English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

well the question isn't really that hard is it?

2007-03-02 17:37:37 · 8 answers · asked by 234retgf 3 in Science & Mathematics Astronomy & Space

8 answers

Not hard at all. The answer is "no".
Black holes are made of matter, and thus cannot violate the light barrier. Play around with this equation:

E=(mc^2) / (square root (1-(v^2/c^2)), you'll find you get weird things when v is greater than c.

Anyway, I don't see your reasoning. If your telephone catches signals moving light speed, does that mean it moves at light speed? No. Black holes can be stationary, or orbiting another object, and all at speeds allowed by Kepler's laws of motion.

2007-03-02 17:42:20 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

no longer truly. Gravity is a warping of area-time. It travels in a wave, it truly is restricted to the speed of light. in truth, if the solar abruptly vanished, it may take about 8 minutes for the earth to stop feeling the consequences of it truly is gravitational pull. the reason that elementary can't damage out the shape horizon of a black hollow is that area-time is warped critically by technique of the mass of the singularity on the middle. It became once believed (lower than Newton's Classical Physics) that gravitational consequences were on the spot, and this became between the failings that Einstein's concept addressed.

2016-12-05 04:28:54 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

The black hole could be standing perfectly still (if that were possible) and still trap light. It does not need to move because light is trapped by the black hole's intense gravitational field.

However, contrary to what another responder said Black Holes are not 'static' or unmoving in space. Nothing else. Everything is moving relative to something else. Movement is dependant on perspective. That's what relativity is all about.

2007-03-02 18:29:14 · answer #3 · answered by socialdeevolution 4 · 0 0

actually blackholes do not travel in space, they r static in space. tthe only thing is that light cannot travel in such mediums which have their densities more than matter on space and earth. black hole is having a density much greater than anything in this universe.

2007-03-02 17:49:07 · answer #4 · answered by dev m 1 · 0 0

That means that blackholes have very powerful gravitational pull.

2007-03-02 17:45:53 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

You can't exceed the speed of light.
Black holes are theoretical entities and there is a very good chance they do not exist.

2007-03-03 00:46:54 · answer #6 · answered by Billy Butthead 7 · 0 0

TO answer your question no they dont because black holes are dead stars.

2007-03-02 18:11:26 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

No. That was easy.

2007-03-02 20:48:56 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers