

    Can kinetic energy lead to black hole?

    Dear PF Forum, I have a question in mind. But I'm not sure if this belong to SR forum, cosmology or classical physics. So I post it here. And perhaps as some of you might have known before or thought it over. It's about kinetic energy. Supposed this... A rocket, with a rest mass 1 ton. And the...
  47. Physics Monkey

    BMS symmetries and black hole horizons

    I would like to discuss a bit this paper (http://arxiv.org/abs/1508.06577): BMS invariance and the membrane paradigm Robert F. Penna (Submitted on 26 Aug 2015) We reinterpret the BMS invariance of gravitational scattering using the membrane paradigm. BMS symmetries imply an infinite number of...
  48. nilesh_pat

    B Difference between a massive tornado and a black hole.

    What is the difference between a massive tornado and a black hole. With regards Nilesh
  49. marcus

    Stephen Hawking offers new resolution of black hole paradox

    Bee Hossenfelder was live-blogging from Stockholm Conference on BH info puzzle today Tuesday 25 August. Herewith: http://backreaction.blogspot.com/2015/08/hawking-proposes-new-idea-for-how.html The conference is 24-29 August. Hawking presented his idea Tuesday, based on joint work with Malcolm...
  50. Johnny Neutrons

    Black hole expansion in the LHC?

    Greetings, I am new to this forum and would like to present a discussion. If a miniscule black hole is created in the LHC. Is it probable the LHC is capable of creating more than one black hole during a single event collision? Considering fact and theory provided by credible research. Could...
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