- cross-posted to:
- science@lemmy.ml
- science@midwest.social
- cross-posted to:
- science@lemmy.ml
- science@midwest.social
Many of us look at black holes as cosmic vacuum cleaners: sucking in everything in their vicinity. But it turns out they don’t suck at all.
Key Takeaways
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Black holes are the densest objects in the Universe, with at least several Suns worth of mass collected in a region that’s so small, even objects moving at the speed of light can’t escape from it.
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Although these objects exert a tremendous gravitational force, they don’t “suck matter in” any differently than neutron stars, white dwarfs, stars, or planets do: they just gravitate normally.
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Despite the common picture of black holes sucking everything in from their surroundings, that’s not how they work at all. Black holes don’t suck; that’s just the most common myth about them.
They don’t suck, they just pull things in with gravity. Okay? Like, nobody thought there were actual wind forces like a vacuum cleaner.