Added: 2 years ago
From: SpaceRip
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  • oooh my f*ck , it's awesome ! =/

  • why does it seem that matter seems to rotate around the singularity on one axis so that it becomes a flat disk?

  • @jesuistahmid There are different types of black holes, a kerr black hole is electrically charged and has angular momentum and therefore produces two magnetic poles.

  • @The95superfly I'm thinking of a gravity well with a multi-brane permeation. And even though a wormhole doesn't necessarily have to be a gravity well by definition, it's state of being would still have to depart a 3rd dimensional context.

  • The title should be: ''How vaginas cum''

  • do they really look like some black hole?

  • Awesome!

    I hope this sucks once my dick to!

  • how long is one light year?

  • @kyle45887

    ~ 9.500.000.000.000 kilometres

  • what might be insane numbers like that to a normal person, is almost only like 1 for astronomers... math geeks, all of em! :D

  • Comment removed

  • @kyle45887 -.-

  • Most of you should watch a video on String theory or M theory before speculating, black holes colliding would not be the end of the world.

  • It could be possible that the universe ends in 2 super massive black holes that finally collide and due to the extreme conditions it will cause a new big bang.

  • What are you people talking about? Your random, made up on the spot daydreamings don't even qualify as hypotheses. Collisions between supermassive black holes have almost certainly taken place *many times* already, during the formation and collision of galaxies.

    This did not and could not end the "universe." And QuartuvLarry... the answer to your "perhaps" musing is "no." Your "what does it look like when perceived from the 4th dimension" question is also ridiculous and without answer.

  • Daydreaming is not that bad.. There must be lot's of black holes in the universe. I was just 'dreaming' about when they all 'ate' eachother and then the last 2 big holes collide by attracting eachother. This might cause one last extreme black hole that implodes on itself crushing the total universe mass to a critical point. After that temperatures will rise so high that all matter can do is explode and create a new big bang. It may be just a silly, made up daydream to you, but I don't care. :P

  • Just so long as you know it's not real and never will be.

  • that jet blast could destroy Earths atmosphere...

  • Black hole is perhaps...a part of some larger extra-dimensional occurrence? Gravity does permeate and spread out through multiple branes of existence. What is a black hole when perceived from the 4th dimension?

  • no Black holes turn things back to what they use to be vary small atoms or a small dimension

  • was this the one with titled "suck or blow" lol

  • Hehe, you finally changed the title.

  • vejai

  • vagina!

  • amazing

  • Here's part of the trick. Neutron Stars, White Dwaef Stars.. they can have mind boggling magnetic fields trapped within them which extend out of them. In fact, one kind of remnant star is called a "Magnetar" with a magnetic field nothing can withstand. It rips anything with electrons or any electrically charged particles apart. A Black Hole is just another remnant star and it, too, once had a magnetic field. Where did it go? What *is* that debris ring *doing*? To every season, turn, turn, turn..

  • A gamma ray burst will strike us any minute now, so good buy if we don't make it another day.

  • I saw that silly docudrama too. We are in no danger from gamma ray bursts. The show GR1o... is referencing, showed a theoretical hypernova releasing a powerful gamma ray burst and how it could disrupt satellites in orbit if it were close enough and aimed directly at us. It then showed what would happen if it were within a 1000 light-years... destruction.

    Except there's nothing within 1,000 light years that could produce a GRB, and it's *extremely* unlikely we'd be hit by even a weak one.

  • indeed

  • Black holes suck but do the swallow? Can you stop being so vulgar?

  • well the speed of light is slow on a universal scale the light that reaches us is showing what it looked like when that light was blasted out, what we see as the center of our galaxy is actually what it looked like 26,000 years ago.

  • When you're a jet, you're a jet all the way, from event horizon to the darn Milky Way...

  • Good eye candy,but black holes dont suck as you put it

  • Define "suck"

  • to suck (third-person singular simple present sucks, present participle sucking, simple past and past participle sucked) 1. To use the mouth to pull in liquid substances for ingestion or to perform a similar act on solid material without ingestion. 2. To draw into, by any means, with an attractive force, usually without direct contact. Used to describe the effect of negative pressure allowing atmospheric pressure to push air in, as occurs with breathing, drinking and vacuum cleaning

  • Thanks... hope Docs209 reads it :P

  • Those showing blue gas near the inner edge of the black hole are depicting the greater velocity and thus temperature of the gas closer to the (always pictured as rotating, even though they aren't necessarily) event horizon, due to frame-dragging and tidal forces. Those showing the lens-like distortion of stars in the background of the hole are showing the tremendous curvature of space very near the event horizon. So they're all partially right, but in that respect, completely wrong.

  • Thank you Mr Obvious

  • thanx

  • Lastly and unfortunately, none of those artistic renderings gets it even a little close to what an actual hole would look like. They all skip something or several somethings, in their attempt to show one aspect. Those showing the red gas swirling in close to the whole are depicting the time dilation that increases without bound as you reach the event horizon (and thus the red-shifting of any light leaving)

  • Spam.

  • The difference is rather large. Quasars are supermassive black holes (yes, this was a scientific term before Muse made a song with the same name) at the centers of galaxies, billions of light-years distant. There are no quasars within "thousands" of light-years, and thank goodness. They formed only in the early universe, during the formation of galaxies as those large central black holes tore apart and swallow thousands, perhaps millions of times the mass of our Sun.

  • up you spammer

  • They might not exist any more because the light that left them hit us a long time later.

  • "Black Holes suck... but do they swallow? Find out how magnetic fields hurl volumes of matter out from these strange cosmic sinkholes. "

    Black holes do not "suck". They are nothing like a vacuum. They have a gravitational field, proportional to their mass. At a far distance, the gravitational pull from a black hole is identical to what the pull would be from a star of equal mass. Further, the images shown here were all quasars, not stellar (made from stars) black holes.

  • shut

  • Lol at the title!

    My girlfriend does both, could she be a black hole?

  • Close, xXxplanexXx. The jets aren't coming from matter *in* the black hole, but matter that got scraped by the edge of the event horizon. Remember the "hyperbolic" orbits favored by sci-fi and real space craft for accellerating away from a planet? That's what's happening to the matter in the jets.Spinning of the hole is what helps shape and light up the jets. Neutron stars are more likely to light up their matter jets using magnetic fields. Black holes use spin and gravity. Lots of gravity :P

  • the name got me interested lol

  • u guys know nothing about black hole.

  • The cosmic recycling bin.

  • and you know this how

  • Rocket scientists gone wild.

  • The movie is just fine but...someone really needs to do sth with the title

  • ya, taken the wrong way it is a bit naughty

    yes, no men?

  • What I don't get is this, when the black hole is feeding, I always hear that Nothing, not even light can escape it's pull. Then how dose the stuff the black hole spits out, escape it pull? Wouldn't it just pull it back in. I'm probably missing something or just don't understand it. Any answers?

  • I second this question. If matters fall into this dense object called black hole, eventually so much matters collide and pile up on this object? stick onto its surface supposed to be, but why it also spits out?

  • do they gurgle?

  • do they spit?

  • yeah, is re upload, but now without HD

  • Isn't this re upload?

  • i believe it is lol

  • I'll never understand these :S

  • nice

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