Black hole size

Black hole size

Science

Cookies help us deliver our Services. By using our Services or clicking I agree, you agree to our use of cookies. Learn More.

bunny knight

planet Earth

Joined
12 Dec 13
Moves
2917
31 Mar 20

They know the rough diameter of a neutron star, but does anyone know the actual diameter of a black hole? I'm not talking about the diameter of the event horizon, but the actual diameter of the solid mass, assuming there is a real mass and not some warp hole.

D
Losing the Thread

Quarantined World

Joined
27 Oct 04
Moves
87415
01 Apr 20

@bunnyknight said
They know the rough diameter of a neutron star, but does anyone know the actual diameter of a black hole? I'm not talking about the diameter of the event horizon, but the actual diameter of the solid mass, assuming there is a real mass and not some warp hole.
Of the order of a Planck length.

mlb62

Joined
20 May 17
Moves
15841
01 Apr 20

Black holes are lots of different sizes

Misfit Queen

Isle of Misfit Toys

Joined
08 Aug 03
Moves
36753
01 Apr 20

@ogb said
Black holes are lots of different sizes
No.

Black holes have different masses, and it's this mass that determines the event horizon, but all black holes (the actual business size of all that mass) are singularities. That's the theory, anyways. Rotating black holes were thought to be ring singularities at one time, giving rise to theories including dimensional portals. Not sure what the current thinking on this is.

s
Fast and Curious

slatington, pa, usa

Joined
28 Dec 04
Moves
53223
01 Apr 20

@Suzianne
I think they realize there is no singularity in the sense of an infinite density. It has to stop getting denser at some point. For instance you probably heard the bit about mother universes, daughter universes where a universe has this black hole which looks just like a black hole to an observer but where it really spits into a new universe with very similar laws of physics, like the speed of light being 200,000 miles per second or so or 100,000 in that newly spawned universe. That kind of thing would not happen if the density was truly infinite as we would suppose a singularity would represent.

So singularity just means 'unknown physics ATT'

h

Joined
06 Mar 12
Moves
642
01 Apr 20

@suzianne said
No.

Black holes have different masses, and it's this mass that determines the event horizon,
but that is what is generally meant by different "sizes" of black holes.

bunny knight

planet Earth

Joined
12 Dec 13
Moves
2917
01 Apr 20
2 edits

@humy
So basically my assumption is correct - that nobody really knows for sure if a black hole is an actual solid mass (of quarks perhaps) with a certain diameter, or not.

Thus the only way to get to the truth of the matter is for me to fly to one, dive under the event horizon, and feel the black hole surface with my own fingers.

chemist

Linkenheim

Joined
22 Apr 05
Moves
657012
04 Apr 20

@bunnyknight said
@humy
So basically my assumption is correct - that nobody really knows for sure if a black hole is an actual solid mass (of quarks perhaps) with a certain diameter, or not.

Thus the only way to get to the truth of the matter is for me to fly to one, dive under the event horizon, and feel the black hole surface with my own fingers.
Did you ever read the gateway novels by Frederick Pohl?

There is an interesting concept on the research into black holes (though not at the forefront of todays theories).

bunny knight

planet Earth

Joined
12 Dec 13
Moves
2917
05 Apr 20

@ponderable said
Did you ever read the gateway novels by Frederick Pohl?

There is an interesting concept on the research into black holes (though not at the forefront of todays theories).
Never read it --- but I just put it on my to-read list.

I realize there's a whole bunch of theories about black holes, but that doesn't help me because only the factual truth will satisfy my curiosity now. I think a black hole could be just a simple blob of squished quarks ... or ... something so strange that no one has yet imagined. I will not rest until I find out!

E

Joined
12 Jul 08
Moves
13814
05 Apr 20

@bunnyknight said
Never read it --- but I just put it on my to-read list.

I realize there's a whole bunch of theories about black holes, but that doesn't help me because only the factual truth will satisfy my curiosity now. I think a black hole could be just a simple blob of squished quarks ... or ... something so strange that no one has yet imagined. I will not rest until I find out!
Since we will never know what is in the center of a black hole, you will never be satisfied.

bunny knight

planet Earth

Joined
12 Dec 13
Moves
2917
05 Apr 20

@eladar said
Since we will never know what is in the center of a black hole, you will never be satisfied.
"Never" is a very strong word -- also very big -- as big or bigger than infinity.

As soon as someone invents a gravity-neutralizing field, much of the impossible will become possible.

E

Joined
12 Jul 08
Moves
13814
05 Apr 20

@bunnyknight said
"Never" is a very strong word -- also very big -- as big or bigger than infinity.

As soon as someone invents a gravity-neutralizing field, much of the impossible will become possible.
Gravity neutralizing machine? They have one, it is called going on a diet.

bunny knight

planet Earth

Joined
12 Dec 13
Moves
2917
05 Apr 20

@eladar said
Gravity neutralizing machine? They have one, it is called going on a diet.
Haha! That was so funny I nearly slipped and fell into a black hole.

Misfit Queen

Isle of Misfit Toys

Joined
08 Aug 03
Moves
36753
06 Apr 20

@ponderable said
Did you ever read the gateway novels by Frederick Pohl?

There is an interesting concept on the research into black holes (though not at the forefront of todays theories).
Yes, the Gateway novels are awesome.

Misfit Queen

Isle of Misfit Toys

Joined
08 Aug 03
Moves
36753
06 Apr 20

@eladar said
Since we will never know what is in the center of a black hole, you will never be satisfied.
When you and other conservatives, like Trump, say "We don't know, we just don't know", what they mean is I don't know. Plenty of people know. Just not you.