
An Italian astronomer has explained that supermassive black holes
have masses millions or billions times greater than that of the Sun, and
have grown to huge proportions by swallowing matter and merging with
other black holes.
In an animated TED-Ed video, titled “Could the Earth be
swallowed by a black hole?” Fabio Pacucci, a Yale Postdoctoral
Associate, explains that a supermassive black hole works as a “cosmic
vacuum cleaner with infinite capacity”, wiping out everything in its
path due to the immense gravitational field.
“Nothing,
not even light, can move fast enough to escape a black hole’s
gravitational pull once it passes a certain boundary, known as the event
horizon. The black hole is millions or billions times greater than that
of our Sun and has an event horizon that could span billion
of kilometres”, he details.
Pacucci
elaborated that if a stellar-mass black hole were to pass
along Neptune, the orbit of the Earth would be significantly modified,
“with dire results”. Still this type of black hole doesn’t cause as much
worry as supermassive black holes that lie at the centre of galaxies.
“Our
solar system is in a stable orbit around a supermassive black hole that
resides at the centre of the Milky Way, at a safe distance of 25,000
light-years. But that could change. If our galaxy collides with another,
the Earth could be thrown towards the galactic centre, close enough
to the supermassive black hole to be eventually swallowed up.
"In fact, a collision with the Andromeda Galaxy is predicted to happen 4 billion years from now, which may not be great news for our home planet”, he added.At the same time, the astronomer stressed that the black holes were not just “agents of destruction”, but play a key role in the formation of galaxies.
“Our
solar system is in a stable orbit around a supermassive black hole that
resides at the centre of the Milky Way, at a safe distance of 25,000
light-years. But that could change. If our galaxy collides with another,
the Earth could be thrown towards the galactic centre, close enough
to the supermassive black hole to be eventually swallowed up."In fact, a collision with the Andromeda Galaxy is predicted to happen 4 billion years from now, which may not be great news for our home planet”, he added.At the same time, the astronomer stressed that the black holes were not just “agents of destruction”, but play a key role in the formation of galaxies.
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click on link For video : https://youtu.be/e9TLbZuvsko


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