My thanks to all who have responded. Obviously, I'm a writer, not a physicists, and obviously, my question needs to be restated. I've finished one novel about a 4 ft diameter black hole coming through the solar system (Dragon's Eye Black Hole) At the ending, the black hole is leaving the solar...
Sorry. I'm working on a science fiction story. I realize worm holes don't exist, or at least haven't been found yet. I suppose my question is, IF one were discovered, would it be reasonable that it might be discovered by gravitational lensing? Also, if my question offends the rules of this...
Would astrophysicists be able to locate the end of a worm hole using gravitational microlensing? I strongly suspect the answer is yes, but any "how" methodologies you could toss in would be helpful.
I am a writer completing a science fiction novel involving a four foot diameter black hole (with approx 1.5 times the mass of Saturn) At one point in the story, this small black hole has sling shot past the sun, is headed outward toward the Kuiper belt & Oort Cloud. As it moves, the sun's...
My sincere thanks to those that have discussed this. Great help for an English and Computer Science major. You've brought up things I never would have considered. What a wonderful forum where less trained science-lovers like myself can go to get thoroughly thought out answers. Again, Thank You.
Homework Statement: I am a writer completing a science fiction novel involving a four foot diameter black hole (with approx 1.5 times the mass of Saturn) In my novel, the black hole is being drawn toward our much more massive sun. I assume the black hole would begin to consume plasma/energy...
Sorry to be slow. I didn't do the calculation myself. I asked an astrophysicist at Univ Arizona. He sent this:
"Assuming the diameter is the Schwarzschild radius, then
rS = 2 GM/c^2 => M = rS c^2 / 2G ~ 1e30 g.
This is about 2 times of the mass of Saturn".
I'll be the first to admit that my math...
It's a problem I made up myself that I'm working on. We've all seen the movie Armageddon, an asteroid coming at the Earth. What about a small black hole?
A 4 ft diameter black hole (1.5 to 2 times the mass of Saturn) is headed toward Earth. Will Earth be able to defend itself using missiles with nuclear bombs? How to calculate such a problem?