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  2. Black hole - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_hole

    The term "black hole" was used in print by Life and Science News magazines in 1963, [61] and by science journalist Ann Ewing in her article " 'Black Holes' in Space", dated 18 January 1964, which was a report on a meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science held in Cleveland, Ohio. [62] [63]

  3. Event horizon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Event_horizon

    For black holes, this manifests as Hawking radiation, and the larger question of how the black hole possesses a temperature is part of the topic of black hole thermodynamics. For accelerating particles, this manifests as the Unruh effect , which causes space around the particle to appear to be filled with matter and radiation.

  4. Kruskal–Szekeres coordinates - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kruskal–Szekeres_coordinates

    The event horizons bounding the black hole and white hole interior regions are also a pair of straight lines at 45 degrees, reflecting the fact that a light ray emitted at the horizon in a radial direction (aimed outward in the case of the black hole, inward in the case of the white hole) would remain on the horizon forever. Thus the two black ...

  5. Malament–Hogarth spacetime - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Malament–Hogarth_spacetime

    This effect is even more pronounced near the inner horizon due to the extreme curvature of spacetime in this region. The energy of the infalling radiation increases as it approaches the inner horizon because of this blueshifting. The energy appears to become infinite from the perspective of an observer falling into the black hole.

  6. Kerr metric - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kerr_metric

    The Kerr metric or Kerr geometry describes the geometry of empty spacetime around a rotating uncharged axially symmetric black hole with a quasispherical event horizon.The Kerr metric is an exact solution of the Einstein field equations of general relativity; these equations are highly non-linear, which makes exact solutions very difficult to find.

  7. Ring singularity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ring_singularity

    Event horizons and ergospheres of a rotating black hole; the ringularity is located at the equatorial kink of the inner ergosphere at R=a. When a spherical non-rotating body of a critical radius collapses under its own gravitation under general relativity, theory suggests it will collapse to a 0-dimensional single point.

  8. Outline of black holes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Outline_of_black_holes

    Intermediate-mass black hole – black hole whose mass is significantly more than stellar black holes yet far less than supermassive black holes. Supermassive black hole – largest type of black hole in a galaxy, on the order of hundreds of thousands to billions of solar masses.

  9. De Sitter–Schwarzschild metric - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/De_Sitter–Schwarzschild...

    It has two horizons, the cosmological de Sitter horizon and a Schwarzschild black hole horizon. For small mass black holes, the two are very different — there is a singularity at the center of the black hole, and there is no singularity past the cosmological horizon. But the Nariai limit considers making the black hole bigger and bigger ...