Author Topic: black holes  (Read 4106 times)

Offline Ardy123

  • Gold Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 3417
Re: black holes
« Reply #45 on: March 29, 2011, 05:08:19 PM »
They believe that at the center of every galaxy is a blackhole. My theory is that every blackhole is like beads of water on a waxed car hood. Over the emmense scale of time, the larger beads (blackholes) suck up the smaller ones until there is just one huge blackhole containing everything, all gas, matter, etc in the universe. In a fraction of a second that blackhole explodes in a BIG BANG and the cycle starts all over again.

Not true, the challenge for 30 years with Black Holes has been....
1) Until recently Hawking's formulas indicated that mass as destroyed by them which violates our current understanding of physics
2) There is a singularity with matter itsself, how does it all originate and from what? nothing?


Both of these issues have been recently 'solved' by the use of 'm-theory' in which our universe is not of one but rather part of an infinite number of universes and that matter is transferring between them. M-Theory breaks things down to the 11 dimensions in which if you view everything as a series of membranes, that have a wave like pattern. When the waves of a membrane collied with another wave from another membrane you get  a 'big bang' and an explosion of matter in that universe.

M-Theory was developed out of string theory but unlike string theory which argued that there were 10 dimensions, m-theory argues that there are actually 11.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M-theory
Yeah, that's right, you just got your rear handed to you by a fuggly puppet!
==Army of Muppets==
(Bunnies)

Offline caldera

  • Platinum Member
  • ******
  • Posts: 6437
Re: black holes
« Reply #46 on: March 29, 2011, 05:14:28 PM »
"Why don't you just make 10 louder?"

           "These go to eleven."
"Then out spake brave Horatius, the Captain of the gate:
 To every man upon this earth, death cometh soon or late.
 And how can man die better, than facing fearful odds.
 For the ashes of his fathers and the temples of his Gods."

Offline RTHolmes

  • Plutonium Member
  • *******
  • Posts: 8260
Re: black holes
« Reply #47 on: March 29, 2011, 05:35:32 PM »
 :lol :aok
71 (Eagle) Squadron

What most of us want to do is simply shoot stuff and look good doing it - Chilli

Offline curry1

  • Gold Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 2321
Re: black holes
« Reply #48 on: March 29, 2011, 05:51:44 PM »
Nova, supernova and hypernova are energetic scales for an "explosive" events in a dying star. The different amount of energies involved relate to different processes that produce these events. Nova is a nuclear explosion due to accretion of material onto a compact object like a neutron star. Supernova is the way some stars end their lives and there are several kinds that depend on the exact scenario. Sometimes it destroys the star completely, sometimes it leaves a neutron star. Hypernova is an even more energetic supernova. It is not exactly clear what happens there, but the common idea is that this is how particularily massive stars end their short lives by collapsing straight into a black hole. It is usually under the broad definition of a supernova.
The cartoon intent is only to give a rough illustration and combine different pieces of information  into one picture we can keep in our heads. The details in it are far from consensus among astronomers, but they agree on the broad picture of it. Astronomy (and science in general) has developed tools to investigate things that cannot be imaged by a camera. In the case of active galactic nuclear (AGN) the elements in the picture represent a large amount of investigations using spectroscopy, timing analysis and statistical surveys.

Example:
Astronomers see broadened spectral lines that indicate velocity dispersion of 1000s km/sec. These must come from "things" close to a very compact gravitational source (nothing else can create such a dispersion) - depicted as clouds in what is called the "broad line region". From analysis of the variation in brightness in time astronomers know the distance between the central bright light source and reflecting clouds around it - echoes of these variations are seen in the reflected light. From the statistics of how many of these objects appear highly obscured and in how many the light reaches us without much in the way we know that there is thick material around the central source that cover a certain fraction of the sphere around it (depicted as a torus in the images). and so on.



I always thought that large stars went supernova and all of the gas and debris shot out into space the gravity from whatever was left of the star pulled in all of the debris and mostly Neutrons from the fusion explosions.  Those neutrons accumulate until they form a neutron star and as soon as that star reaches a certain diameter it has so much mass in such a small area that it turns into a black hole.
Curry1-Since Tour 101

Offline bozon

  • Platinum Member
  • ******
  • Posts: 6037
Re: black holes
« Reply #49 on: March 29, 2011, 06:44:28 PM »
To maintain a neutron star as such a huge pressure is needed. Free neutrons (outside of a nucleus) decay into an electron and proton quite quickly. In high enough density, the pressure is supported not by regular collision of the particles, but by Fermi pressure - this is due to the limited number of quantum states per unit volume. Simply all the quantum states are occupied.

In the core of massive enough stars, when the fuel starts to run out, electrons and protons can combine to form neutrons. In such conditions, the neutron cannot decay back into a proton and electron because the electron does not have an available quantum state to be in. The result is a neutron core which is all that is left of the core of the star when the outer envelopes are blown away in the supernova. The neutron star is so dense (more than a ton per cc) that it can maintain this pressure under its own gravity.

To create a black hole an even stronger pressure is needed. If the mass of the neutron core is much higher than 4 solar masses then it will likely unable to support itself and collapse into a black hole. This can happen due to neutron star mergers, accretion or simply the progenitor star is massive enough to have such a heavy and dense core.
Mosquito VI - twice the spitfire, four times the ENY.

Click!>> "So, you want to fly the wooden wonder" - <<click!
the almost incomplete and not entirely inaccurate guide to the AH Mosquito.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RGOWswdzGQs

Offline Penguin

  • Persona Non Grata
  • Gold Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 3089
Re: black holes
« Reply #50 on: March 29, 2011, 07:08:14 PM »
Dear dedalos,

The jets generated by the black hole never "escaped the inescapable" because they never crossed the event horizon.  Furthermore, you have misinterpreted Occam's razor:

It requires two assumptions; that the hypothesis cannot be proved directly, and that the set of possibilities is finite.  The obserever makes puts the hypotheses in a list according to complexity, and chooses the least complex solution for further testing.

Occam's razor is flawed, in that it invokes the Black Swan Paradox.  The set of possibilities is actually always infinite.  Occam's razor cannot prove that something is, but prove that something is the most likely.  It is not a "sound" piece of logic (deductive logic), but rather a tool for triaging what needs attention.

Moot, that implies that the gravitational field only exists or is stronger at a disk at the equator and weaker at the poles.  How is that possible?  Also, how do they know so match and have been able to create illustrations of something they can not see but only speculate that it is there?  I am not saying they do not exist.  Just asking how could they explain and illustrate something they only "know" it is there by observing the surroundings.  This is just everything else.  It will be a fact until they discover something else.

Hawking s latest is that black holes eventually disappear and what ever matter they have devoured also disappears with them.  Again, no observation.  Just speculation using a lot of math and even more made up constants.  Tomorrow, the facts will be something else.

The matter does not "dissapear", that violates a law of thermodynamics "Energy cannot be destroyed".  Matter is a concentrated form of energy (hence E=mc2).  Black holes convert the absorbed matter into energy, and then release it as radiation.   

dedalos, please do your research first, then try to make an argument.  I know you're not trying to, but you're behaving like a troll.  Yes, this is coming from someone with the exact same problem.  This is why I know why you post the way you do.  Relax, it's better to close your mouth and be thought a fool than to open it and prove it to the world.

-Penguin

Offline RTHolmes

  • Plutonium Member
  • *******
  • Posts: 8260
Re: black holes
« Reply #51 on: March 29, 2011, 08:02:43 PM »
penguin, the smartest kids ask the most questions, not try and tell you what they know. just sayin :)
71 (Eagle) Squadron

What most of us want to do is simply shoot stuff and look good doing it - Chilli

Offline Penguin

  • Persona Non Grata
  • Gold Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 3089
Re: black holes
« Reply #52 on: March 29, 2011, 08:04:18 PM »
penguin, the smartest kids ask the most questions, not try and tell you what they know. just sayin :)

I'm smart, but I can't read well between the lines.  Would you care to elaborate?  Are you saying that I am wrong?

-Penguin

Offline moot

  • Plutonium Member
  • *******
  • Posts: 16333
      • http://www.dasmuppets.com
Re: black holes
« Reply #53 on: March 29, 2011, 09:24:17 PM »
Nova, supernova and hypernova are energetic scales for an "explosive" events in a dying star. The different amount of energies involved relate to different processes that produce these events.
From Project Rho's Boom Table:

Joules (J)      TNT Equivalent      Notes
0.0 x 1000   Big Bang (interpretation one)
1.0 x 1002   Firecracker
1.4 x 1003   kinetic energy of a 3.5 g AK-74 bullet fired at 900 m/s
3.3 x 1003   kinetic energy of a 9.33 g NATO rifle cartridge fired at 838 m/s
4.184 x 10031 gram= 1 microton
1.3 x 100531 gramsAnti-personnel land mine
2.1 x 100550 gramsSingle round of depleted uranium from an A-10 Warthog's GAU-8 rotating cannon (1,800 rpm)
8.4 x 1005200 grams1 stick TNT
9.5 x 1005226 gramsHand grenade
6.1 x 10061.4 kilogram120mm Tank Gun KE Ammunition (KEW-A1)
2.1 x 10075 kgAnti-tank mine
3.9 x 1007   Impact energy of proposed Navy 64 megajoule railgun
1.2 x 100828 kg1 gallon of gasoline
1.8 x 100843 kg1 microgram of antimatter + 1 microgram of matter
5.3 x 1008127 kgBattleship Iowa 16 inch shell with 54 kg high explosive charge
8.5 x 1008203 kg1 second of output from an average commercial nuclear power reactor (850 MW)
1.9 x 1009454 kgTomahawk cruise missile (TLAM-C)
4.184 x 10091 ton   
8.4 x 10092 t= 0.002 kiloton, Oklahoma City bombing
2.0 x 10104.8 tAverage lightning bolt
3.6 x 10108.6tAverage tornado
4.2 x 101010 t= 0.01 kiloton, Davy Crockett tactical nuclear weapon
5.0 x 101012 tyield energy of a MOAB (Massive Ordnance Air Blast) bomb, the second most powerful non-nuclear weapon ever designed
1.8 x 101143 t1 milligram of antimatter + 1 milligram of matter
1.8 x 101144 tyield energy of a ATBIP (Aviation Thermobaric Bomb of Increased Power) bomb, the most powerful non-nuclear weapon ever designed
4.184 x 10121 kiloton= 1000 tons
1.5 x 1013   1 second of the total power consumption of the human world in the year 2004
2.0 x 1013   1 second of power generated between the surfaces of Jupiter and its moon Io due to Jupiter's magnetic field
3.6 x 10131 ktenergy released by an average thunderstorm
4.4 x 1013   1 second of total heat flux from earth's interior
4.6 x 101311 ktRelativistic weapon: 1 gram at 75% c
6.3 x 101315 kt1 Hiroshima "Little Boy"
8.8 x 101321 ktNagasaki "Fat Man"
1.2 x 101429 ktRelativistic weapon: 1 gram at 90% c
1.8 x 101443 kt1 gram of antimatter + 1 gram of matter
4.2 x 1014100 ktW76 warhead
5.5 x 1014132 ktRelativistic weapon: 1 gram at 99% c
6.0 x 1014143 ktenergy released by an average hurricane in one second
1.3 x 1015300 ktW87 warhead
1.4 x 1015338 ktEarthquake 6.9 on the Richter scale
1.4 x 1015   1 second of total heat flux transported by the Gulf Stream
1.9 x 1015454 ktRelativistic weapon: 1 gram at 99.9% c
2.0 x 1015475 ktW88 warhead
2.0 x 1015477 ktEarthquake 7.0 on the Richter scale
2.1 x 1015500 ktIvy King device (largest pure fission device ever made)
4.0 x 1015   1 second of total heat flux transported by earth's atmosphere and oceans away from the equator towards the poles
« Last Edit: March 29, 2011, 09:47:11 PM by moot »
Hello ant
running very fast
I squish you

Offline moot

  • Plutonium Member
  • *******
  • Posts: 16333
      • http://www.dasmuppets.com
Re: black holes
« Reply #54 on: March 29, 2011, 09:24:48 PM »
4.184 x 1015   1 megaton   67 Hiroshimas
5.0 x 10151.2 MtMaximum yield of B83 nuclear bomb (most powerful U.S. weapon in active service)
6.3 x 10151.5 MtRelativistic weapon: 1 gram at 99.99% c
1.5 x 10163.5 Mt1 Barringer Meteor Crater
3.8 x 10169 MtB53 nuclear bomb (most powerful US warhead; no longer in active service)
4.4 x 101610.4 MtEniwetok
4.6 x 101611 Mt   Relativistic weapon: 1 kilogram at 75% c
6.3 x 101615 MtCastle Bravo device (Bikini Atoll) (most powerful US test)
6.3 x 101615 Mt   1 Tunguska event = 4.3 Barringer Meteor Craters
6.3 x 101615 MtEarthquake 8.0 on the Richter scale
1.0 x 101724 Mt   total energy output of a Type-I civilization (Kardashev scale) each second
1.1 x 101725 Mt1 "city killer" nuclear warhead
1.1 x 101725 Mt   Maximum yield of B41 bomb (most powerful US bomb; no longer in active service)
1.1 x 101725 Mt   Mount St. Helens = 1.6 Tunguskas
1.2 x 101729 MtRelativistic weapon: 1 kilogram at 90% c
1.3 x 101731 Mt   energy released by an average hurricane in one day
1.7 x 101742 Mttotal energy from the Sun that strikes the face of the Earth each second
1.8 x 101743 Mt   1 kilogram of antimatter + 1 kilogram of matter
2.1 x 101750 Mt   Tsar Bomba device (USSR, most powerful nuclear test ever)
3.6 x 101785 Mt   Earthquake 8.5 on the Richter scale
5.0 x 1017120 MtEarthquake 8.6 on the Richter scale
5.5 x 1017132 MtRelativistic weapon: 1 kilogram at 99% c
6.3 x 1017150 Mt1 Krakatoa = 6 Mount St. Helens
7.1 x 1017161 MtEarthquake 8.7 on the Richter scale
1.0 x 1018239 MtEarthquake 8.8 on the Richter scale
1.9 x 1018454 MtRelativistic weapon: 1 kilogram at 99.9% c
2.0 x 1018477 MtEarthquake 9.0 on the Richter scale
2.5 x 1018600 Mt1 Thera = 6 Krakatoas
2.8 x 1018674 MtEarthquake 9.1 on the Richter scale
4.0 x 1018952 MtEarthquake 9.2 on the Richter scale
4.0 x 1018   energy released by the 2004 Indian Ocean earthquake (between 9.1 and 9.3 on the Richter scale)
4.184 x 10181 gigaton= 1000 megatons
6.3 x 10181.5 GtRelativistic weapon: 1 kilogram at 99.99% c
1.1 x 10193 GtEarthquake 9.5 on the Richter scale
1.8 x 102043 Gt1 metric ton of antimatter + 1 metric ton of matter
4.184 x 10211 teraton= 1000 gigatons = 1e6 megatons
1.5 x 10224 Tttotal energy from the Sun that strikes the face of the Earth each day
2.5 x 10226 Tt1 Shoemaker-Levy = 10,000 Theras
1.4 x 102333 Tt   total energy output of Wolf 359 each second (bolometric luminosity)
2.0 x 102348 Tt   Solar flare
3.4 x 102380 Tt   = 80,000 gigatons = 8e7 megatons, 1 Dinosaur Killer = 13 Shoemaker-Levys
5.0 x 1023120 Tt1 Chicxulub Crater = 20 Shoemaker-Levys
3.0 x 1024720 Tt1 Wilkes Land crater = 6 Chicxulub Craters
« Last Edit: March 29, 2011, 11:15:13 PM by moot »
Hello ant
running very fast
I squish you

Offline moot

  • Plutonium Member
  • *******
  • Posts: 16333
      • http://www.dasmuppets.com
Re: black holes
« Reply #55 on: March 29, 2011, 09:25:54 PM »
4.184 x 1024   1 petaton            = 1000 teratons
5.5 x 10241 Pt   total energy from the Sun that strikes the face of the Earth each year
3.2 x 102677 PtEnergy required blow off Terra's atmosphere into space
3.9 x 102692 Pttotal energy output of the Sun each second (bolometric luminosity)
4.0 x 102696 Pt   total energy output of a Type-II civilization (Kardashev scale) each second
6.6 x 1026158 PtEnergy required to heat all the oceans of Terra to boiling
4.184 x 10271 exaton= 1000 petatons
4.5 x 10271 EtEnergy required to vaporize all the oceans of Terra into the atmosphere
7.0 x 10272 EtEnergy required to vaporize all the oceans of Terra and dehydrate the crust
2.9 x 10287 EtEnergy required to melt the (dry) crust of Terra
1.0 x 102924 EtEnergy required blow off Terra's oceans into space
2.1 x 102950 EtEarth's rotational energy
1.5 x 1030359 EtEnergy required blow off Terra's crust into space
4.184 x 10301 zettaton= 1000 exatons
2.9 x 10317 ZtEnergy required to blow up Terra (reduce to gravel orbiting the sun)
3.3 x 10318 Zttotal energy output of the Sun each day
3.3 x 10318 Zttotal energy output of Beta Centauri each second (bolometric luminosity)
5.9 x 103114 ZtEnergy required to blow up Terra (reduce to gravel flying out of former orbit)
1.2 x 103229 Zt   total energy output of Deneb each second (bolometric luminosity)
2.9 x 103269 Zt   Energy required to blow up Terra (reduce to gravel and move pieces to infinity)
4.184 x 10331 yottaton   = 1000 zettatons
1.2 x 10343 Yt   total energy output of the Sun each year
4.184 x 10361 x 1027 tons= 1,000 yottatons
5.0 x 10361.2 x 1027 tonstotal energy output of the Milky Way galaxy each second (bolometric luminosity)
4.0 x 10379.6 x 1027 tonstotal energy output of a Type-III civilization (Kardashev scale) each second
6.0 x 10371.4 x 1028 tonsNova Persei
1.2 x 10382.9 x 1028 tonstotal energy output of the Sun in ten thousand years
4.184 x 10391 x 1030 tons= 1,000,000 yottatons
1.0 x 10402.0 x 1030 tonsone second's worth of output from a quasar
1.0 x 10422.7 x 1032 tonsEnergy in photons from a type I supernova = 0.01 foe
1.0 x 10422.7 x 1032 tonstotal energy output of the Local Supercluster each second (bolometric luminosity)
4.184 x 10421 x 1033 tons= 1,000,000,000 yottatons
3.0 x 10437.0 x 1033 tonsEnergy needed to make the local superbubble (Supernova Geminga) = 0.3 foe
1.0 x 1044   1 Foe (ten to the Fifty-One Ergs, unit of supernova strength)
1.0 x 10442.4 x 1034 tonsEnergy in neutrinos from a type I supernova = 1 foe = 2.4 x 1034 tons
1.3 x 10443.1 x 1034 tonsTotal radiant energy from the Sun (approximately ten billion years worth)
3.0 x 10447.2 x 1034 tonsEnergy in photons from a type II supernova = 1.3 foes
1.0 x 10452.4 x 1035 tonsGamma-ray burster = 10 foes
1.0 x 10462.0 x 1036 tonsEnergy in photons from a hypernova = 100 foes
3.0 x 10467.0 x 1036 tonsEnergy in neutrinos from a type II supernova = 300 foes
1.0 x 10482.4 x 1038 tonsEnergy in neutrinos from a hypernova = 10,000 foes
2.0 x 10494.8 x 1039 tonstotal energy output of all the stars in the observable universe each second (bolometric luminosity)
3.0 x 1069   Big Bang (interpretation two)
« Last Edit: March 29, 2011, 09:35:33 PM by moot »
Hello ant
running very fast
I squish you

Offline dunnrite

  • Silver Member
  • ****
  • Posts: 909
Re: black holes
« Reply #56 on: March 30, 2011, 07:47:02 AM »
I'm smart, but I can't read well between the lines.  Would you care to elaborate?  Are you saying that I am wrong?

-Penguin

I think he's trying to say that you're the most annoying know-it-all kid this BBS has seen in a long time (possibly ever).

Maybe that's just my interpretation.
Amazing you could actually recruit that much suck into one squad.
Your Proctologist called, they found your head.

Offline VonMessa

  • Plutonium Member
  • *******
  • Posts: 11922
Re: black holes
« Reply #57 on: March 30, 2011, 08:29:02 AM »
I thought a bolt of lightning was 1.21 Gigawattts?    :headscratch:
Braümeister und Schmutziger Hund von JG11


We are all here because we are not all there.

Offline dedalos

  • Plutonium Member
  • *******
  • Posts: 8052
Re: black holes
« Reply #58 on: March 30, 2011, 08:41:16 AM »

Example:
Astronomers see broadened spectral lines that indicate velocity dispersion of 1000s km/sec. These must come from "things" close to a very compact gravitational source (nothing else can create such a dispersion That we know of) - depicted as clouds in what is called the "broad line region". From analysis of the variation in brightness in time astronomers think theyknow the distance between the central bright light source and reflecting clouds around it - echoes of these variations are seen in the reflected light. From the statistics of how many of these objects appear highly obscured and in how many the light reaches us without much in the way we know that there is thick material around the central source that cover a certain fraction of the sphere around it (depicted as a torus in the images). and so on.



OK, I ll ask you then.  Do you think they know and understand everything that describes a black hole, its creation and its behavior?  And if they do, why can't they come into agreement with each other?
Quote from: 2bighorn on December 15, 2010 at 03:46:18 PM
Dedalos pretty much ruined DA.

Offline thundabooge

  • Copper Member
  • **
  • Posts: 178
Re: black holes
« Reply #59 on: March 30, 2011, 09:16:22 AM »
I thought a bolt of lightning was 1.21 Gigawattts?    :headscratch:

 :lol :lol :lol
LT ThundaJB  VF-17 Jolly Rogers  Currently on R&R in Australia

You called down the Thunda, well now you've got it! You tell 'em I'M coming... and hell's coming with me, you hear?... HELL'S COMING WITH ME!!!