You know when I'm without you, there's
a black hole in my life!
Isn't it crazy that «marriage / kids / etc» is this purported
black hole in life?
Kingdom Hearts 3 was announced at last year's E3 event, and fans of the series were finally able to close that
black hole in their lives.
Not exact matches
Dec 22, 2016 Carrying around high interest debt is like
living in a financial
black hole.
If fine tuned, the universe was much more made for
black holes than for us, since it can
live in the vast stretches of space, while space is hostile to us.
I can't stand the woman and all she stands for
in her public and political
life, but I think we should let that particular e-mail find it's way into the
black hole of «this was no one's business.»
We have no idea that there might be other types of
life in other parts of the universe or through a
black hole into another universe that have very different narrow constrictions for environment that this argument says is prime for us.
Do we imagine this
black -
hole of apparent «communion» with the rest of the world is more interested than He is
in the details of our
lives?
No two
black holes live out their
life in the same measures.
but i have a new idea for what believers think god is... and it may actually exist and funny enough is only tested thru its effect on other objects — kinda like a
black hole — the collective conscienceness of every
living thing... since we all are part of the same energies and have
in some form or another a conscienciness, i believe that collective is what the believers claim is god — the collective being felt and moved like any conscienceness but with the power to effect us all as we all play into it — as long as we are open to it... your thoughts?
«Every opportunity is being given for military personnel to retrain either for alternative roles
in the armed forces or
in civilian
life, but the simple fact is we have to tackle the massive deficit we inherited from Labour and the huge
black hole in the defence budget,» he explained.
They can explode
in spectacular supernovae at the end of their
lives, forming some of the most exotic objects
in the Universe — neutron stars and
black holes.
The proposal from the world's most famous
living physicist, presented August 25 at a conference
in Stockholm, is the latest attempt to explain what happens to information that falls into the abyss of a
black hole.
The discovery follows decades of astronomers searching for small
black holes in the galactic center, where a supermassive
black hole lives (SN: 3/4/17, p. 8).
Scouting out the locales where
black hole pairs
live allows astronomers to look for light produced
in the collision.
If this is the case, it would mean that the
black holes are
living in a dense environment — most likely within star clusters.
The two
black holes live roughly 3.7 billion light - years away
in a quasar, the ferociously bright core of a galaxy lit up by...
Supermassive
black holes live in the heart of large galaxies, including our own Milky Way, and can be millions or even billions of times the mass of the sun.
They could have emerged from gamma - ray bursts, mysterious and short -
lived cataclysms that briefly rank as the brightest objects
in the universe; shock waves from exploding stars; or so - called blazars, jets of energy powered by supermassive
black holes.
Such stars end their
lives in huge supernova explosions, ejecting their stellar materials outwards into space and leaving behind an extremely dense and compact object; this could either be a white dwarf, a neutron star or a
black hole.
In a lecture in 1975 he said «in my entire scientific life... the most shattering experience has been the realisation that an exact solution of Einstein's equations of general relativity, discovered by the New Zealand mathematician Roy Kerr, provides the absolutely exact representation of untold numbers of massive black holes that populate the Univers
In a lecture
in 1975 he said «in my entire scientific life... the most shattering experience has been the realisation that an exact solution of Einstein's equations of general relativity, discovered by the New Zealand mathematician Roy Kerr, provides the absolutely exact representation of untold numbers of massive black holes that populate the Univers
in 1975 he said «
in my entire scientific life... the most shattering experience has been the realisation that an exact solution of Einstein's equations of general relativity, discovered by the New Zealand mathematician Roy Kerr, provides the absolutely exact representation of untold numbers of massive black holes that populate the Univers
in my entire scientific
life... the most shattering experience has been the realisation that an exact solution of Einstein's equations of general relativity, discovered by the New Zealand mathematician Roy Kerr, provides the absolutely exact representation of untold numbers of massive
black holes that populate the Universe.
This discovery allowed the astronomers to reconstruct the stellar
life story that permitted the magnetar to form,
in place of the expected
black hole [3].
4 THE
BLACK HOLE OF NEVADA On average, according to the most recent U.S. census, less than one person per square mile
lives in the Great Basin of Nevada.
In August, researchers at the Kavli Institute for Particle Astrophysics and Cosmology at Stanford University ran a supercomputer simulation of the early universe and provided a tantalizing glimpse into the
lives of the first
black holes.
«Understanding how supermassive
black holes form tells us how galaxies, including our own, form and evolve, and ultimately, tells us more about the universe
in which we
live,» said Regan, at Dublin City University.
By gathering energetic X-rays, it will study the physics of
black holes, the evolution of galaxy clusters, and the formation of heavy elements — crucial for
life —
in exploding stars.
A reversal of thermodynamics could allow
life to exist on planets orbiting a
black hole, as seen
in the film Interstellar
One possible interpretation of the discovery, Loeb says, is «that we are witnessing a short -
lived phase
in the evolution of clusters, just before the central massive
black hole starts its feedback.
Black holes will likely be the last objects standing
in the universe, so
life's survival may depend on harnessing their tremendous energy stores.a.g.
So,
black holes as well as being sort of agencies of doom and destruction
in the end of time and allegories of halo and all the rest of it, are also bringers of
life.
Were it not for the tragedy and drama of his
life, would so many of us have become interested
in black holes, the beginning of the universe, the nature of time?
Maybe there are a lot more monster
black holes out there that don't
live in a skyscraper
in Manhattan, but
in a tall building somewhere
in the Midwestern plains.»
«The massive
black hole seeds are the ones that won the birth lottery and got the best start
in life.»
«NGC 1600 is the first very massive
black hole that
lives outside a rich environment
in the local universe, and could be the first example of a descendent of a very luminous quasar that also didn't
live in a privileged site.»
«The brightest quasars, probably hosting the most massive
black holes, don't necessarily have to
live in the densest regions of the universe,» she said.
Although the source of the flares is unclear, the finding may help astronomers better understand the first few minutes
in the
lives of
black holes.
In the modern universe,
black holes typically form from massive stars that collapse under their own gravity at the ends of their
lives.
These were very massive and short
lived and could have formed large
black holes when they exploded
in supernovae.
A mysterious object that repeatedly bursts with ultra-powerful radio waves must
live in an extreme environment — something like the one around a supermassive
black hole.
Quasars constitute a brief phase
in the galactic
life - cycle, during which they shine as the most luminous objects
in the Universe, powered by the infall of matter onto a supermassive
black hole.
This general purpose, long -
lived facility would be the prime tool for generations of astronomers, producing transformational scientific advances
in every area of astronomy and astrophysics from
black hole physics to galaxy formation, from star and planet formation to the Solar System.
Black holes have finite lifetimes, but they will
live much longer than other structures
in the universe.
The
black holes that power quasars probably started their
lives in miniature and grew exponentially by accretion — whereby matter close to a
black hole can not escape the strong gravitational field and is ultimately pulled into the
black hole.
MATISSE will contribute to several fundamental research areas
in astronomy, focusing
in particular on the inner regions of discs around young stars where planets are forming, the study of stars at different stages of their
lives, and the surroundings of supermassive
black holes at the centres of galaxies.
For many years, astronomers have known two types - «supermassive»
black holes at the centers of large galaxies and the so - called «stellar - mass»
black holes that result when a star about 10 times the Sun's mass ends its
life in a supernova explosion.
Then, the team behind the new paper compared those ages with the size of the supermassive
black hole at the center of the galaxies those stars
live in, which other scientists had previously calculated.
These distant quasars are thought to «turn on» when the host galaxy's central
black hole is «fueled» by material drawn
in during an early stage of the galaxy's development, before the galaxy «settles down» to a more sedate
life.
Instead, at the end of their
lives, they will explode
in a violent supernova, leaving behind a neutron star or
black hole.
I had only two watches so far
in my
life and they both ended up missing, first one got swallowed up by a «
black hole» at home and 2nd one was a misfortunate loss on one of my summer holidays.
But Ben, sans direction or real ambition, is a
black hole in every scene and fails
in convincing the audience that he knows what he wants for dinner, much less out of
life.