Questions About Event Horizon, Singularity & Schwarzchild Radius

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The Schwarzschild radius defines the size an object must reach to become a black hole, depending on its mass. The event horizon is the boundary surrounding a black hole, marking the point of no return for objects falling in. Inside the event horizon lies the singularity, where all the mass is concentrated at an infinitely dense point, as predicted by general relativity. Quantum theory fails to explain conditions at the singularity, leaving its true nature a mystery. Understanding these concepts clarifies the structure and behavior of black holes.
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A Couple Questions...

I was recently watching a t.v. show and the following terms came up: event horizon, singularity and schwarzchild radius... Can anyone tell me what these things are?
 
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All these terms relate to black holes. The Schwarzschild radius (depends on mass of object) is the radius that an object has to have to become a black hole. That is if the object is bigger, it is not, if smaller, it is.

The event horizon is determined by the Schwarzschild radius and it refers to the point of no return for any object falling into a black hole.

A singularity (in this context) refers to the idea that all the mass of a black hole is concentrated at one point of infinite density - a prediction of general relativity. Since quantum theory breaks down under these circumstances, no one really knows what happens inside a black hole.
 
The event horizon of a black hole is the point of no return, once an object is past this point it can only move towards the singularity.

The Schwarzschild radius is the radius of the sphere around the (Scwarzchild) black hole whose surface forms the event horizon and is given by the simple equation:

r_S = \frac{2GM}{c^2}

Ther singularity is the infinitely dense point at the centre of a black hole which matter is pulled to.
 
Interesting... Thanks...It all makes sense now...
 
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