Everything you need to know about the widely talked about “Black Hole”
Black
Hole is an extremely dense celestial body that has been theorized to exist in
the universe. The gravitational field of a black hole is so strong that, if the
body is large enough, nothing, including electromagnetic radiation, can escape
from its vicinity. The body is surrounded by a spherical boundary, called a
horizon, through which light can enter but not escape; it therefore appears
totally black.
PROPERTIES
In 1905
German-born American physicist Albert Einstein published his first paper
outlining the theory of relativity. It was ignored by most of the scientific
community. In 1916 he published his second major paper on relativity, which
altered mankind’s fundamental concepts of space and time.
The
black-hole concept was developed by the German astronomer Karl Schwarzschild in
1916 on the basis of physicist Albert Einstein’s general theory of relativity.
The radius of the horizon of a Schwarzschild black hole depends only on the
mass of the body, being 2.95 km (1.83 mi) times the mass of the body in solar
units (the mass of the body divided by the mass of the Sun). If a body is
electrically charged or rotating, Schwarzschild’s results are modified. An
“ergosphere” forms outside the horizon, within which matter is forced to rotate
with the black hole; in principle, energy can be emitted from the ergosphere.
According
to general relativity, gravitation severely modifies space and time near a
black hole. As the horizon is approached from outside, time slows down relative
to that of distant observers, stopping completely on the horizon. Once a body
has contracted within its Schwarzschild radius, it would theoretically collapse
to a singularity—that is, a dimensionless object of infinite density.
FORMATION
Stars
begin life as diffuse clouds of dust and gas. These clouds condense to form
stars, after which the stars can develop into a variety of objects, depending
on how much matter they contain. Stars that contain more matter experience the
effects of gravity more strongly and evolve into dense bodies, such as neutron
stars or even black holes.
Black
holes are thought to form during the course of stellar evolution. As nuclear
fuels are exhausted in the core of a star, the pressure associated with their
energy production is no longer available to resist contraction of the core to
ever-higher densities. Two new types of pressure, electron and neutron
pressure, arise at densities a million and a million billion times that of
water, respectively, and a compact white dwarf or a neutron star may form. If
the star is more than about five times as massive as the Sun, however, neither
electron nor neutron pressure is sufficient to prevent collapse to a black
hole.
Author of
the best-selling book A Brief History of Time, physicist Stephen Hawking has
strived to make difficult concepts in physics more accessible to the public.
His discoveries about gravitation are regarded as some of the most important
contributions to that area of physics since Albert Einstein introduced the
general theory of relativity in 1915.
In 1994
astronomers used the Hubble Space Telescope (HST) to uncover the first
convincing evidence that a black hole exists. They detected an accretion disk
(disk of hot, gaseous material) circling the center of the galaxy M87 with an
acceleration that indicated the presence of an object 2.5 to 3.5 billion times
the mass of the Sun. By 2000, astronomers had detected supermassive black holes
in the centers of dozens of galaxies and had found that the masses of the black
holes were correlated with the masses of the parent galaxies. More massive
galaxies tend to have more massive black holes at their centers. Learning more
about galactic black holes will help astronomers learn about the evolution of
galaxies and the relationship between galaxies, black holes, and quasars.
The
English physicist Stephen Hawking has suggested that many black holes may have
formed in the early universe. If this were so, many of these black holes could
be too far from other matter to form detectable accretion disks, and they could
even compose a significant fraction of the total mass of the universe. For
black holes of sufficiently small mass it is possible for only one member of an
electron-positron pair near the horizon to fall into the black hole, the other
escaping (see X Ray: Pair Production). The resulting radiation carries off
energy, in a sense evaporating the black hole. Any primordial black holes
weighing less than a few thousand million metric tons would have already
evaporated, but heavier ones may remain.
The
American astronomer Kip Thorne of California Institute of Technology in
Pasadena, California, has evaluated the chance that black holes can collapse to
form 'wormholes,' connections between otherwise distant parts of the universe.
He concludes that an unknown form of 'exotic matter' would be necessary for
such wormholes to survive.
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