New research shows that black holes are not the ultimate destroyers that are often portrayed in popular culture. Instead, warm gas escaping from the clutches of enormous black holes could be one source of the chemical elements that make life possible. picked by AutumnLotus 1 year ago 0 comments edit related share science |
Astronomers can't see black holes. And they definitely can't go out and grab a piece of one to measure its mass. 0 comments edit related share plime.comSo how do they weigh them? picked by AutumnLotus 1 year ago |
Researchers from Duke University and the University of Cambridge think there is a way to determine whether some black holes are not actually black. Finding such an unmasked form of what physicists term a singularity "would shock the foundation of general relativity." picked by AutumnLotus 1 year ago 4 comments edit related share plime.com |
New research shows that black holes are not the ultimate destroyers that are often portrayed in popular culture. Instead, warm gas escaping from the clutches of enormous black holes could be one source of the chemical elements that make life possible. picked by dork 1 year ago 1 comments edit related share plime.com |
Spitzer Space Telescopes show that the vicinities around the black holes could be backing up with excess matter - the black holes just can’t consume it fast enough to clear the space. When this happens, the matter heats up, and releases a tremendous amount of energy. picked by 2manyusernames 2 years ago 0 comments edit related share plime.com |
![]() | syndication |
Astronomers have found an enormous hole in the Universe, nearly a billion light-years across, empty of both normal matter such as stars, galaxies, and gas, and the mysterious, unseen "dark matter." While earlier studies have shown holes, or voids, in the large-scale structure of the Universe, this new discovery dwarfs them all. picked by 2manyusernames 1 year ago 3 comments edit related share plime.com |
This Black Google Portal is easier on your eyes and saves energy. All search results are displayed on google.com with a black background and light text. picked by plimytheelder 2 years ago 2 comments edit related share plime.com |
The Black Keys are a blues band out of Akron, OH who have a distinctly gritty sound that is refreshing in todays over-produced industry. picked by donteatpoop 2 years ago 1 comments edit related share plime.com |
Scientists could generate a black hole as often as every second when the world's most powerful particle accelerator comes online in 2007. picked by afeldman 2 years ago 5 comments edit related share science |
A Humane Society in Idaho has banned adoptions of black cats, fearing they might be mistreated, or worse, on Halloween. picked by Caremel 2 years ago 4 comments edit related share weird |
Right now, the colour black, or “Kuro” in Japanese, is surprisingly enjoying widespread popularity in Japan. A trend so strong that we could even find an oh-so-hip black toilet paper. picked by muppet 1 year ago 8 comments edit related share plime.com |
The most energetic particles in the universe likely come from enormous black holes nestled in the restless hearts of traumatized galaxies, scientists say. Where these cosmic "bullets" originated has been a source of much speculation, with scientists proposing everything from gamma ray bursts to decaying dark matter. picked by AutumnLotus 11 months ago 1 comments edit related share plime.com |
Hundreds of "missing" black holes have been found lurking in dusty galaxies billions of light-years away. The finding is the first direct evidence that most, if not all, massive galaxies in the distant universe spent their youths constructing supermassive black holes at their cores. picked by AutumnLotus 12 months ago 6 comments edit related share plime.com |
Supermassive black holes can produce powerful winds that shape a galaxy and determine their own growth. The RIT team has, for the first time, observed the vertical launch of rotating winds from glowing disks of gas, known as accretion disks, surrounding supermassive black holes in the centers of galaxies. picked by AutumnLotus 11 months ago 2 comments edit related share plime.com |
A half-dozen hefty black holes hide out where they are least expected, in relatively skinny galaxies. The discovery implies galaxies don't need bulging bellies to harbor monstrous black holes. picked by AutumnLotus 9 months ago 0 comments edit related share science |
Black holes can't be seen, but they're detected by noting their effects on stars or gas around them. They're so dense that nothing, including light, escapes them. Only two classes of black holes are firmly established to exist: Stellar black holes typically weigh a few times the mass of the sun; supermassive black holes are loaded with millions or billions of solar masses. picked by AutumnLotus 6 months ago 0 comments edit related share science |
Hundreds of undetected black holes, each with a mass thousands of times greater than the Sun, might be stealthily roving our galaxy, ready to devour anything that crosses their paths. picked by AutumnLotus 9 months ago 2 comments edit related share science |
"The fate of stars that venture too close to black holes could be even more violent than previously believed." picked by deepchill 1 year ago 1 comments edit related share plime.com |
The biggest black holes in the universe might have grown within the bellies of giant stars, a new study suggests. If these hole-bearing "quasistars" exist, then they might be bright enough to see from across the universe. picked by AutumnLotus 10 months ago 0 comments edit related share plime.com |
Professor Hawking is renowned for his brilliant work in Quantum Gravity and constant study of Black Holes. One of his theories demonstrates that black holes emit radiation, later named as Hawking radiation. picked by pepersconc 1 year ago 4 comments edit related share science |