325 lines
16 KiB
Plaintext
325 lines
16 KiB
Plaintext
Combat Arms
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2869 Grove Way
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Castro Valley, California 94546-6709
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Telephone (415) 538-6544
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The following material was downloaded from the NASA SpaceLink
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BBS at the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, George C.
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Marshall Space Flight Center, Marshall Space Flight Center, Alabama
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35812 on 11/16/88.
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B L A C K H O L E S I N S P A C E
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There is much more to black holes than meets the eye. In fact,
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your eyes, even with the aid of the most advanced telescope, will
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never see a black hole in space. The reason is that the matter
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within a black hole is so dense and has so great a gravitational pull
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that it prevents even light from escaping.
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Like other electromagnetic radiation (radio waves, infrared
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rays, ultraviolet radiation, X-rays, and gamma radiation), light is
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the fastest traveler in the Universe. It moves at nearly 300,000
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kilometers (about 186,000 miles) per second. At such a speed, you
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could circle the Earth seven times between heartbeats.
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If light can't escape a black hole, it follows that nothing else
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can. Consequently, there is no direct way to detect a black hole.
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In fact, the principal evidence of the existence of black holes
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comes not from observation but from solutions to complex equations
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based on Einstein's Theory of General Relativity. Among other
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things, the calculations indicate that black holes may occur in a
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variety of sizes and be more abundant than most of us realize.
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MINI BLACK HOLES
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Some black holes are theorized to be nearly as old as the Big
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Bang, which is hypothesized to have started our Universe 10 to 20
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billion years ago. The rapid early expansion of some parts of the
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dense hot matter in this nascent Universe is said to have so
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compressed less rapidly moving parts that the latter became
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superdense and collapsed further, forming black holes. Among the
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holes so created may be the submicroscopic mini-black holes.
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A mini-black hole may be as small as an atomic particle but
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contain as much mass (material) as Mount Everest. Never
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underestimate the power of a mini-black hole. If some event caused
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it to decompress, it would be as if millions of hydrogen bombs were
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simultaneously detonated.
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HOW STARS DIE
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The most widespread support is given to the theory that a black
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hole is the natural end product of a giant star's death. According
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to this theory, a star like our Sun and others we see in the sky
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lives as long as thermal energy and radiation from nuclear reactions
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in its core provide sufficient outward pressure to counteract the
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inward pressure of gravity caused by the star's own great mass.
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When the star exhausts its nuclear fuels, it succumbs to the
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forces of its own gravity and literally collapses inward. According
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to equations derived from quantum mechanics and Einstein's Theory of
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General Relativity, the star's remaining mass determines whether it
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becomes a white dwarf, a neutron star, or black hole.
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WHITE DWARFS
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Stars are usually measured in comparison with our Sun's mass. A
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star whose remaining mass is about that of our Sun condenses to
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approximately the size of Earth. The star's contraction is halted by
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the collective resistance of electrons pressed against each other and
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their atomic nuclei. Matter in this collapsed star is so tightly
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packed that a piece the size of a sugar cube would weigh thousands of
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kilograms. Gravitational contraction would also have made the star
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white hot. It is appropriately called a white dwarf.
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Astronomers have detected white dwarfs in space. The first
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discovery was a planet-sized object that seemed to exert a
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disproportionately high gravitational effect upon a celestial
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companion, the so call dog star Sirius, which is about 2.28 times our
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Sun's mass. It appeared that this planet-sized object would have to
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be about as massive as our Sun to affect Sirius as it did. Moreover,
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spectral analysis indicated the star's color was white.
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Based upon these and other studies, astronomers concluded that
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they had found a white dwarf. However, it took many years after the
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discovery in 1914 before most scientists accepted the fact that an
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object thousands of times denser than anything possible on Earth
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could exist.
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NEUTRON STARS AND SUPERNOVAS
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Giant stars usually lose most of their mass during their normal
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lifetimes. If such a star still retains 1 1/2 to 3 solar masses
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after exhaustion of its nuclear fuels, it would collapse to even
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greater density and smaller size than the white dwarf. The reason is
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that there is a limit on the amount of compression electrons can
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resist in the presence of atomic nuclei.
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In this instance, the limit is breached. Electrons are
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literally driven into atomic nuclei, mating with protons to form
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neutrons and thus transmuting nuclei into neutrons. The resulting
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object is aptly called a neutron star. It may be only a few
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kilometers in diameter. A sugar-cube size piece of this star would
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weigh about one-half a trillion kilograms.
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Sometimes, as electrons are driven into protons in atomic
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nuclei, neutrinos are blown outward so forcefully that they blast off
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the star's outer layer. This creates a supernova that may
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temporarily outshine all of the other stars in a galaxy.
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The most prominent object believed to be a neutron star is the
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Crab Nebula, the remnant of a supernova observed and reported by
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Chinese astronomers in 1504. A star-like object in the nebula
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blinks, or pulses, about 30 times per second in visible light, radio
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waves, and X and gamma rays. The radio pulses are believed to result
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from interaction between a point on the spinning star and the star's
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magnetic field. As the star rotates, this point is theorized
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alternately to face and be turned away from Earth. The fast rotation
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rate implied by the interval between pulses indicates the star is no
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more than a few kilometers in diameter because if it were larger, it
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would be torn apart by centrifugal force.
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PULSARS
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Radio telescopes have detected a large number of other objects
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which send out naturally pulsed radio signals. They were named
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pulsars. Like the object in the Crab Nebula, they are presumed to be
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rotating neutron stars.
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Of these pulsars, only the Vela pulsar--which gets its name
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because of its location in the Vela (Sails) constellation--pulses at
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wavelengths shorter than radio. Like the Crab pulsar, the Vela
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pulsar also pulses at optical and gamma ray wavelengths. However,
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unlike the Crab pulsar, it is not an X-ray pulsar. Aside from the
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mystery generated by these differences, scientists also debate the
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reasons for the pulses at gamma, X-ray and optical frequencies. As
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noted earlier, they agree on the origin of the radio pulses.
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BLACK HOLES
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When a star has three or more solar masses left after it
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exhausts its nuclear fuels, it can become a black hole.
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Like the white dwarf and neutron star, this star's density and
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gravity increase with contraction. Consequently, the star's
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gravitational escape velocity (speed needed to escape from the star)
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increases. When the star has shrunk to the Schwarzschild radius,
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named for the man who first calculated it, its gravitational escape
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velocity would be nearly 300,000 kilometers per second, which is
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equal to the speed of light. Consequently, light could never leave
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the star.
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Reduction of a giant star to the Schwarzschild radius represents
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an incredible compression of mass and decrease in size. As an
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example, mathematicians calculate that for a star of 10 solar masses
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(ten times the mass of our Sun) after exhaustion of its nuclear
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fuels, the Schwarzschild radius is about 30 kilometers.
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---------------------------------------------------------------------
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According to the Law of General Relativity, space and time are
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warped, or curved, by gravity. Time is theorized TO POINT INTO THE
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BLACK HOLE FROM ALL DIRECTIONS. To leave a black hole, an object,
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even light would have to go backward in time. Thus, anything falling
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into a black hole would disappear from our Universe.
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---------------------------------------------------------------------
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The Schwarzschild radius becomes the black hole's "event
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horizon", the hole's boundary of no return. Anything crossing the
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event horizon can never leave the black hole. Within the event
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horizon, the star continues to contract until it reaches a space-time
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singularity, which modern science cannot easily define. It may be
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considered a state of infinite density in which matter loses all of
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its familiar properties.
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Theoretically, it may take less than a second for a star to
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collapse into black hole. However, because of relativistic effects,
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we could never see such an event. This is because, as demonstrated
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by comparison of clocks on spacecraft with clocks on Earth, gravity
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can slow, perhaps even stop, time. The gravity of the collapsing
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star would slow time so much that we would see the star collapsing
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for as long as we watched.
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Once a black hole has been formed, it crushes into a singularity
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anything crossing its event horizon. As the black hole devours
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matter, its event horizon expands. This expansion is limited only by
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the availability of matter. Incredibly vast black holes that harbor
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the crushed remains of billions of solar masses are theoretically
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possible.
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Evidence that such superdense stars as white dwarfs and neutron
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stars do exist has supported the idea that black holes, representing
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what may be the ultimate in density, must also exist. Potential
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black holes, stars with three or more times the mass of our Sun,
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pepper the sky. But how can astronomers detect a black hole?
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HOW BLACK HOLES MAY BE INDIRECTLY DETECTED
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Scientists found indirect ways of doing so. The methods depends
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upon black holes being members of binary star systems. A binary star
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system consists of two stars comparatively near to and revolving
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about each other. Unlike our Sun, most stars exist in pairs.
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If one of the stars in a binary system had become a black hole,
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the hole would betray its existence, although invisible, by its
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gravitational effects upon the other star. These effects would be in
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accordance with Newton's Law: attractions of two bodies to each other
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are directly proportional to the square of the distance between them.
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The reason is that outside of its event horizon, a black hole's
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gravity is the same as other objects'.
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Scientists also have determined that a substantial part of the
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energy of matter spiraling into a black hole is converted by
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collision, compression, and heating into X- and gamma rays displaying
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certain spectral characteristics. The radiation is from the material
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as it is pulled across the hole's event horizon, its radiation cannot
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escape.
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WORMHOLES
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Some scientists speculate that matter going into a black hole
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may survive. Under special circumstances, it might be conducted via
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passages called "wormholes" to emerge in another time or another
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universe. Black holes are theorized to play relativistic tricks with
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space and time.
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NASA ORBITING OBSERVATORY OBSERVATIONS
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Black hole candidates--phenomena exhibiting black hole
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effects--have been discovered and studied through such NASA
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satellites as the Small Astronomy Satellites (SAS) and the much
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larger Orbiting Astronomical Observatories (OAO) and High Energy
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Astronomical Observatories (HEAO). The most likely candidate is
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Cygnus X-1, an invisible object in the constellation Cygnus, the
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swan. Cygnus X-1 means that it is the first X-ray source discovered
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in Cygnus. X-rays from the invisible object have characteristics
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like those predicted from material as it falls toward a black hole.
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The material is apparently being pulled from the hole's binary
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companion, a large star of about 30 solar masses. Based upon the
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black hole's gravitational effects on the visible star, the hole's
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mass is estimated to be about six times of our Sun. In time the
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gargantuan visible star could also collapse into a neutron star or
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black hole or be pulled piece by piece into the existing black hole,
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significantly enlarging the hole's event horizon.
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BLACK HOLES AND GALAXIES
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It is theorized that rotating black holes, containing the
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remains of millions or billions of dead stars, may lie at the centers
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of galaxies such as our Milky Way and that vast rotating black holes
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may be the powerhouses of quasars and active galaxies. Quasars are
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believed to be galaxies in an early violent evolutionary stage while
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active galaxies are marked by their extraordinary outputs of energy,
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mostly from their cores.
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According to one part of the General Theory of Relativity called
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the Penrose Process, most of the matter falling toward black holes is
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consumed while the remainder is flung outward with more energy than
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the original total falling in. The energy is imparted by the hole's
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incredibly fast spin. Quiet normal galaxies like our Milky Way are
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said to be that way only because the black holes at their centers
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have no material upon which to feed.
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This situation could be changed by a chance break-up of a star
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cluster near the hole, sending stars careening into the hole. Such
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an event could cause the nucleus of our galaxy to explode with
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activity, generating large volumes of lethal gamma radiation that
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would fan out across our galaxy like a death ray, destroying life on
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Earth and wherever else it may have occurred.
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BLACK HOLES AND GALACTIC CLUSTERS
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Some astronomers believe that the gravity pulls of gigantic
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black holes may hold together vast galactic clusters such as the
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Virgo cluster consisting of about 2500 galaxies. Such clusters were
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formed after the Big Bang some 10 to 20 billion years ago. Why they
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did not spread randomly as the Universe expanded is not understood,
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as only a fraction of the mass needed to keep them together is
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observable. NASA's Hubble Space Telescope and AXAF Telescope,
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scheduled for a future Shuttle launch, will provide many more times
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the data than present ground and space observatories furnish and
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should contribute to resolving this and other mysteries of our
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Universe.
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BLACK HOLES AND OUR UNIVERSE
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Our universe is theorized to have begun with a bang that sent
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pieces of it outward in all directions. As yet, astronomers have not
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detected enough mass to reverse this expansion. The possibility
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remains, however, that the missing mass may be locked up in
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undetectable black holes that are more prevalent than anyone
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realizes.
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If enough black holes exist to reverse the universe's expansion,
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what then? Will all of the stars, and galaxies, and other matter in
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the universe collapse inward like a star that has exhausted its
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nuclear fuels? Will one large black hole be created, within which
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the universe will shrink to the ultimate singularity?
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Extrapolating backward more than 10 billion years, some
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cosmologists trace our present universe to a singularity. Is a
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singularity both the beginning and end of our universe? Is our
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universe but a phase between singularities?
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These questions may be more academic than we realize.
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Scientists say that, if the universe itself is closed and nothing can
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escape from it, we may already be in a black hole.
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e.
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Scientists say that, if the universe itself is closed and nothing can
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esc |