2 Black Holes: What Would Happen?

  • Thread starter Thread starter hell18
  • Start date Start date
  • Tags Tags
    Black holes Holes
AI Thread Summary
When two black holes, one smaller than the other, move toward each other, they will merge into a single, larger black hole. The mass of the resulting black hole will equal the sum of the two original masses, conserving properties like angular momentum and charge. During this merger, significant energy will be released in the form of gravitational waves. This phenomenon is actively monitored by gravitational wave detectors, which are designed to detect such events. The merger process highlights the fascinating dynamics of black hole interactions in the universe.
hell18
Messages
21
Reaction score
0
when there are 2 black holes and 1 is smaller than the other and they move toward each other. what would the effect be? would they combine and become 1 big black hole or would the smaller black hole just disappear?
 
Physics news on Phys.org


Originally posted by hell18
when there are 2 black holes and 1 is smaller than the other and they move toward each other. what would the effect be? would they combine and become 1 big black hole or would the smaller black hole just disappear?

they would merge into a black hole with larger mass

some energy would escape as gravitational waves
(repercussions of the merger)
but except for that, the mass of the combined hole would
be the sum of the two masses when they were still separate
and far from each other.
 
Yep, they would coalesce into one larger, black hole conserving properties such as mass angular momentum and charge.

As Marcus said tey would produce a lot of gravational radiation as well, which means that gravity wave detectors are set up to look for just this kind of event.
 
Thread 'Is there a white hole inside every black hole?'
This is what I am thinking. How much feasible is it? There is a white hole inside every black hole The white hole spits mass/energy out continuously The mass/energy that is spit out of a white hole drops back into it eventually. This is because of extreme space time curvature around the white hole Ironically this extreme space time curvature of the space around a white hole is caused by the huge mass/energy packed in the white hole Because of continuously spitting mass/energy which keeps...

Similar threads

Back
Top