Universe
11th Edition
ISBN: 9781319039448
Author: Robert Geller, Roger Freedman, William J. Kaufmann
Publisher: W. H. Freeman
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Question
Chapter 21, Problem 41Q
To determine
The reason why mass of the resulting black hole is less than the sum of masses of individual black holes. Also explain where does the mass go. Given that two black holes merge to form a larger black hole.
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Chapter 21 Solutions
Universe
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- If a black hole itself emits no radiation, what evidence do astronomers and physicists today have that the theory of black holes is correct?arrow_forwardA student becomes so excited by the whole idea of black holes that he decides to jump into one. It has a mass 10 times the mass of our Sun. What is the trip like for him? What is it like for the rest of the class, watching from afar?arrow_forwardUse the result from Exercise 24.21 to calculate the radius of a black hole with a mass equal to: the Earth, a B0-type main-sequence star, a globular cluster, and the Milky Way Galaxy. Look elsewhere in this text and the appendixes for tables that provide data on the mass of these four objects.arrow_forward
- As a person approaches the Schwarzschild radius fo a black hole, outside observers see all the processes of that person (their clocks, their heart rate, etc.) slowing down, and coming to a halst as they reach the Schwarzschild radius. (The person falling into the black hole sees their own processes unaffected.) But the speed of light is the same everywhere for all observers. What does this say about space as you approach the black hole?arrow_forwardDo the same calculations as in Exercise 23.42 but for a pulsar that rotates 1000 times per second.arrow_forward
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