How Strong is the Gravity of a Black Hole Compared to Earth?

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Gravity on Earth is 9.8 m/s², while black holes exert an incomprehensibly stronger gravitational pull, fundamentally altering spacetime rather than acting as a conventional force. General Relativity describes gravity as a curvature of spacetime caused by mass, making it complex near black holes where traditional Newtonian physics fails. There is no defined minimum force of gravity needed to bend spacetime, as any mass can distort it, and the effects of gravity extend infinitely, though they diminish with distance. At significant distances, the gravitational influence of nearby masses, like Earth, will overshadow that of distant black holes. Understanding black hole gravity requires a grasp of advanced physics concepts, as the effects are not easily simplified.
uperkurk
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Gravity on Earth is 9.8m/s² and on the moon I believe it's 1.6m/s² so I'm wondering how much gravity a black hole has?

What is the minimum force of gravity needed to bend space-time, do we know? Is there a formula?

Also how far from the black hole would you have to be before you no longer feel the pull of gravity?
 
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There isn't really an answer to your first question, I'm afraid (although note that this is at the limit of my understanding, and someone may correct me). In General Relativity, gravity is not a force. Mass changes the definition of "straight line" so that objects moving freely tend to curve toward it. The maths describing that is rather complicated, but you find that you can recover Newton's gravity-is-a-force maths if the gravity is weak. However, gravity is not weak near a black hole and it isn't really possible to treat that kind of thing as a force in a coherent way.

All mass distorts spacetime. That's what gravity is, to the best of our knowledge. Under some circumstances you can pretend that Newton was right because the maths is a lot simpler and the errors are too small to matter. For example, NASA throws spacecraft at the outer planets without Einstein. On the other hand, the GPS would report wrong positions if it did not allow for spacetime curvature.

Finally, there is no known limit to the range of gravity. Given enough time, any mass will pull you in unless you do something like orbit it. If you are far enough away, though, nearby sources of gravity will dominate - for example the Earth's gravity is much more important to you than that of a supermassive black hole two galaxies over.
 
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So I know that electrons are fundamental, there's no 'material' that makes them up, it's like talking about a colour itself rather than a car or a flower. Now protons and neutrons and quarks and whatever other stuff is there fundamentally, I want someone to kind of teach me these, I have a lot of questions that books might not give the answer in the way I understand. Thanks

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