Quantcast Rogue black holes Text - Physics Forums Library

PDA

View Full Version : Rogue black holes


hammertime
Sep16-08, 05:26 AM
In January, a Vanderbilt University astronomer (I forget her name) found that there were probably hundreds of 'rogue' black holes flying about our galaxy. She surmised that the risk to the earth from these RBH's was infinitesimal. She said that the only possible risk would be that one goes through the Oort cloud and flings something in our direction, but even then, the odds of that are one in a quadrillion per year.

But I'm skeptical.

How can the RBH going through the Oort cloud be the only possible risk? Couldn't it just head straight for earth, or at least in a trajectory that would either throw earth off its orbit or hurl something towards it?

russ_watters
Sep16-08, 06:57 AM
"Only possible risk" doesn't sound like something a scientist would say, but the reason it would be the biggest risk is because of the size of the Ort Cloud compared with the size of the rest of the solar system.

Chronos
Sep16-08, 11:48 PM
There is nothing special about black holes. They behave exactly the same as any other equally massive body aside from having an event horizon. A garden variety star passing through the Oort cloud would be equally disruptive, not to mention more probable.