Sentences with phrase «much about the black hole»

Hamilton did not know much about black holes back then, but he had a lot of related expertise to draw on.
«So, this protocol, though interesting in its own right, will probably not teach us much about the black hole information problem in general.»

Not exact matches

If you really care that much, it's not hard to test, mass is directly proportional to gravitational strength, I told you how far the black hole is, and alpha centarui is about 4 lightyears away.
and ur football knowledge is as much as a 3 y.o. kid knows about black holes... Cech took the ball 5 times from his net (our game in recent past), Cassillas has got even more... all keepers can have a bad day ffs!!
At the Milky Way's heart, stars circle a supermassive black hole called Sagittarius A *, which contains about 3.7 million times as much mass as our sun.
Tipping the scales at less than about a million suns in mass, middleweight black holes may hold clues to how their much larger siblings, and galaxies, first formed
Much smaller black holes (typically weighing several times as much as the sun) result from the explosive death of ultrabright stars, so these dark objects reveal secrets about the stellar life cyMuch smaller black holes (typically weighing several times as much as the sun) result from the explosive death of ultrabright stars, so these dark objects reveal secrets about the stellar life cymuch as the sun) result from the explosive death of ultrabright stars, so these dark objects reveal secrets about the stellar life cycle.
Future flares will reveal much about how the black hole feeds, experts say.
So the very fact that we exist here on earth to talk about these things tells us that even if black holes are produced, pretty much everything is very safe.
«Future LIGO observing runs will tell us much more about the universe's population of black holes, and it won't be long before we'll know if the scenario I outline is either supported or ruled out,» Kashlinsky said.
Most of the black holes in LIGO's mergers have been middleweights, being heavier than that 20 — solar mass limit but much lighter than the supermassive variety, raising questions about their origins and relationship to the two well - studied populations of black holes.
It comes from the spinning space - time around the black hole and in fact it is not very well known, but that energy is there for the taking — up to 29 percent of the so - called rest mass energy of a spinning black hole is extractable — an d original conjecture, which is not, as I say [said], yet established fact, but certainly taken much more seriously than it was at that time — 10 or 15 percent of the rest mass energy of the black hole, about half of the spin energy, is in practice according to our conjecture, is in fact, the power source for these relativistically moving jets.
«Pretty much anything we can learn about black holes has a good chance of leading to deep insights about the laws of physics,» says Daniel Harlow of Princeton University.
Lately scientists» excitement has grown thanks to well - publicized rumors about a discovery — some specific (detection of a black hole merger), some not so much.
These ancient black holes proved to be proportionately much heavier than those in the present - day universe — about 3 percent of the galaxy's mass.
Scientists say that type II supernovae should not produce black holes much bigger than about 30 solar masses — and both black holes were at the high end of that range.
The lost difference, about three Suns» worth, was dispersed as gravitational radiation — much of it during what physicists call the «ringdown» phase, when the merged black hole was settling into a spherical shape.
To scientists, that suggested that the collision involved much less celestial stuff than a black - hole merger — that it was instead two neutron stars, each about one and a half times the mass of our sun.
The waves came from a catastrophic event — the collision of two black holes located about 1.3 billion light years away from Earth — and the released energy undulated across the universe, much like ripples in a pond.
G1 [right], a much larger globular cluster, harbors a heftier black hole, about 20,000 times more massive than our Sun.
Now, for the past six years, I have had seven dresses that I always wear for formal events (black - tie, weddings): (1) a long sleeved, high - necked, knee length black lace dress by Lover, whose darts I removed entirely so that it falls straight from my shoulders to hips to knees in a very loose, comfortable cut (no need to pull any waists in, and I can eat as much as I like) that I made an underskirt for, so it can also be calf length (2) an ivory version of the same above, with the optional lace underskirt (3) an amazingly intricate ivory leather macrame flapper dress uner which I wear a dark brown long, stretch singlet dress (so comfortable again)(4) a vermillion small V - neck, long bell sleeved, straight cut, long, widens - at - the -(just above ankle) hemline dress I sewed in the most gorgeous lace for twenty dollars (5) a burgundy lace version of the vermillion lace dress in (4)-- for the same price (6) a knee length, Romance Was Born silk shift three sizes up so it sits away from the waist — again — its all about «a'll the better to eat dinner with, my dear», in a huge, wild sunflower graphic print before graphic prints were trendy: it's giant sunflowers against an intense turquoise background (7) a calf length caftan cut dress that I made from Japanese printed silk my mother had bought and kept for sixty years (it's just a giant square with a hole fro my neck and two for my arms, and has the best drape EVER owing to its being silk)
Needless to say, this biopic didn't require much brainpower, but all that hubbub about black holes, sure was cool.
A 2011 amendment makes it a criminal offense to disclose who donates SSO money, how much they donate, or which schools receive these donations, making any knowledge about where the money goes so shrouded in mystery that the Society of Professional Journalists awarded HB 1133 the Black Hole Award, for «the most heinous violations of the public's right to know.»
There are a few other models that were bandied about by Reuss including a compact van to take on the Ford Transit Connect, a «black hole» pickup truck that would be sandwhich between a medium - duty and heavy - duty truck, and a a flagship model for Buick that Reuss says «a much more beautiful Panamera.»
As we finally are getting some much - needed rain I keep thinking about things, besides the social and political black holes, that are ripe for clean up.
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