
Black Hole - A Beginning, not the End
Author(s) -
Purujit Malik
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
international journal for research in applied science and engineering technology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2321-9653
DOI - 10.22214/ijraset.2021.35316
Subject(s) - black hole (networking) , physics , white hole , event horizon , hawking radiation , extremal black hole , black hole thermodynamics , sonic black hole , membrane paradigm , theoretical physics , fuzzball , de sitter–schwarzschild metric , horizon , classical mechanics , charged black hole , astronomy , computer science , computer network , routing protocol , routing (electronic design automation) , link state routing protocol
A black hole is a region of space from which nothing, not even light, can escape. According to the general theory of relativity[2], it starts existing when spacetime gets curved by a huge mass. There is a sphere around the black hole. If something goes inside the sphere, it can not leave. This sphere is called the event horizon. A black hole is black because it absorbs all the light that hits it. It reflects nothing, just like a perfect black body in thermodynamics. Under quantum mechanics, black holes have a temperature and emit Hawking radiation, which makes them slowly get smaller.Because black holes are very hard to see, people trying to see them look for them by the way they affect other things near them. The place where there is a black hole can be found by tracking the movement of stars that orbit somewhere in space. Or people can find it when gas falls into a black hole, because the gas heats up and is very bright[1].However besides all these theories we still do not know what a black hole and dark matter is because all these theories rely on the much physical aspect of things and not on a unified understanding of creation.