Could the Earth be swallowed by a black hole? - Fabio Pacucci

1,020,101 views ・ 2018-09-20

TED-Ed


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From asteroids capable of destroying entire species,
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to gamma-ray bursts and supernovae that could exterminate life on Earth,
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outer space has no shortage of forces that could wreak havoc on our tiny planet.
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But there’s something in space
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that seems more terrifying than any of these –
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something that wipes out everything it comes near.
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Could the Earth be swallowed by a black hole?
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A black hole is an object so dense
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that space and time around it are inescapably modified,
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warped into an infinite sink.
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Nothing, not even light, can move fast enough
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to escape a black hole’s gravitational pull
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once it passes a certain boundary,
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known as the event horizon.
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Thus, a black hole is like a cosmic vacuum cleaner with infinite capacity,
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gobbling up everything in its path, and letting nothing out.
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To determine whether a black hole could swallow the Earth,
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we first have to figure out where they are.
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But since they don’t emit light, how’s that possible?
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Fortunately, we’re able to observe their effect on the space around them.
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When matter approaches a black hole,
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the immense gravitational field accelerates it to high speed.
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This emits an enormous amount of light.
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And for objects too far away to be sucked in,
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the massive gravitational force still affects their orbits.
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If we observe several stars orbiting around an apparently empty point,
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a black hole could be leading the dance.
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Similarly, light that passes close enough to an event horizon
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will be deflected in a phenomenon known as gravitational lensing.
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Most of the black holes that we’ve found can be thought of as two main types.
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The smaller ones, called stellar mass black holes,
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have a mass up to 100 times larger than that of our sun.
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They’re formed when a massive star consumes all its nuclear fuel
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and its core collapses.
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We’ve observed several of these objects as close as 3000 light-years away,
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and there could be up to 100 million small black holes
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just in the Milky Way galaxy.
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So should we be worried?
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Probably not.
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Despite their large mass,
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stellar black holes only have a radius of around 300 kilometers or less,
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making the chances of a direct hit with us miniscule.
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Although because their gravitational fields
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can affect a planet from a large distance,
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they could be dangerous even without a direct collision.
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If a typical stellar-mass black hole were to pass in the region of Neptune,
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the orbit of the Earth would be considerably modified,
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with dire results.
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Still, the combination of how small they are and how vast the galaxy is
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means that stellar black holes don’t give us much to worry about.
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But we still have to meet the second type:
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supermassive black holes.
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These have masses millions or billions times greater than that of our sun
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and have event horizons that could span billions of kilometers.
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These giants have grown to immense proportions
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by swallowing matter and merging with other black holes.
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Unlike their stellar cousins,
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supermassive black holes aren’t wandering through space.
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Instead, they lie at the center of galaxies, including our own.
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Our solar system is in a stable orbit around a supermassive black hole
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that resides at the center of the Milky Way,
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at a safe distance of 25,000 light-years.
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But that could change.
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If our galaxy collides with another,
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the Earth could be thrown towards the galactic center,
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close enough to the supermassive black hole
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to be eventually swallowed up.
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In fact, a collision with the Andromeda Galaxy
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is predicted to happen 4 billion years from now,
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which may not be great news for our home planet.
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But before we judge them too harshly,
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black holes aren’t simply agents of destruction.
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They played a crucial role in the formation of galaxies,
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the building blocks of our universe.
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Far from being shadowy characters in the cosmic play,
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black holes have fundamentally contributed
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in making the universe a bright and astonishing place.
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