UNIVERSE (LOOSELEAF):STARS+GALAXIES
UNIVERSE (LOOSELEAF):STARS+GALAXIES
6th Edition
ISBN: 9781319115043
Author: Freedman
Publisher: MAC HIGHER
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Chapter 21, Problem 57Q
To determine

Whether it is correct or not to think that theSchwarzschild radius of the black hole is the radius of the black hole when the Moon’s radius is considered as the smallest radius which encloses all the Moon’s material.

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The Schwarzschild radius RBH for an object of mass M is defined as (See image.) where c is the speed of light and G is the universal gravitational constant. RBH gives the radius of the event horizon of a black hole with mass M. In other words, it gives the radius to which some amount of mass M would need to be compressed in order to form a black hole.   1. The mass of the Sun is about 1.99 × 1030 kg. What would be the radius of a black hole with this mass?   2. The mass of Mars is about 6.42 × 1023 kg. What would be the radius of a black hole with this mass?   3. Suppose you want to make a black hole that is roughly the size of an atom (take RBH = 1.10 x 10-10 m). What would be the mass M of such a black hole?
The radius Rh of a black hole is the radius of a mathematicalsphere, called the event horizon, that is centered on the blackhole. Information from events inside the event horizon cannotreach the outside world. According to Einstein’s general theory ofrelativity, Rh = 2GM/c2, where M is the mass of the black hole andc is the speed of light.Suppose that you wish to study a black hole near it, at a radialdistance of 50Rh. However, you do not want the difference in gravitationalacceleration between your feet and your head to exceed10 m/s2 when you are feet down (or head down) toward the blackhole. (a) As a multiple of our Sun’s mass MS, approximately what isthe limit to the mass of the black hole you can tolerate at the givenradial distance? (You need to estimate your height.) (b) Is the limitan upper limit (you can tolerate smaller masses) or a lower limit(you can tolerate larger masses)?
In 1999, scientists discovered a new class of black holes with masses 100 to 10000 times the mass of our sun, but occupying less space than our moon. Suppose that one of these black holes has a mass of 1x10^3 suns and a radius equal to one-half the radius of our moon. What is the density of the black hole in g/cm^3? The radius of our sun is 7.0x10^5km and it has an average density of 1.4x10^3kg/m^3. The diameter of the moon is 2.16x10^3 miles. Note: the volume of a sphere is V=4/3 pie r^3
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