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  • Shedding Light on Black Holespresented by Science@NASA

  • "Black holes" is one of the most highly searched terms about our universe.

  • There's a fascination with the idea of a region of space having a gravitational pull so strong,

  • nothing can escape its deadly grasp, not even a sliver of light.

  • Well, not quite. In fact, much of what we think we know about black holes turn out to be myths.

  • Myth 1 – All black holes are black. As this photograph from the Event Horizon telescope demonstrated,

  • light can be detected near a black hole's event horizon.

  • This is the boundary between normal space and the space affected by the black hole's gravity,

  • from which no escape is possible. Part of this light comes from the black hole's accretion disk,

  • a flat, pancake like structure composed of dust, gas and other debris.

  • Friction constantly moves the disk's material inward toward the event horizon.

  • Light also comes from jet streams which propel matter outward along the disk's north and south poles.

  • Myth 2: All black holes are about the same size.

  • Black holes actually come in several different sizes which are defined by their mass.

  • Small black holes are usually the result of a relatively short and violent collapse of a star.

  • Recent work suggests that Intermediate black holes are found in the nuclei of some active galaxies.

  • Super massive black holes on the other hand, are found at the center of nearly every galaxy.

  • Dr. Dan Evans, an Astrophysicist at NASA Headquarters says,

  • There's a direct relationship between the beginning of super massive black holes

  • and the beginning of their corresponding galaxy.

  • This strongly suggests the two were born about the same time and slowly grew in size together over billions of years.”

  • Myth 3: If you get within a few thousand miles of a black hole, its super gravity will pull you into its center.

  • It turns out you can get surprisingly close to a black hole.

  • If you approached a black hole with mass equal to our Sun's for example, you could get as close as tens of miles.

  • So imagine if we replaced our sun with a black hole of the same mass.

  • All of the planets would continue to revolve around it, at exactly the same speed and distance as they do now.

  • Myth 4: Once inside a black hole, nothing ever comes out.

  • Nope. It turns out that radiation can escape from a black hole.

  • One of Stephen Hawking's contributions was a theory that a black hole is not so dense in a quantum mechanical sense.

  • The slow leak of what's now known as Hawking radiation would, over time, cause the black hole to simply evaporate.

  • The image from the Event Horizon telescope confirmed

  • what Albert Einstein's general theory of relativity predicted over 100 years ago,

  • that a black hole's form is that of a perfect circle.

  • And as scientists learn even more about the properties of this gigantic cosmic mystery we call a black hole,

  • they'll be able to puncture even more myths.

  • To hear more true tales about black holes and other mysteries of the cosmos, visit science.nasa.gov

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