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  2. Black Holes and Baby Universes and Other Essays - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_Holes_and_Baby...

    This book is a collection of essays and lectures written by Hawking, mainly about the makeup of black holes, and why they might be nodes from which other universes grow. Hawking discusses black hole thermodynamics , special relativity , general relativity , and quantum mechanics .

  3. Black hole - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_hole

    A black hole with the mass of a car would have a diameter of about 10 −24 m and take a nanosecond to evaporate, during which time it would briefly have a luminosity of more than 200 times that of the Sun. Lower-mass black holes are expected to evaporate even faster; for example, a black hole of mass 1 TeV/c 2 would take less than 10 −88 ...

  4. Black Holes and Time Warps - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_Holes_and_Time_Warps

    Black Holes & Time Warps: Einstein's Outrageous Legacy is a 1994 popular science book by physicist Kip Thorne. It provides an illustrated overview of the history and development of black hole theory, from its roots in Newtonian mechanics until the early 1990s.

  5. Oppenheimer–Snyder model - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oppenheimer–Snyder_model

    While Oppenheimer is remembered in history as the “father of the atomic bomb”, his greatest contribution as a physicist was on the physics of black holes. The work of Oppenheimer and Hartland Snyder helped transform black holes from figments of mathematics to real, physical possibilities – something to be found in the cosmos out there.

  6. Hawking radiation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hawking_radiation

    A black hole of one solar mass (M ☉ = 2.0 × 10 30 kg) takes more than 10 67 years to evaporate—much longer than the current age of the universe at 1.4 × 10 10 years. [22] But for a black hole of 10 11 kg, the evaporation time is 2.6 × 10 9 years. This is why some astronomers are searching for signs of exploding primordial black holes.

  7. How the Universe Works - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/How_the_Universe_Works

    Black holes, the most powerful destroyers in the Universe, the most mysterious phenomena in the heavens. For years, they were only speculation; now, modern astronomy is proving their existence. For years, they were only speculation; now, modern astronomy is proving their existence.

  8. Accretion disk - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Accretion_disk

    A fully general relativistic treatment, as needed for the inner part of the disk when the central object is a black hole, has been provided by Page and Thorne, [25] and used for producing simulated optical images by Luminet [26] and Marck, [27] in which, although such a system is intrinsically symmetric its image is not, because the ...

  9. Outline of black holes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Outline_of_black_holes

    Extremal black holeblack hole with the minimal possible mass that can be compatible with a given charge and angular momentum. Black hole electron – if there were a black hole with the same mass and charge as an electron, it would share many of the properties of the electron including the magnetic moment and Compton wavelength.