Should I be scared of black holes?

Black holes are one of the most fascinating occurences in the universe, but they are nothing to be afraid of. A rogue black hole
rogue black hole
A rogue black hole (also termed a free-floating (FFP), interstellar, nomad, orphan, unbound or wandering black hole) is an interstellar object without a host galactic group. They are caused by collisions between two galaxies or when the merging of two black holes is disrupted.
https://en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Rogue_black_hole
is not going to suddenly appear and destroy the earth, nor is the sun going to become a black hole. There is so much we don't know about black holes, and they should be studied, not feared.
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Why am I afraid of black holes?

Melanoheliophobia (from Greek melās, "black", and helios, "sun") is the fear of black holes, which are objects with such extreme mass and gravity that they consume even light itself. The phobia is often suffered by children after first learning about black holes and their effects out in space.
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Do we need to fear black holes?

*unless you're very bad at flying your spaceship. There's been a very welcome bump in interest surrounding black holes since the recent picture dropped. With it has come a corresponding swell in questions, including the “Why take a picture of a black hole?” topic we covered last week.
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Can black holes hurt you?

Although their gravity is stronger, the stretching force is weaker than it would be with a small black hole and it would not kill you. The bad news is that the event horizon marks the edge of the abyss. Nothing can escape from inside the event horizon, so you could not escape or report on your experience.
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What happens if a person goes into a black hole?

If you leapt heroically into a stellar-mass black hole, your body would be subjected to a process called 'spaghettification' (no, really, it is). The black hole's gravity force would compress you from top to toe, while stretching you at the same time… thus, spaghetti.
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What makes the Universe Terrifying?



Has anyone been in a Blackhole?

Fortunately, this has never happened to anyone — black holes are too far away to pull in any matter from our solar system.
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Where does a black hole take you?

By their calculations, quantum mechanics could feasibly turn the event horizon into a giant wall of fire and anything coming into contact would burn in an instant. In that sense, black holes lead nowhere because nothing could ever get inside. This, however, violates Einstein's general theory of relativity.
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What kills you in a black hole?

Black holes are the densest objects in the Universe, and you absolutely couldn't survive the crushing pressure. But that wouldn't be what kills you. What would kill you is an effect referred to – honestly – as 'spaghettification'. Imagine you're falling feet-first towards a black hole.
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What is a white black hole?

White holes are theoretical cosmic regions that function in the opposite way to black holes. Just as nothing can escape a black hole, nothing can enter a white hole. White holes were long thought to be a figment of general relativity born from the same equations as their collapsed star brethren, black holes.
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Would spaghettification hurt?

Either way, spaghettification leads to a painful conclusion. When the tidal forces exceed the elastic limits of your body, you'll snap apart at the weakest point, probably just above the hips. You'll see your lower half floating next to you, and you'll see it begin to stretch anew as tidal forces latch onto it.
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Will a black hole hit Earth?

Despite their abundance, there is no reason to panic: black holes will not devour Earth nor the Universe. It is incredibly unlikely that Earth would ever fall into a black hole. This is because, at a distance, their gravitational pull is no more compelling than a star of the same mass.
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What is the chance of a black hole hitting Earth?

In fact, if we're only considering a collision between a black hole and Earth, the odds are minuscule: about 1-in-40 billion over the history of the Earth, and about 1-in-1020 (or, written out, 1-in-100,000,000,000,000,000,000) with each passing year, or your odds of winning the lotto jackpot three times in a row.
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What phobias exist?

Common phobias include:
  • fear of spiders, or arachnophobia.
  • fear of flying in an airplane, or aviophobia.
  • fear of elevators, or elevatophobia.
  • fear of heights, or acrophobia.
  • fear of enclosed rooms, or claustrophobia.
  • fear of crowded public places, or agoraphobia.
  • fear of embarrassment, or katagelophobia.
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Are black hole scary?

In a The Conversation article where this description on black holes as scarier than a ghost originally came from, Professor Chris Impey of the University of Arizona wrote, black holes are scary for three reasons: a hungry beast in each galaxy, death caused by it, and supermassive black holes are considered strange.
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Can you survive a black hole?

Regardless of the explanation, we do know that it is highly unlikely that anyone entering a black hole would survive. Nothing escapes a black hole. Any trip into a black hole would be one way. The gravity is too strong and you could not go back in space and time to return home.
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Are black holes hot?

Black holes are freezing cold on the inside, but incredibly hot just outside. The internal temperature of a black hole with the mass of our Sun is around one-millionth of a degree above absolute zero.
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Are wormholes real?

Wormholes are shortcuts in spacetime, popular with science fiction authors and movie directors. They've never been seen, but according to Einstein's general theory of relativity, they might exist.
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Can we create wormholes?

To create a wormhole on Earth, we'd first need a black hole. This is problematic: creating a black hole just a centimetre across would require crushing a mass roughly equal to that of the Earth down to this tiny size. Plus, in the 1960s theorists showed that wormholes would be incredibly unstable.
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Are wormholes possible?

Einstein's theory of general relativity mathematically predicts the existence of wormholes, but none have been discovered to date. A negative mass wormhole might be spotted by the way its gravity affects light that passes by.
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Are white holes real?

The short answer, unfortunately, is no. White holes are really just something scientists have imagined — they could exist, but we've never seen one, or even seen clues that one may exist. For now, they are an idea. To put it simply, you can imagine a white hole as being a black hole in reverse.
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Does time stop in a black hole?

Time does stop at the event horizon of a black hole, but only as seen by someone outside the black hole. This is because any physical signal will get infinitely redshifted at the event horizon, thus never reaching the outside observer. Someone falling into a black hole, however, would not see time stop.
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Is time Travelling possible?

Yes, time travel is indeed a real thing. But it's not quite what you've probably seen in the movies. Under certain conditions, it is possible to experience time passing at a different rate than 1 second per second. And there are important reasons why we need to understand this real-world form of time travel.
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Can humans create a black hole?

To study the phenomenon more closely, physicists in Israel managed to create a lab-grown, analogue black hole using some thousand atoms. This faux black hole exhibited all properties of a black hole in the state in which it is believed to exist in space.
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Can anything escape a black hole?

According to Einstein's general theory of relativity, the gravity of a black hole is so intense that nothing can escape it.
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