Can we send a probe inside a black hole? And why are we so obsessed with the Milky Way? This and more in this episode of The Astroholic Explains!
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Chris
Hello and welcome back to a brand new episode of The Astroholic, I am Chris!
Alfredo
And I am Alfredo, the Astroholic
Chris
Let’s dive straight into some brand new questions from a couple of our listeners.
Alfredo
Fantastic. Let’s dive in!
Chris
The first question comes from @Paulieblogger on Twitter, who asks: can you send something into a black hole like a camera? Or would it disintegrate? It’s probably a stupid question, he then adds.
Alfredo
Okay, first of all, no such thing as a stupid question. Because you clearly are curious about this. You clearly want to know. And it doesn’t matter if it’s something that is obvious to me or to any other or even if it’s something that is super common, and a lot of people know and this is definitely not it. So if you’re curious, you should never feel bad for asking questions. And if somebody makes you feel bad for asking a question, let me know. And I’m going to go and beat them up.
Chris
The Astroholic is not advocating violence.
Alfredo
Okay, let me know. I’m gonna go meet them and I will say something.
Chris
I will have stern words with them.
Alfredo
Now I’m just gonna say something clever and devastating.
Chris
Brilliant.
Alfredo
No violence. So, no, you cannot throw anything into a black hole. It will disintegrate. But I think what is very interesting is how. How can we work out what’s in a black hole? Could we build something that might tell us something? Yes & no. So we need to understand just how enormously dramatic black holes are. So let’s start by approaching a black hole. The gravity around the black hole becomes so intense that even a person will start feeling, and let’s assume you’re jumping in feet first, the gravity on your feet from the black hole would be different from the gravity in your head. And as you get closer and closer to the black hole, you will start getting stretched.
Chris
Physically stretched?
Alfredo
Physically stretched!
Chris
Wow!
Alfredo
This is a process called spaghettification.
Chris
Did an Italian come up with this?
Alfredo
No, but there’s a lot of pasta related terms in space.
Chris
I’ve heard of noodles, space noodles,
Alfredo
Space noodles, there is nuclear pasta. There’s a lot! It’s just that Italians are popular.
Chris
Like pasta.
Alfredo
Yes. It’s not our fault that everyone loves us. So you’re being stretched and eventually you stretch so much that even the molecules in your body are broken down. You’re just a big cloud of hot plasma, and then you’re spiraling into the black hole. So far, there’s no material that can survive that.
I think we just got some potential first evidence for a collision between a black hole and a neutron star. What’s inside the neutral star is this nuclear pasta that I mentioned. This is probably the densest, most incredible material in the universe. And we don’t think anything like that survives unscathed, I think some will be thrown out and lose those properties. The rest will be sucked in by the black hole. There is nothing that we can build, as far as we can tell, that can survive the encounter with a black hole.
Chris
Woooah, okay!
Alfredo
How do we know about what’s inside?
Chris
Maths, isn’t it?
Alfredo
It is Maths!
Chris
My old nemesis.
Alfredo
Well, there is maths, there’s biology, there’s physics…
Chris
I’ve had many enemies!
Alfredo
Yeah, you’ve made many enemies in your school years. Thanks to the power of maths, we can sort of work out what the properties inside the black hole should be. And it still becomes complicated because black holes are surrounded by what we call the event horizon. beyond that point, nothing can escape. Not even light because beyond that point, the escape velocity that something should have to escape is larger than the speed of light.
Chris
I know something that couldn’t escape… love. [laughs]
Alfredo
No.
Chris
Oh, Interstellar was wrong?
Alfredo
Interstellar was wrong! But now there is an interesting thing since you mentioned love. So let’s assume, let’s go back, you jumping in! You know what you’re gonna experience dramatic forces and all of trauma and then you will be turned into plasma. And that’s it.
Chris
Typical Saturday!
Alfredo
Typical Saturday! But if I have a telescope and looking at you, I will see the light emitted by you getting to lower lower wavelengths, the redshift that we mentioned a few episodes back..
Chris
I remember
Alfredo
and that light that it will be there till the end of the universe.
Chris
So, there would be an imprint of me dying in space for eternity
Alfredo
But I can always look up at that.. awwwww
Chris
You can look at a photo!
Alfredo
Awwwwwwwww
Chris
No, it’s not cute. It’s devastating!
Alfredo
Okay, well, you said love.. So no, nothing escapes black holes: not light, not love.
Chris
Not me apparently!
Alfredo
And not you. So where were we with the question though?
Chris
I can’t remember!
Alfredo
No, me neither.
Chris
Maths!
Alfredo
Yes, the power of maths. So everything we know is through maths. And there is this barrier that stops us from actually physically seeing inside. The ways we’ve been sort of peeking through are pretty much the limits of our understanding of physics. One is gravitational waves we mentioned, they tell us quite a bit about the properties of black holes, when black holes merge and how the gravitational waves are emitted. And that’s just by having very very good theoretical ideas of what gravitational waves should look like. Another approach is something called Hawking radiation. So Stephen Hawking predicted that black holes..
Chris
They are hairy.
Alfredo
Yes, they’re hairy. Yes. Can you remember that?
Chris
I just said it. [laughs] So I remember there was a picture of one and it just looked like obviously, the stereotypical image of a black hole was just a big black circle. But the edge of it was all fuzzy and hairy.
Alfredo
Yes, the edges of it are all fuzzy and hairy. So, one big problem in physics is that general relativity and quantum mechanics don’t work quite well together. So generally, theory tells us that when something crosses, the event horizon is gone forever because nothing can escape the speed of light, and all information at the most can move at the speed of light. Quantum mechanics is telling us that the information of any system can change but it cannot just disappear. So suddenly black holes in quantum mechanics are changing the entire properties of the universe every time they eat something, and so they are constantly changing the properties of the universe. That doesn’t sit well. So one idea suggested by Stephen Hawking was that, over time, black holes can emit radiation. And this happens because at the edge on the event horizon, you can form particles, and you can form particles in any bit of the universe. So, you get some energy and that energy turns into a particle and an antiparticle, and then those two, the particle/antiparticle mix again, and they disappear. So they create and destroy, create and destroy
Chris
Over and over again over and over.
Alfredo
But at the edge of the event horizon when that happens, one particle is taken in and the other one escapes out
Chris
One in one out policy!
Alfredo
Yeah, but by escaping out, you’re taking away some of the energy.
Chris
So some energy does escape from a black hole?
Alfredo
Yes, because of that, yeah. And the idea was the black holes are a little bit hairy. So with that as well, we can sort of try to work out some of the properties. We have some very good theoretical ideas, but the finer details of what black holes are, like, still eludes us. So it’s a work in progress. But I’m very grateful for this question because I think Black holes are extremely, extremely fascinating. They are absolutely mind-blowing, and I could be talking for hours about them.
Chris
Maybe we’ll revisit the topic next season. On to our next question. Today’s second question comes from @JamesSPiperPhotography on Instagram, who asks, Will my addiction of the Milky Way ever go away?
Alfredo
Based on your gorgeous picture of the Milky Way, I really hope not. But in general, I think it’s something that fascinates everyone. Why? Why do we put so much belief and fascination and so much of our culture based on the stars and this strip of light across the sky?
Chris
Primordial culture, I guess?
Alfredo
It’s everything for us. Not everything in the universe, just tiny little dot in the universe, but it’s our tiny little dot in the universe. And seriously, if you’re a city dweller, like we are now, go into the countryside. Look up on a clear night sky and you’ll see it and it is breathtaking. And you looking at one hundred billion stars, and you’re looking towards a supermassive black hole that weighs 4.6 million times our Sun, you’re looking at star systems, planets, comets, nebulae all in our corner of the universe. I sincerely hope that this obsession, this addiction as you call it, it never goes away for you or for anyone else, and I think it’s so good to see… We know people that are doing great panoramas with gorgeous celestial phenomena from Northern Lights to meteor showers, to the occasional comets. We have panoramas with the Milky Way. And I’m not just talking about professional observatories, there is a huge amount of people that just are so passionate. It’s just fantastic. I always argue that astronomy is always been the oldest science, because we were, from our ancestral time, always looking up in the sky! Calendars were devised based on space. So I think this is why I enjoy so much talking about astronomy. Because it’s so important, so crucial, so fundamental to human culture. And I think people that take pictures and make videos, animations, it’s making all those faraway points of light, more real, more tangible. And sometimes, because we are in cities full of lives, we forget to look up and see the stars.
Chris
That was very beautiful.
Alfredo
Yeah, I could have been a poet in another life
Chris
It’s good and it’s important. And I think you hit the nail on the head. I don’t think anyone’s addiction to the Milky Way will vanish because, throughout human history, it never has.
Alfredo
Yeah. And although light pollution is a problem… I like to believe that it’s, again, the usual disclaimer, if we survive the climate crisis, we might get better at finding a solution to make the night sky even in cities more authentic.
Chris
I miss the stars.
Alfredo
Well, we’ll take you out of London soon enough.
Chris
Awesome. Thank you very much for answering our questions today. I hope you had a great time.
Alfredo
My pleasure, as always!
Chris
Well everyone listening, join us next time for the season finale of The Astroholic Explains
Alfredo
The season finale?
Chris
The Season finale. And guess what? I have something different planned. We are having a guest! [Dramatic Jingle]. See you next time!
Alfredo
See you next time!
Image Credit: The Event Horizon Collaboration