Table of Contents
What does the Schwarzschild radius of a black hole indicate?
Schwarzschild radius, also called gravitational radius, the radius below which the gravitational attraction between the particles of a body must cause it to undergo irreversible gravitational collapse. This phenomenon is thought to be the final fate of the more massive stars (see black hole).
Why can’t light escape a black hole?
Answer: Within the event horizon of a black hole space is curved to the point where all paths that light might take to exit the event horizon point back inside the event horizon. This is the reason why light cannot escape a black hole.
Why does anything dropped into a black hole appear redder as it approaches the event horizon of the black hole?
It never crosses the event horizon, but stays frozen there in space and time. The falling clock also becomes continuously redder, since its light loses energy as it escapes from the black hole’s vicinity. By contrast, if we were falling with the clock, time would appear to behave perfectly normally.
What is the Schwarzschild radius calculator?
The Schwarzschild radius calculator lets you obtain the gravitational acceleration on the surface of a black hole, also called the event horizon.
What is Schwarzschild equation?
Schwarzschild’s equation is used to calculate radiative transfer – energy transfer – through a medium in local thermodynamic equilibrium that both absorbs and emits electromagnetic radiation. This equation and a variety of equivalent expressions are known as Schwarzschild’s equation.
How does the Schwarzschild radius of a black hole depend on its mass?
The Schwarzschild radius depends only on the mass of the object, meaning the greater the mass, the larger the Schwarzschild radius. Just as importantly, you need to understand that at a far enough distance away from the black hole, its gravity is no greater than an object that has a similar mass.
What is the radius of black hole?
Black hole classification by Schwarzschild radius
Class | Approx. mass | Approx. radius |
---|---|---|
Supermassive black hole | 105–1010 MSun | 0.001–400 AU |
Intermediate-mass black hole | 103 MSun | 103 km ≈ REarth |
Stellar black hole | 10 MSun | 30 km |
Micro black hole | up to MMoon | up to 0.1 mm |
What is the Schwarzschild radius for the black hole at the center of our galaxy if it has the mass of 4 million solar masses?
about 13 million kilometres
The supermassive black hole at the centre of our galaxy, called Sagittarius A*, has a mass of about 4 million solar masses. That makes its Schwarzschild radius about 13 million kilometres. By comparison, the radius of the Earth’s orbit is about 150 million kilometres.