Could the Earth be swallowed by a black hole Fabio Pacucci

From asteroids capable
of destroying entire species,

to gamma-ray bursts and supernovae
that could exterminate life on Earth,

outer space has no shortage of forces
that could wreak havoc on our tiny planet.

But there’s something in space

that seems more terrifying
than any of these –

something that wipes out
everything it comes near.

Could the Earth
be swallowed by a black hole?

A black hole is an object so dense

that space and time around it
are inescapably modified,

warped into an infinite sink.

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.

Thus, a black hole is like a cosmic
vacuum cleaner with infinite capacity,

gobbling up everything in its path,
and letting nothing out.

To determine whether a black hole
could swallow the Earth,

we first have to figure out
where they are.

But since they don’t emit light,
how’s that possible?

Fortunately, we’re able to observe
their effect on the space around them.

When matter approaches a black hole,

the immense gravitational field
accelerates it to high speed.

This emits an enormous amount of light.

And for objects too far away
to be sucked in,

the massive gravitational force
still affects their orbits.

If we observe several stars orbiting
around an apparently empty point,

a black hole could be leading the dance.

Similarly, light that passes
close enough to an event horizon

will be deflected in a phenomenon
known as gravitational lensing.

Most of the black holes that we’ve found
can be thought of as two main types.

The smaller ones,
called stellar mass black holes,

have a mass up to 100 times larger
than that of our sun.

They’re formed when a massive star
consumes all its nuclear fuel

and its core collapses.

We’ve observed several of these
objects as close as 3000 light-years away,

and there could be up to 100 million
small black holes

just in the Milky Way galaxy.

So should we be worried?

Probably not.

Despite their large mass,

stellar black holes only have a radius
of around 300 kilometers or less,

making the chances
of a direct hit with us miniscule.

Although because
their gravitational fields

can affect a planet from a large distance,

they could be dangerous
even without a direct collision.

If a typical stellar-mass black hole
were to pass in the region of Neptune,

the orbit of the Earth
would be considerably modified,

with dire results.

Still, the combination of how small
they are and how vast the galaxy is

means that stellar black holes
don’t give us much to worry about.

But we still have to meet the second type:

supermassive black holes.

These have masses millions or billions
times greater than that of our sun

and have event horizons that
could span billions of kilometers.

These giants have grown
to immense proportions

by swallowing matter
and merging with other black holes.

Unlike their stellar cousins,

supermassive black holes aren’t
wandering through space.

Instead, they lie at the center
of galaxies, including our own.

Our solar system is in a stable orbit
around a supermassive black hole

that resides
at the center 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 center,

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.

But before we judge them too harshly,

black holes aren’t simply agents
of destruction.

They played a crucial role
in the formation of galaxies,

the building blocks of our universe.

Far from being shadowy characters
in the cosmic play,

black holes have fundamentally contributed

in making the universe
a bright and astonishing place.


能够摧毁整个物种的小行星,


能够消灭地球上生命的伽马射线爆发和超新星,

外太空不乏
可能对我们这个小星球造成严重破坏的力量。

但太空中有些东西

似乎
比这些都更可怕——

它会抹去
它靠近的一切。

地球
会被黑洞吞噬吗?

黑洞是一个如此密集的物体,

以至于它周围的空间和时间
都不可避免地被改变,

扭曲成一个无限的水槽。 一旦黑洞通过某个边界,即事件视界

,没有任何东西,即使是光,
也无法以足够快的速度

逃离黑洞的
引力

因此,黑洞就像一个
容量无限的宇宙真空吸尘器,

吞噬其路径上的一切,不
放出任何东西。

要确定黑洞是否
可以吞噬地球,

我们首先必须弄清楚
它们在哪里。

但既然它们不发光,那
怎么可能呢?

幸运的是,我们能够观察到
它们对周围空间的影响。

当物质接近黑洞时

,巨大的引力场
将其加速到高速。

这会发出大量的光。

对于太远而
无法被吸入的物体

,巨大的引力
仍然会影响它们的轨道。

如果我们观察到几颗恒星
围绕一个明显的空点运行,那么

一个黑洞可能正在引领这场舞蹈。

同样,通过
足够接近事件视界的光

将在称为引力透镜的现象中发生偏转

我们发现的大多数黑洞
可以被认为是两种主要类型。

较小的
称为恒星质量黑洞,

其质量
比我们的太阳大 100 倍。

它们是在一颗大质量恒星
耗尽其所有核燃料

并且其核心坍塌时形成的。

我们已经
在 3000 光年以外的地方观察到了其中的几个物体,仅在银河系

中就可能有多达 1 亿
个小黑洞

那么我们应该担心吗?

可能不是。

尽管质量很大,但

恒星黑洞的半径只有
大约 300 公里或更小

,因此
直接撞击我们的机会微乎其微。

虽然因为
它们的引力场

可以从很远的距离影响行星,

但即使没有直接碰撞,它们也可能是危险的

如果一个典型的恒星质量黑洞
在海王星区域通过,

地球的轨道
将会发生相当大的改变,

结果是可怕的。

尽管如此,它们有多小
和银河系有多大的结合

意味着恒星黑洞
并不会让我们担心太多。

但我们还是要遇到第二种:

超大质量黑洞。

它们的质量是我们太阳的数百万或数十亿
倍,

并且事件视界
可以跨越数十亿公里。

通过吞噬物质
并与其他黑洞合并,这些巨人已经成长为巨大的比例。

与它们的恒星表亲不同,

超大质量黑洞并没有
在太空中游荡。

相反,它们位于星系的中心
,包括我们自己的。

我们的太阳系位于银河系中心
的超大质量黑洞周围的稳定轨道上

,安全距离为 25,000 光年。

但这可能会改变。

如果我们的星系与另一个星系相撞

,地球可能会被
抛向星系中心,

距离
超大质量

黑洞足够近,最终会被吞噬。

事实上,
与仙女座星系

的碰撞预计将在
40 亿年后发生,


对我们的母星来说可能不是好消息。

但在我们过于严厉地评判它们之前,

黑洞不仅仅是
破坏的媒介。

它们在星系的形成中发挥了至关重要的作用
,星系

是我们宇宙的基石。 黑洞

远非
宇宙剧中的阴暗角色,它

从根本上促成

了使宇宙
成为一个明亮而令人惊讶的地方。