What is a Black Hole Actually Made Of?

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Discussion Overview

The discussion revolves around the composition and characteristics of black holes, exploring their formation, properties, and the nature of their singularities and event horizons. Participants engage in both theoretical and conceptual aspects of black holes, touching on their origins and implications in astrophysics.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory
  • Technical explanation
  • Conceptual clarification
  • Debate/contested

Main Points Raised

  • One participant questions what black holes are made of, suggesting they might be remnants of stars or "ash."
  • Another participant describes black holes as spacetime entities that interact primarily through gravity and quantum mechanics, lacking properties of ordinary matter.
  • It is proposed that black holes form from the collapsed cores of giant stars, from the accumulation of matter, or potentially from primordial conditions following the Big Bang.
  • A participant clarifies that the event horizon of a black hole is significantly larger than its singularity, which represents a point of infinite gravitational pull.
  • There is a mathematical expression provided for the size of a black hole's event horizon, indicating that it can vary widely based on the black hole's mass and type.
  • Evidence is mentioned regarding the existence of black holes in galaxies, with a specific reference to Cygnus X-1 as a potential example.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants express various viewpoints regarding the nature and formation of black holes, with no consensus reached on the specifics of their composition or the implications of their properties.

Contextual Notes

Some discussions involve assumptions about the definitions of terms like "event horizon" and "singularity," which may not be universally agreed upon. The mathematical expressions provided depend on specific conditions that are not fully explored in the discussion.

Mr. dude
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OK. Black holes. I know they are a super dense thing but made up of what? The remnants of its former stardom? Ash? What is a black hole actually made of? These things facsinate me.
 
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A black hole technically is a spacetime entity that only interacts gravitationally and quantum mechanically with the rest of the universe. It only betrays its existence by tugging at nearby objects [which can produce spectacular fireworks] and weakly squawking by the rules of quantum physics. It has none of the other properties we ascribe to ordinary, unsquished matter.
 
Matter and energy squished down to a singularity (point). Once reaching that singularity state, it is something totally new (as Chronos described) & just beyond the ability for modern physics to fully explain.

Some form from the collapsed cores of giant stars that went supernova. Some form from the accumulation of lots of matter (e.g., possibly supermassive black holes to be found in the center of many galaxies). Some may have formed directly out of the Big Bang (so-called primordial black holes).

I'm sure we can suggest some excellent links on the subject if you want to study it further.
 
ok. So they are smaller than I thought. Thanks for the help.
 
correct me if I am wrong, but here is what i have to say on the topic:

the event horizon of the black hole is a great deal larger than its singularity (if this is the sort of black holes we choose to discuss) the singularity is that point at which the gravitational pull of the former, more spread out matter had been pulled into by an infinite (for a degree of distance) gravitational field..aka the smallest space that the matter could possibly be compacted into is the amount of space it takes up. Though what many referr to when they call somethign a black hole is the outreach of the event horizon, which is the endpoint of the holes infinite strength of gravity. picture a marble with a giant black (chaotic as far as quantum mechanics are concerned) void concealing it. This void could have a diameter anywhere from about the size of the sun to presumabley the size of a small group of solar systems.
 
In astronomy, what we usually mean by the "size" of a black hole is the extent of its event horizon. For a non-rotating black hole, this is simply:

R_{BH}=\frac{2GM}{c^2}

For a supermassive black hole, this can be as large as the solar system. For a collapsed star, it's a few kilometers. Primordial black holes can be arbitrarily small, perhaps limited by the Planck length. We do expect real black holes to be rotating, but the outer event horizon will still be at the same order of magnitude.
 
Last edited:
en...there is (are) a black hole(s) in every galaxy .the astronomers have found some evidences . Cygnus X-1,maybe,is a black hole .
 

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