How to destroy a black hole I Dead Planets Society

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  • Опубліковано 15 кві 2024
  • How do you destroy a black hole? Turns out they're pretty tough cookies.
    Kicking off a brand new series of Dead Planets Society, Chelsea Whyte and Leah Crane take on the universe's most powerful adversaries. With the help of their cosmic toolbelt and black hole astronomer Allison Kirkpatrick at the University of Kansas, they test all the destructive ideas they can think of.
    Whether it’s throwing masses of TNT at it, blasting it with a t-shirt gun full of white holes, loading it up with a multiverse worth of matter, or sending it back in time - they try everything to kill a black hole. Will they succeed?
    Dead Planets Society is a podcast that takes outlandish ideas about how to tinker with the cosmos - from punching a hole in a planet to unifying the asteroid belt to destroying the sun - and subjects them to the laws of physics to see how they fare.
    If you have a cosmic object you’d like to figure out how to destroy, email the team at deadplanets@newscientist.com. It may just feature in a later episode…
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  • Наука та технологія

КОМЕНТАРІ • 7

  • @NewScientist
    @NewScientist  Місяць тому

    Learn more about Dead Planets Society and our other podcasts here: www.newscientist.com/podcasts/

  • @chandanmazumdar1001
    @chandanmazumdar1001 Місяць тому

    Enjoying and really educative

  • @topdawgshadic
    @topdawgshadic Місяць тому +1

    Could a black hole spin itself apart?
    Could our universe come from an ultra massive black hole that was so big that the center ripped apart and expanded? It could explain inflation and universe flatness, because spinning flattens out.

    • @thetobyntr9540
      @thetobyntr9540 Місяць тому +1

      Since you can't accelerate anything to the speed of light it would be impossible. You'd need to somehow get something inside it spinning faster than the speed of light relative to the space it occupies.
      Black holes are also stuck in time from the universe's perspective so you'd have to wait an infinite time on the outside for any time to pass for the interior to accelerate. If you fell in and looked up you'd watch the universe in fast forward, and to the outside you'd appear to slow down and redshift. According to math I don't understand; space and time change places inside a black hole, so you could maybe get change and movement, or spacetime could somehow convert back to normal. I guess the space inside a black hole could expand if the universe exists in a multidimensional environment. The insanely dense and hot conditions in there could act like the early universe. It probably would never be able to interact with ours since this would have to happen after an infinite amount of time passes in our universe. I don't know if this would count as one since we don't understand where ours comes from, or what contains it though.

    • @topdawgshadic
      @topdawgshadic Місяць тому +1

      @@thetobyntr9540 - That is a pretty good reply.
      There was one thing that you said about something being inside the black hole that is faster than the speed of light; since gravity can pull space-time to make a black hole, could it pull it apart If it were the result of an ultra black hole's center being ripped apart?
      Is gravity the strongest in the center of a sphere or somewhere between the surface and center? Because the center has less material/mass compared to the area between.
      Does that make sense?

  • @tswan137
    @tswan137 Місяць тому

    Cosmic Zamboni 😂😂

  • @ronaldkemp3952
    @ronaldkemp3952 Місяць тому

    Take away her credit card privileges.