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People being sucked into a black hole

2021.12.30 05:35


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Theories vary wildly, but one thing is certain: Black holes themselves don't actually suck, but getting pulled in to one probably would. In the case of black holes, the pull is so strong that nothing – not even light – can escape. A black hole is so massive that time itself starts to warp. You wouldn't feel anything different as you fell in, but to anyone watching, you would appear to slow. Anyone caught in a black hole can expect to be "spaghettified" week's release of the first photo of a black hole, people the world over.



Human beings don't stand a chance. But before you go worrying over what it might feel like to be sucked into the gaping maw of a black hole, we've got news for you: Black holes are so lethal that you could die in a handful of ways before you even reach the event horizon. The supermassive black hole it featured, galaxy Messier 87’s Pōwehi, is billion times as massive as the Sun and looks like a vibrant, swirling pool . As you're sucked in to a black hole, time would bend in front of and behind you, allowing you to "see" into the past and www.adultted Reading Time: 5 mins.



What would happen if you got sucked into a black hole? From wormhole passages to white hole escape routes, no one knows for certain what lurks beyond a black hole’s event horizon – so choose. Human beings don't stand a chance. But before you go worrying over what it might feel like to be sucked into the gaping maw of a black hole, we've got news for you: Black holes are so lethal that you could die in a handful of ways before you even reach the event horizon. As you're sucked in to a black hole, time would bend in front of and behind you, allowing you to "see" into the past and future.



Or ever. Maybe even trying to imagine being in such a situation feels like writing yourself into a Doctor Who episode. But, for mathematicians, physicists, and other scientists attempting to understand cosmic strangeness in practical terms, these thought experiments are actually very useful. Which is why Hintz and his team were so curious about it. What we do know for certain is that if you spend too long near the Cauchy horizon — deliberating the senselessness of deep space, perhaps — gravity will stretch you to death.