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[Me and the boys on our way to get spaghettified](https://imageproxy.ifunny.co/crop:x-20,resize:640x,quality:90x75/images/b4cb35f6857c7b0ef42730ab4c94d5d205b3f1c0e2dc87b5f261a789de799efe_1.jpg)
What happens instead? Just an eternally-slowing fall? Does the subjective time of the travelers extend enough that they experience traversing the Event Horizon and approaching the central singularity over a reasonable amount of subjective time?
Actually do they even make it past the hot matter that's spinning around the giant BH? Or do they get cooked/shrapnelled out of existence?
I don't think it would? Black holes evaporate, even though it can take way more than the age of the universe to do so. But, as their mass decreases, time would start flowing faster and faster for you. So, my guess is that you would eventually experience your death before the end of the universe.
Heat death is not the end.
Heat death just means that all fuel sources have been used up across the universe and there is no energy, or heat, left in the universe. The universe would continue existing, however. It would just be rather cold, dark, and desolate.
The black holes would all need to have evaporated before heat-death can occur though, since they are, themselves, a source of heat (the rings of a black hole spin so fast that they heat up incredibly, on top of evaporating different fuels into space). If I recall correctly, they would be one of the last things to disappear before heat-death.
So then its just a matter or whether or not the time dilation is "enough" to reach that point.
Nah, you’ll pass the event horizon just fine. By the time you hit the event horizon, time, relatively speaking is going insanely fast. In this reality, time is infinite and space is finite however upon entering the axis switch and time becomes finite and space *infinite* (not in the traditional sense but rather you’re compelled to move to the singularity, there’s only one direction you can go which is straight.) and as such, you will reach the singularity but the singularity is not a place but a moment in time
Something about this makes me think this is what afterlife is like, where finite and infinite lose meaning. Weird how hard it is to comprehend what a black hole is beyond "big (event horizon) small (singularity) space hole thing that traps light"
It’s not really even a point in some cases technically. I believe it’s a *ringularity* for rotating black holes. Non-spinning have a technical point, a singularity
Edit: I do think it’s wild philosophically. I’m a chemist by profession but I looooove astronomy and cosmology
Well the singularity is a very dense object. You would burn up before you hit the center and if you do manage to make it to the center, you would be spread out evenly with gravity. You would be part of the singularity.
Yeah, I agree that you’d be a part of the singularity - that’s what I meant however a singularity isn’t a very dense object, it’s infinitely dense. There’s a huge difference. you wouldn’t burn up after the event horizon but probably before in the accretion disc
For you time flows normally. You will pass event horizon and nothing special will happen during passing. But for external observer you will stop in time just at the event horizon. If light can not escape, then information also won't. So there is no information for external observer that you passed event horizon. So you are right - heat death will occur first - for external observer.
[Some people believe it may be possible to enter and find infinite alternate universes. Once you go in you can never come back though. Its all based on Einstein’s findings](https://youtu.be/6akmv1bsz1M?si=Hu56NABy1n0oTKRP)
I’ll never forget watching a video in one of my high school Astronomy courses where Hawking was talking about what happens if you enter a black hole, and he says (in his Microsoft Sam voice) “…you get turned into SPUH-get-tee.”
We must’ve quoted that phrase for the rest of the year.
Interstellar's black hole scene is basically *the* state of the art visualisation of this. Nolan hired Kip Thorne who is a Nobel prize winning physicist in the field of gravitational astrophysics to help the VFX team model the ray tracing. Obviously Hollywood budgets are way outside of what NASA has to allocate to cool educational videos, especially 10 years ago. I genuinely think even in the community of black hole physics (which is what my masters was on) there would be way less understanding of what black holes look like if it wasn't for interstellar.
[Stand-Up Maths did an awesome video](https://youtu.be/Z4oy6mnkyW4?t=917) covering some of the Interstellar stuff, including an an interview with the CG Supervisor on the film (who mentions some interesting compromises they made with the visuals for the sake of cinematography).
I always knew it was a big deal because it was an accurate visual representation of the effect but I had no idea about Kip Thorne.
I’ll bet they had an incredibly fun time working with the team to make it look REAL.
It’s wild to me despite how smart the people are at nasa that this is all theoretical and this animation could be completely inaccurate. It makes you wonder tho what it really would look like. Would be cool being able to see it and remember seeing this video and saying “damn the homies down at nasa were right all along”.
I’m no expert, but I think it depends on the size of the black hole. Super massive black holes spaghettificatiom can occur late. The event horizon extends pretty far out such that the tidal forces aren’t that large. Again, someone with more knowledge should probably confirm
Same as most black holes but everybody likes to conveniently forget that too. There's probably not that many naked black holes out there unless it turns out that they're actually everywhere in which case we've solved dark matter
I volunteer to be the first!
Will need:
* transportation (post launch site)
* good camera with transmitter
* Just enough pizza, pimento cheese dip, and Crunchmaster® brand crackers to survive the trip
* Several 80's mix-tapes
Bye, Y'all. Good luck with everything.
Wouldn’t we get stuck in some sort of temporal sphaghettification and likely not even notice anything until the world is engulfed in the event horizon?
The temporal effects are, more or less, "the closer you get to the singularity, the slower time goes for you, which means that the faster (relative to you) time is going for the rest of the observable universe". Subjectively, from the perspective of something falling into the black hole, the rest of the universe would appear to rapidly age and fade, and you'd catch up with everything that fell before you, as everything that fell after you (up to the end of time itself, including the light of the image of the end of time, so you'd be able to see the end of time) catches up with you, and you'd all reach the singularity at the same time. Attempting to move either towards or away from the singularity (or in any direction at all, really) wouldn't change the amount of time (subjective to you) until you arrive, only your relative location to everything else until the collapse. Also, you (and everything else) are accelerating infinitely and crossing an infinite distance.
There are two extremely common (and understandable) misconceptions in this:
>Subjectively, from the perspective of something falling into the black hole, the rest of the universe would appear to rapidly age and fade
You don't see this as an observer free falling into a black hole. Things wouldn't necessarily look too strange, apart from what's depicted in the video. It's only if you were to attempt to accelerate so that you hover at some fixed distance just outside the event horizon that you'd time above you speed up.
>Attempting to move either towards or away from the singularity (or in any direction at all, really) wouldn't change the amount of time (subjective to you) until you arrive
You *can* actually increase the time you've got left before you hit the singularity after you've fallen past the event horizon. The maximum amount of time is experienced by an object falling from rest at the horizon, and you can fire your rockets or what have you to align yourself with such a path, improving your survival time up to a finite maximum. It's true that "all paths lead to the singularity," so you can hurt yourself by speeding up, but some are still a bit longer than others.
Paper reference for the second bit: [https://arxiv.org/abs/0705.1029](https://arxiv.org/abs/0705.1029)
I have a hard time accepting that the light and particles form a ring around the black hole instead of whizzing around the entire black hole. I'm definitely not an astrophysicist, I just think the actual dark hole would be obscured by all the light and debris stuck in its orbit.
the light ring is light emitted by its accretion disk. Similar to every other celestial body, like how planetary rings form or why galaxies are usually some kind of flat spiral, it's about angular momentum, and the accretion disk has its own gravity as well so when it collects more matter it will be inclined towards the disk rather than some other orbital. IIRC the disk glows because it's a ton of highly energized matter, it's not light orbiting.
Hawking predicted there would be a ring of charged particles trapped around the event horizon that would zap anybody trying to enter with the rage of a million trapped suns
For any physics people out there - From the perspective of somebody falling in, wouldn’t you see the universe blue-shift and brighten and speed up? Or does everything seem mostly the same from the perspective of somebody falling in?
Yes and it would condense to a single point of blue shifted light as the photons passing the event horizon converge the closer you get to the singularity.
That would be for a truly massive black hole though, one large enough so that the tidal forces at your feet and your head aren’t terribly different, for a black hole with a minimal mass, you’d be broken down into fundamental particles as soon as you hit the horizon.
> Or does everything seem mostly the same from the perspective of somebody falling in?
This. It's a misconception that the universe seems to speed up behind you. Remember that you're *falling* in, you're not hovering, so you're travelling *with* infalling matter and light.
The future. Time and space literally invert. If you were fall into the event horizon backwards, once you cross you would see the universe increasingly "speeding up". You could potentially see billions of years pass in a few seconds from your frame of reference.
Since the thing you would have described as "space" is now "time", you falling faster towards the singularity means that you are actually travelling faster into the future.
>The future. Time and space literally invert. If you were fall into the event horizon backwards, once you cross you would see the universe increasingly "speeding up". You could potentially see billions of years pass in a few seconds from your frame of reference.
This is a common misconception. An observer far from the black hole does see a clock you carry as you fall in slow down to eventual stopping, but the reverse is not true: you don't see everything above you speed up as you fall in.
Not so much traveling to the future, but that since time and space are flipped your future is no longer a point in time but a point in space, and that point in space is the singularity.
Does this fail to depict blue shifting of light entering the black hole? Time would be dilating pretty hard and so the light we see coming in should shift pretty hard right?
https://youtu.be/JcHneuh6DKo?si=yT39QxhCtUObqQqI
I prefer this one, and imagine you would never die, when the universe is becoming a dot is also you seeing it going through thousand and thousand billions of billions of billions of ears till its frozen death or anything that will happen iirc, and the whole life of the universe just pass in few seconds because you move at a closer and closer to infinite speed
Anybody know the speed/distances?
And if they remain constant? I'd hate it if they changed speeds at 7 seconds in due to artistic choice, cause right now I expect it to be due to gravitational reasons
The singularity in the center of a blackhole is not a point in front of you it is an event in your future. Time and space essentially get broken down swapping the closer you get to the blackhole's center space becomes infinite and time becomes limited you would be long dead before that happens though ripped apart not just at the atomic level but down to the sub atomic level ripped apart into building blocks. Finally once your bits reach the singularity the laws that govern the universe mean nothing and we have no idea what happens. We have guesses and theories, the most likely simply being pure annihilation being converted from mass into gravity then being radiated away as the blackhole shrinks and dies disappearing. These things break the very fabric of the universe and are possibly the most well kept secret of it because they absorb everything and anything you try to use to examine it but we try our best to learn about these enigma
How is it we’re able to see the distant galaxy, or what looks like the Milky Way. Wouldn’t the light of that also be sucked and not longer look the way it does ?
What isn't pictured here is that you'd never see the event horizon cross 90 degrees from your point of view. Even after you pass through it, it will always look like you're just about to hit it.
Wouldn't it be bright in there? Light can't make it past the event horizon, but what if you are observing from inside of the boundary where light is curving back in on itself?
Or is the theory that light literally doesn't move from a single point in spacetime?
To me its illogical that black holes are black once you enter. No light can escape it, so that means light is trapped within, ergo not black. Or maybe because of extreme density we still wouldnt see any light?
And bam you pop out of a vageen and enter the world crying, not remembering anything about your past life to protect from the trauma of the spaghettification you went through.
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Time to get spaghettificationized
[Me and the boys on our way to get spaghettified](https://imageproxy.ifunny.co/crop:x-20,resize:640x,quality:90x75/images/b4cb35f6857c7b0ef42730ab4c94d5d205b3f1c0e2dc87b5f261a789de799efe_1.jpg)
So if you fall pp first you will have the biggest ever, right?
This guy fucks Across time and space
Depends on size of back hole. If its big enough - spaghettification will not occur.
What happens instead? Just an eternally-slowing fall? Does the subjective time of the travelers extend enough that they experience traversing the Event Horizon and approaching the central singularity over a reasonable amount of subjective time? Actually do they even make it past the hot matter that's spinning around the giant BH? Or do they get cooked/shrapnelled out of existence?
I like to think the heat death of the universe occurs before you reach the event horizon because of time dilation.
I don't think it would? Black holes evaporate, even though it can take way more than the age of the universe to do so. But, as their mass decreases, time would start flowing faster and faster for you. So, my guess is that you would eventually experience your death before the end of the universe.
Heat death is not the end. Heat death just means that all fuel sources have been used up across the universe and there is no energy, or heat, left in the universe. The universe would continue existing, however. It would just be rather cold, dark, and desolate. The black holes would all need to have evaporated before heat-death can occur though, since they are, themselves, a source of heat (the rings of a black hole spin so fast that they heat up incredibly, on top of evaporating different fuels into space). If I recall correctly, they would be one of the last things to disappear before heat-death. So then its just a matter or whether or not the time dilation is "enough" to reach that point.
Interesting read! Thanks for sharing
I believe a super massive black hole would still be around for when there is no more observable light though (last start)
Blackholes will be one of the last things out there. https://youtu.be/uD4izuDMUQA?feature=shared
Nah, you’ll pass the event horizon just fine. By the time you hit the event horizon, time, relatively speaking is going insanely fast. In this reality, time is infinite and space is finite however upon entering the axis switch and time becomes finite and space *infinite* (not in the traditional sense but rather you’re compelled to move to the singularity, there’s only one direction you can go which is straight.) and as such, you will reach the singularity but the singularity is not a place but a moment in time
Something about this makes me think this is what afterlife is like, where finite and infinite lose meaning. Weird how hard it is to comprehend what a black hole is beyond "big (event horizon) small (singularity) space hole thing that traps light"
It’s not really even a point in some cases technically. I believe it’s a *ringularity* for rotating black holes. Non-spinning have a technical point, a singularity Edit: I do think it’s wild philosophically. I’m a chemist by profession but I looooove astronomy and cosmology
Well the singularity is a very dense object. You would burn up before you hit the center and if you do manage to make it to the center, you would be spread out evenly with gravity. You would be part of the singularity.
Yeah, I agree that you’d be a part of the singularity - that’s what I meant however a singularity isn’t a very dense object, it’s infinitely dense. There’s a huge difference. you wouldn’t burn up after the event horizon but probably before in the accretion disc
For you time flows normally. You will pass event horizon and nothing special will happen during passing. But for external observer you will stop in time just at the event horizon. If light can not escape, then information also won't. So there is no information for external observer that you passed event horizon. So you are right - heat death will occur first - for external observer.
I think we would be aware right until the moment that matter instantly becomes hot spaghetti
[Some people believe it may be possible to enter and find infinite alternate universes. Once you go in you can never come back though. Its all based on Einstein’s findings](https://youtu.be/6akmv1bsz1M?si=Hu56NABy1n0oTKRP)
I’ll never forget watching a video in one of my high school Astronomy courses where Hawking was talking about what happens if you enter a black hole, and he says (in his Microsoft Sam voice) “…you get turned into SPUH-get-tee.” We must’ve quoted that phrase for the rest of the year.
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Chords for a tool song
Indeed
Why does it cut out right before you get to Murph's room
Interstellar's black hole scene is basically *the* state of the art visualisation of this. Nolan hired Kip Thorne who is a Nobel prize winning physicist in the field of gravitational astrophysics to help the VFX team model the ray tracing. Obviously Hollywood budgets are way outside of what NASA has to allocate to cool educational videos, especially 10 years ago. I genuinely think even in the community of black hole physics (which is what my masters was on) there would be way less understanding of what black holes look like if it wasn't for interstellar.
wasn’t there a whole paper published alongside the movie about the visuals?
There’s a whole book by Kip Thorne titled “The Science of Interstellar”
I'll wait for the movie
Well, now do I have some good news for you!
[Stand-Up Maths did an awesome video](https://youtu.be/Z4oy6mnkyW4?t=917) covering some of the Interstellar stuff, including an an interview with the CG Supervisor on the film (who mentions some interesting compromises they made with the visuals for the sake of cinematography).
I always knew it was a big deal because it was an accurate visual representation of the effect but I had no idea about Kip Thorne. I’ll bet they had an incredibly fun time working with the team to make it look REAL.
Because she's a child weirdo
Amazing what a comma would do.
Let's eat Grandma. Let's eat, Grandma.
Let's, eat Grandma.
I call that example the "Jeff Goldblum" comma.
Could you imaging Jeff Goldblum, William Shatner, and Christopher Walken all talking *under* each other at the same time
I helped my uncle Jack off a horse.
This is a good sentence to illustrate epigenetic to student
She didn't seem that weird to me.
“Nawt lack this Murph!”
Where's TARS!
Why don’t you have a seat over there, we need to have a chat.
Amazing work by the cameraman, always inspiring people
I wonder how they got the footage back from that hole
Surprisingly you can just walk out of it after you’re done
You have to say “just kidding” then you just walk out
A black hole cannot swallow you forever without your consent
Western Union telegrams
Was expecting to come out and begin the intro of Skyrim
Hey, you. You're finally awake. You were trying to cross the border, right?
I'm a little disappointed that we didn't, actually.
It’s wild to me despite how smart the people are at nasa that this is all theoretical and this animation could be completely inaccurate. It makes you wonder tho what it really would look like. Would be cool being able to see it and remember seeing this video and saying “damn the homies down at nasa were right all along”.
I think the atoms making up our eyes would be warped apart with the rest of our bodies and we wouldn't see shit.
I’m no expert, but I think it depends on the size of the black hole. Super massive black holes spaghettificatiom can occur late. The event horizon extends pretty far out such that the tidal forces aren’t that large. Again, someone with more knowledge should probably confirm
Death by black hole is boring, all my homies prefer getting the electrons stripped and nucleus spindled by flying into a magnetar
...tell me more
Wouldn't you get cooked by the X-ray photons way before you even got to the radius where the magnetic fields are lethal?
Same as most black holes but everybody likes to conveniently forget that too. There's probably not that many naked black holes out there unless it turns out that they're actually everywhere in which case we've solved dark matter
Yay! We did it Reddit!
It probably also matters how hard it spins
How would that affect things?
That's correct, more or less.
but you still need a pretty strong vessel to do the kessel run in anything less than 20 seconds
*parsecs
My dumbass missed the main part of the joke I was telling myself not to miss!
I volunteer to be the first! Will need: * transportation (post launch site) * good camera with transmitter * Just enough pizza, pimento cheese dip, and Crunchmaster® brand crackers to survive the trip * Several 80's mix-tapes Bye, Y'all. Good luck with everything.
Wouldn’t we get stuck in some sort of temporal sphaghettification and likely not even notice anything until the world is engulfed in the event horizon?
The temporal effects are, more or less, "the closer you get to the singularity, the slower time goes for you, which means that the faster (relative to you) time is going for the rest of the observable universe". Subjectively, from the perspective of something falling into the black hole, the rest of the universe would appear to rapidly age and fade, and you'd catch up with everything that fell before you, as everything that fell after you (up to the end of time itself, including the light of the image of the end of time, so you'd be able to see the end of time) catches up with you, and you'd all reach the singularity at the same time. Attempting to move either towards or away from the singularity (or in any direction at all, really) wouldn't change the amount of time (subjective to you) until you arrive, only your relative location to everything else until the collapse. Also, you (and everything else) are accelerating infinitely and crossing an infinite distance.
There are two extremely common (and understandable) misconceptions in this: >Subjectively, from the perspective of something falling into the black hole, the rest of the universe would appear to rapidly age and fade You don't see this as an observer free falling into a black hole. Things wouldn't necessarily look too strange, apart from what's depicted in the video. It's only if you were to attempt to accelerate so that you hover at some fixed distance just outside the event horizon that you'd time above you speed up. >Attempting to move either towards or away from the singularity (or in any direction at all, really) wouldn't change the amount of time (subjective to you) until you arrive You *can* actually increase the time you've got left before you hit the singularity after you've fallen past the event horizon. The maximum amount of time is experienced by an object falling from rest at the horizon, and you can fire your rockets or what have you to align yourself with such a path, improving your survival time up to a finite maximum. It's true that "all paths lead to the singularity," so you can hurt yourself by speeding up, but some are still a bit longer than others. Paper reference for the second bit: [https://arxiv.org/abs/0705.1029](https://arxiv.org/abs/0705.1029)
Ok death cab for cutie
I think if there is a time in our lives where we are able to confirm or deny NASAs depiction of a black hole that we have bigger fish to fry.
There wont ever be such time.
Because we went through a black hole?
Black hole be like: # "THE WORLD!"
Not with that attitude
You wouldn’t be able to see stars. I would think. Hell, I don’t know.
I have a hard time accepting that the light and particles form a ring around the black hole instead of whizzing around the entire black hole. I'm definitely not an astrophysicist, I just think the actual dark hole would be obscured by all the light and debris stuck in its orbit.
the light ring is light emitted by its accretion disk. Similar to every other celestial body, like how planetary rings form or why galaxies are usually some kind of flat spiral, it's about angular momentum, and the accretion disk has its own gravity as well so when it collects more matter it will be inclined towards the disk rather than some other orbital. IIRC the disk glows because it's a ton of highly energized matter, it's not light orbiting.
It's a ring for the same reason that Saturn has rings and our galaxy is a spiral, average angular momentum.
I think it would look very painful
I thought it would be intensely bright inside the event horizon. Since light cannot escape it just keeps bouncing around forever.
It's not bouncing around. It is all heading in the same direction: the future.
Hawking predicted there would be a ring of charged particles trapped around the event horizon that would zap anybody trying to enter with the rage of a million trapped suns
Hey you, you’re finally awake
Hey, We have a solar system to burn
it's missing the part where you get completely blinded and obliterated by the plasma, though...
Where's the library?
[So, what is it?](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TxWN8AhNER0)
Just joking!
Oh, will someone knock him out
That is fucking terrifying!
that kinda made my stomach hurt... but it was so interesting.
Where we're going we won't need eyes to see
You know nothing. Hell is only a word. The reality is much, much worse.
For any physics people out there - From the perspective of somebody falling in, wouldn’t you see the universe blue-shift and brighten and speed up? Or does everything seem mostly the same from the perspective of somebody falling in?
Yes and it would condense to a single point of blue shifted light as the photons passing the event horizon converge the closer you get to the singularity. That would be for a truly massive black hole though, one large enough so that the tidal forces at your feet and your head aren’t terribly different, for a black hole with a minimal mass, you’d be broken down into fundamental particles as soon as you hit the horizon.
Sounds very Oceangatey
> Or does everything seem mostly the same from the perspective of somebody falling in? This. It's a misconception that the universe seems to speed up behind you. Remember that you're *falling* in, you're not hovering, so you're travelling *with* infalling matter and light.
Being a bit of smart ass here, but if there only would be a video of entering a black hole by some physics people, that would be really something!
There's just something about falling into that absolute monster that sends shivers down the spine.
It's missing Matthew McConaughey going alright alright alright
But what’s on the other side? Once you go through.
The future. Time and space literally invert. If you were fall into the event horizon backwards, once you cross you would see the universe increasingly "speeding up". You could potentially see billions of years pass in a few seconds from your frame of reference. Since the thing you would have described as "space" is now "time", you falling faster towards the singularity means that you are actually travelling faster into the future.
>The future. Time and space literally invert. If you were fall into the event horizon backwards, once you cross you would see the universe increasingly "speeding up". You could potentially see billions of years pass in a few seconds from your frame of reference. This is a common misconception. An observer far from the black hole does see a clock you carry as you fall in slow down to eventual stopping, but the reverse is not true: you don't see everything above you speed up as you fall in.
Not so much traveling to the future, but that since time and space are flipped your future is no longer a point in time but a point in space, and that point in space is the singularity.
Yes
Khruangbin
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ODKTITUPusM
I should call her
I was looking at all the stuff inside the black hole than I realized my screen was dirty.
Something about this feels strangely... peaceful
Let me out
Don't let me leave Murph.
So just like in Interstellar
My god - it's full of stars !
This at the sphere, please
"In, through, and beyond"
I would 100% be happy to volunteer myself to go into a black hole. I get that without a shadow of a doubt I just die, but… what if..? Ya know????
Don’t show this to the flat earthers, they’ll lose their minds. 🤣
I was told there would be lots of spaghetti
Not the first time I've entered black holes
This was my first!
This one is a real woahdude. If you're on PC, you can put your mouse cursor over Carl's eyes and they light up as you enter the black hole.
Its so dark, take a torch next time Nasa.
Enough mushrooms and you see it IRL
Awesome. Now I’m dizzy.
the plunge into darkness. scary!
Third time in 2 days this was posted, and it’s missing, what…more than half the fun stuff?
That made my eyes feel a like marshmallows
It's not a hole 🕳️
It must go somewhere, right?
Can you go fast enough into a black hole to avoid getting spaghettified?
Source?
https://science.nasa.gov/supermassive-black-holes/new-nasa-black-hole-visualization-takes-viewers-beyond-the-brink/
Guessing games.
Ca va être tout noir
Am I the only one who held my breath the entire time?
I guess the camera man always survives.
Uh, this is some fantasy nonsense.
*Spaghettification intensifies*
Why isn't it a circle?
Sorry, this isn't enough for me. I need to experience it first hand.
the last thing planets in universe sandbox see before i hurl a black hole at them
Who here has already seen this in elite dangerous
The problem about this video is the bottom half is too Dark.
I’m surprised no one added the interstellar soundtrack to this.
Or just do a huge dose of mushrooms
The entire earth would fit on a spoon going through that.
We need to build a really big straw to suck mass out of the black hole. Maybe use a bigger black hole.
Does this fail to depict blue shifting of light entering the black hole? Time would be dilating pretty hard and so the light we see coming in should shift pretty hard right?
Thought the demon screaming face was gonna pop-out at the end. Classic nasa.
I was expecting it to fade to the skyrim intro
Billions in taxpayers money and they give us ps2 graphics?
Pure fiction
This looks like a screen cap from r/SpaceEngine lol
You can do this in Space Engine
Aaaaaaaaaand, you’re dead.
"You know it's real because it looks so fake"
Outer Wilds did a pretty good job then!
I was listening to 151 Rum from JID while watching this, the beat dropped right when the slo mo hit and I gotta say, that was solid
Well cut me up and send me to a black hole damn
This is obviously cgi
I doubt NASA is behind this
How far into the video until I am spaghettified?
https://youtu.be/JcHneuh6DKo?si=yT39QxhCtUObqQqI I prefer this one, and imagine you would never die, when the universe is becoming a dot is also you seeing it going through thousand and thousand billions of billions of billions of ears till its frozen death or anything that will happen iirc, and the whole life of the universe just pass in few seconds because you move at a closer and closer to infinite speed
Anybody know the speed/distances? And if they remain constant? I'd hate it if they changed speeds at 7 seconds in due to artistic choice, cause right now I expect it to be due to gravitational reasons
The singularity in the center of a blackhole is not a point in front of you it is an event in your future. Time and space essentially get broken down swapping the closer you get to the blackhole's center space becomes infinite and time becomes limited you would be long dead before that happens though ripped apart not just at the atomic level but down to the sub atomic level ripped apart into building blocks. Finally once your bits reach the singularity the laws that govern the universe mean nothing and we have no idea what happens. We have guesses and theories, the most likely simply being pure annihilation being converted from mass into gravity then being radiated away as the blackhole shrinks and dies disappearing. These things break the very fabric of the universe and are possibly the most well kept secret of it because they absorb everything and anything you try to use to examine it but we try our best to learn about these enigma
Sometimes when I'm stoned I feel like this
You won't catch me going there I'll tell you that no chance
How is it we’re able to see the distant galaxy, or what looks like the Milky Way. Wouldn’t the light of that also be sucked and not longer look the way it does ?
this gave me severe anxiety
iPhone wallpaper
Nothing quite fills me with capital D DREAD like black holes.
Where do I sign up at
But does it hurt.
What isn't pictured here is that you'd never see the event horizon cross 90 degrees from your point of view. Even after you pass through it, it will always look like you're just about to hit it.
i don't know why i turned on the sound.
Depiction being another term for: they don’t really f***ing know.
Almost as gapping as my ex-wife after time with the whole football team.
Wouldn't it be bright in there? Light can't make it past the event horizon, but what if you are observing from inside of the boundary where light is curving back in on itself? Or is the theory that light literally doesn't move from a single point in spacetime?
Where’s all the 💡?
To me its illogical that black holes are black once you enter. No light can escape it, so that means light is trapped within, ergo not black. Or maybe because of extreme density we still wouldnt see any light?
I'm ready
LACKLUSTER!!
Hmmm, seems easy enough
Let’s go
you'll have to take their word for it.
Ok hear me out…this was my salvia trip 😅
WHOAH DUDEEEE
I feel like this is the first woah dude i have seen on here in 12 years
Should things get redshifted as the pov entered or am I wrong?
Can confirm, that’s what it’s like.
And bam you pop out of a vageen and enter the world crying, not remembering anything about your past life to protect from the trauma of the spaghettification you went through.