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zuzg t1_iv2r8nm wrote

>Astronomers have discovered the closest known black hole to Earth, just 1,600 light-years away.

And it's 10 times more massive than our sun

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Stairwayunicorn t1_iv3b3p9 wrote

thats very small for a singularity

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unsanctionedhero t1_iv4v4zn wrote

Looked it up, its Scwartzchild radius is 28km. For reference a sphere of that size would have a surface area just slightly more than that of Puerto Rico

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raidriar889 t1_iv5qyys wrote

Compared to supermassive black holes, yes that is obviously small, but it’s a pretty normal size for a stellar black hole. In fact the smallest stellar remnant that would become a black hole is around 2-3 solar masses, so this black hole is not the smallest possible.

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sorehamstring t1_iv5uiig wrote

For stellar mass black holes, like this one, it’s not small. It’s just normal.

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[deleted] t1_iv3vtsn wrote

[removed]

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jmb2k6 t1_iv3xbc9 wrote

Black holes have dimensions though right? The diameter of the event horizon would be dependent on the mass of the black hole

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gimleychuckles t1_iv3yxmm wrote

The singularity is a dimensionless object. It is a point in space. We aren't certain what exactly that point looks like, but we do know it's a point. It has no length, width or height.

So to describe a black hole's size, is to refer to the event horizon, a boundary which is dictated by the black holes mass and spin.

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starmartyr t1_iv43286 wrote

The singularity might not actually exist. It is theorized under relativity, but it doesn't really work well with quantum theory. Unfortunately, we do not yet have a theory of quantum gravity so the singularity is the best model for the interior of a black hole that we have.

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uniquelyavailable t1_iv2zedn wrote

Sounds too close for me

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nilsmf t1_iv3rj88 wrote

The most undercommunicated thing about space is the size of emptiness between the stars and how far away everything is from everything else.

Think of anything a lightyear away as omg-so-incredibly-far-away-it-is. That makes this black hole super-duper-omg-so-incredibly-far-away-it-is.

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wankerbot t1_iv44ogt wrote

Space is big. You just won't believe how vastly, hugely, mind-bogglingly big it is. I mean, you may think it's a long way down the road to the chemist's, but that's just peanuts to space.

-DA

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If_I_must t1_iv8sv2t wrote

But don't panic. You seem like a frood who knows where their towel is.

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Miramarr t1_iv4ajcd wrote

When the Milky Way and Andromeda collide and merge, it's still unlikely any of the billions of stars will actually hit eachother.

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Ksradrik t1_iv4fwhy wrote

But dont forget that anything traveling at light or near light speed would be impossible to detect until it actually reaches us.

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st4n13l t1_iv4knoc wrote

I'm personally rooting for microwormhole telescopes

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roxmj8 t1_iv35glh wrote

Nah a 10 solar mass black hole isn’t a danger to earth at that distance.

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braiam t1_iv3biwq wrote

At that distance, it's not even in the range of our system gravitational forces to affect it.

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ssgrantox t1_iv3qorq wrote

The range of gravity is infinite, but the falloff means that it's effectively zero. But technically, it's not zero

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TehFuckDoIKnow t1_iv3w132 wrote

But it is a zero followed by a decimal point and then a number of zeros but also a non-zero amount of gravity. At least according to the math I can’t do.

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hermenaut t1_iv5ugnc wrote

I've heard gravity propagates at the speed of light.

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humbird_gs t1_iw5dtjr wrote

Not quite infinite. Gravity is limited by the speed of light.

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ssgrantox t1_iwc3mwu wrote

Ok how bout this? What is limit on how far light can travel in a vaccum? Thats the distance limit for gravity.

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humbird_gs t1_iw5drj6 wrote

I still eagerly await tabloid headlines shrieking about the imminent danger of earth being swallowed whole by a black hole.

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f_d t1_iv3uukp wrote

As long as it isn't rapidly closing the distance on a particularly accurate collision course. Which it presumably isn't doing.

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roxmj8 t1_iv3w8om wrote

It would be no different than a 10 mass star.

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f_d t1_iv3ztc6 wrote

Which would also not be something you want barreling straight through the solar system toward the Earth. But those are all extremely unlikely scenarios.

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Mollusc_Memes t1_iv5du5h wrote

And even if it were, we’d have over a thousand years to get out of the solar system. Nobody alive today would ever meet anyone who’d get to meet somebody affected by this black hole.

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f_d t1_iv6l9na wrote

It looks like a microscopic black hole passed through the end of your sentence. But you are still correct.

Barring total societal collapse, humans could probably cobble together some kind of interstellar life raft in the space of a thousand years. Would they be able to evacuate most of the planet to a safe destination? Hard to say for sure. With current technology it would be very unlikely. But at least they would know they needed to get to work on it.

For all we know, there's a deadly asteroid already headed toward us from a blind spot. And the Earth won't support life forever. Distant black holes or not, getting a toehold outside the solar system is a vital step if we want our lineage to continue.

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roxmj8 t1_iv42zo3 wrote

We would already know this is happening, and it’s not. Stars don’t move at the speed of light.

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trevour t1_iv6l81l wrote

Actually, I think you would prefer the black hole since it's smaller and therefore less likely to actually hit us (although even if it didn't hit us it could still rip the earth apart with total forces at a certain distance, although I'm pretty sure the distance is still smaller than the radius of the equivalent star)

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roxmj8 t1_iv6lnyx wrote

If a 10 solar mass object came through our solar system it would tear the whole thing apart. Star, black hole, it wouldn’t matter at all.

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KellyTheET t1_iv53ls6 wrote

Is there a way to detect movement of a black hole? I understand we use the redshift/blueshift of the light emitted by an object to gage their direction, but what if it doesn't emit light?

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f_d t1_iv7bp16 wrote

I am not an astronomer, but this particular black hole has a star orbiting it indicating the position of the hidden black hole. Measuring that star's movement should be straightforward enough. Knowing the location of the black hole but without the companion as a guide, they might also be able to watch for hints of it if it ever passes in front of more distant visible objects. Those hints could be compared over time to see if it was growing larger or smaller relative to us. I don't know what the relative movement of a black hole would do to the shifting of the light bending around it.

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Miramarr t1_iv4afhb wrote

A black hole wandering close is really no different than a star. They're both just gravity wells. The only difference is that stars are easier to spot

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spidereater t1_iv5d45e wrote

At that distance it doesn’t make a difference if it’s a black hole or just a star 10x the mass of the sun or even two stars 5x the mass orbiting each other or even a constellation of 10 sun sized stars. It’s a neat quirk of astronomy but not really consequential for life on earth. Actually a large star at risk of supernova is possibly more likely to have an effect than a black hole.

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DygonZ t1_iv555wy wrote

You sound just like my highschool crush...

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[deleted] t1_iv3yx7p wrote

[deleted]

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pogidaga t1_iv45v2f wrote

Proxima Centari is the closest at 4.2 light years away.

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Deliphin t1_iv5mfie wrote

Even if the nearest star was only 2ly away, that would be 800x the distance, not 10x. There are tons of stars within 160ly away.

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westnob t1_iv5re52 wrote

You're obviously correct. I think the nyquil was messing with my reading comprehension. I processed the previous information as. It being 10 l.y.

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Banerinho t1_iv4wg5u wrote

It would take the speed of light 1.6 millenia to get there.

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EarthTrash t1_iv4e0ia wrote

Anyone else secretly hoping it was a hole lot closer than that?

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Perpetually_isolated t1_iv3qjnp wrote

That would make it ridiculously tiny right?

I mean i guess all singularities are small but as far as black holes go that doesn't sound very massive at all.

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wandering_revenant t1_iv65oik wrote

I think someone referenced it being 28 km across. We have cities that are larger across than this thing. But more importantly, our great, great, great X 10 grandkids would be long dead before this thing could come close enough to us to care about it.

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beaniemonk t1_iv40jj8 wrote

And nothing even remotely close to the artist's rendering accompanying the article in any conceivable way.

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chillypete99 t1_iv3ve8d wrote

Only 8 times more massive than my son. O'Doyle Rules!

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