Sunday, 30 June 2019

Two Black Holes At The Fringe Of The Galaxy

For Love And Glory, XIX.

Here is a by now familiar thought:

"...explorers were still ranging only this one tiny segment of a thinly populated outer fringe of the galaxy." (p. 111) (See here.)

"...thinly populated..." probably refers to star density.

Interesting facts about black holes:

an event horizon is asteroid-sized, sometimes, though not always, visible like a small blot;

matter pulled in, e.g., from a companion star, forms an accelerating, spiraling accretion disc emitting "...a blaze of energy..." (ibid.);

there are billions of black holes;

Hawking radiation and quantum tunneling are interesting phenomena, except that I cannot make sense of the latter and it seems not to mean what it sounds like;

"...space and time interchangeably distorted..." (p. 112);

the Monster, a giant black hole at the galactic center, is hidden by dust clouds and its released energy would destroy any approaching organism or mechanism.

Does interchangeability of space and time mean that what has been experienced as a temporal interval can come to be perceived instead as a spatial distance? (See here.) Imagine...

That's all till next month.

3 comments:

Sean M. Brooks said...

Kaor, Paul!

Or could "interchangeability of space and time" mean that travelers sucked into the "vortex" of a black hold might find themselves displaced ELSEWHERE in space and time? Poul Anderson speculated in one of his letters to me about the possibility of people in our universe accessing alternate universes via black holes.

Sean

paulshackley2017@gmail.com said...

Sean,
There is something in Relativity about an equivalence of space and time with 186,000 miles of space corresponding to one second of time.
Paul.

Sean M. Brooks said...

Kaor, Paul!

Which I admit I do not understand. But Tipler's THE PHYSICS OF CHRISTIANITY has made me regret my ignorance of physics. I have a collection of Asimov's articles about physics--reading that book should help, I hope, make physics clearer to me.

Sean