tdolowy Posted March 26, 2017 Posted March 26, 2017 (Disclaimer I am a very curious 14 year old so bare with me) I found an article saying glass with 2.5 g/cc would have to be 14 light minutes(Lm) in radius to create a black hole, I am now trying to find out how many Earths' that would have to be in a row to create a black hole. I just need help with the math. Would this mean 1 g/cc would have to be 23.333 light minutes(Lm) large to create a black hole considering 14Lm + (14Lm ÷ 1.5g/cc) = 23.333Lm/g/cc (Lm being Light Minutes)? 1 g/cc density would take 23.333Lm to make a black hole ? Considering this that would mean Earth (Which all together has a density of 5.513 g/cc) would be 5.513 g/cc 5.513 g/cc x 23.333Lm = apx 128.63666Lm (Light minutes) or (7.562067334e+14 Miles) wide to create a black hole with Earths' mass If this is correct thus far what would be my next step considering Earth has a Diameter of 7,917.5 Miles while also taking in the whole volume (Width, Length, and Height) Keep in mind I am 14 so if I am doing this all wrong im sorry! Thanks and all I would like is positive reinforcement please!
StringJunky Posted March 26, 2017 Posted March 26, 2017 (edited) The sun is 330,000 times heavier than the Earth and you would need at least 25 suns to make a blackhole; 330,000 x 25 = 8,250,000 Earths..Laying that many Earths side-by-side gives 7918 (rounded) x 8,250,000 = 6,532,350,000 miles. Edited. Edited March 26, 2017 by StringJunky 1
tdolowy Posted March 26, 2017 Author Posted March 26, 2017 The sun is 330,000 times heavier than the Earth and you would need at least 25 suns to make a blackhole; 330,000 x 25 = 8,250,000 Earths..Laying that many Earths side-by-side gives 7918 (rounded) x 8,250,000 = 6,532,350,000 miles. Note that about 21 suns worth of that mass would get blown away in the supernova and the rest would constitute the mass of the blackhole. Thank you for the response and this way seems much much easier
StringJunky Posted March 26, 2017 Posted March 26, 2017 Thank you for the response and this way seems much much easier You'll get there if you keep trying. I'm a lot older than you are.
imatfaal Posted March 26, 2017 Posted March 26, 2017 You have slipped up - earth is more dense than glass and water (1 gram / cm^3) thus it will need a smaller radius to make a black hole with the DENSITY (not mass as you have put) of earth. I make it 14.1LM, 22.3LM , and 9.4LM respectively for Glass, Water, Earth. More interestingly - a black hole with the MASS of the earth would be about a 3rd of an inch across (9mm) This is the mass of a sphere (the curly p is a rho which stands for density, and r is the radius) [latex]Mass_{sphere} = \rho \cdot \frac{4}{3} \pi r^3[/latex] This is the radius of a blackhole (G and c are constants and M is the mass) [latex]r_s=\frac{2GM}{c^2}[/latex] You can work out all the figures from just these two equations - note that they both have radius and mass in them 1
koti Posted March 26, 2017 Posted March 26, 2017 Theoretically anything could become a black hole if you could squash it dense enough.
imatfaal Posted March 26, 2017 Posted March 26, 2017 Theoretically anything could become a black hole if you could squash it dense enough. Exactly. But the op is making the slightly less usual point that any density object can be a black hole provided it is big enough. For constant density the mass increases with the radius cubed - so bearing in mind that in the equation for schwarzchild radius the mass and the radius are directly related as things get higher radius thn eventually the mass within the radius is high enough to exceed that required for blackhole. It is a little contrived as such a huge sphere would compress to a higher density
koti Posted March 26, 2017 Posted March 26, 2017 I think the OP might be confused and the key point to make here is that black holes (singularities) are incredibly dense objects occupying ridiculously small area of space. I would also like to say that it is a pleasure to read and answer your question tdolowy...you dont have to worry about us having to bare with you. I remember being 14 and I was very much into black holes then
Argent Posted March 26, 2017 Posted March 26, 2017 I think the OP might be confused and the key point to make here is that black holes (singularities) are incredibly dense objects occupying ridiculously small area of space. The key point is surely the one made by imatfaal. Black holes do not need to be incredibly dense. Or am I being incredibly dense.
Strange Posted March 26, 2017 Posted March 26, 2017 The key point is surely the one made by imatfaal. Black holes do not need to be incredibly dense. Or am I being incredibly dense. Absolutely right. There is a good summary here, with a simple equation to calculate the density of a black hole: http://curious.astro.cornell.edu/physics/86-the-universe/black-holes-and-quasars/general-questions/423-what-is-the-density-of-a-black-hole-advanced
koti Posted March 26, 2017 Posted March 26, 2017 The key point is surely the one made by imatfaal. Black holes do not need to be incredibly dense. Or am I being incredibly dense. I'm afraid that they have to be Argent
imatfaal Posted March 26, 2017 Posted March 26, 2017 I think the OP might be confused and the key point to make here is that black holes (singularities) are incredibly dense objects occupying ridiculously small area of space. I would also like to say that it is a pleasure to read and answer your question tdolowy...you dont have to worry about us having to bare with you. I remember being 14 and I was very much into black holes then I'm afraid that they have to be Argent Not true at all. Any density can make a blackhole. The OP correctly gave the radius of a glass sphere (at 2400 kg/m3) which would become a blackhole. All you need is a certain mass within a certain radius - NOT a high density
tdolowy Posted March 26, 2017 Author Posted March 26, 2017 I think the OP might be confused and the key point to make here is that black holes (singularities) are incredibly dense objects occupying ridiculously small area of space. I would also like to say that it is a pleasure to read and answer your question tdolowy...you dont have to worry about us having to bare with you. I remember being 14 and I was very much into black holes then Exactly. But the op is making the slightly less usual point that any density object can be a black hole provided it is big enough. For constant density the mass increases with the radius cubed - so bearing in mind that in the equation for schwarzchild radius the mass and the radius are directly related as things get higher radius thn eventually the mass within the radius is high enough to exceed that required for blackhole. It is a little contrived as such a huge sphere would compress to a higher density You have slipped up - earth is more dense than glass and water (1 gram / cm^3) thus it will need a smaller radius to make a black hole with the DENSITY (not mass as you have put) of earth. I make it 14.1LM, 22.3LM , and 9.4LM respectively for Glass, Water, Earth. More interestingly - a black hole with the MASS of the earth would be about a 3rd of an inch across (9mm) This is the mass of a sphere (the curly p is a rho which stands for density, and r is the radius) [latex]Mass_{sphere} = \rho \cdot \frac{4}{3} \pi r^3[/latex] This is the radius of a blackhole (G and c are constants and M is the mass) [latex]r_s=\frac{2GM}{c^2}[/latex] You can work out all the figures from just these two equations - note that they both have radius and mass in them Thank you for all the answers, I was very curious and love all of the explanations you guys gave, really made me have to think 1
imatfaal Posted March 26, 2017 Posted March 26, 2017 If I have done my sums correctly [latex] m = \sqrt{\frac{3 \cdot c^6}{32 \cdot \pi \cdot G^3 \cdot \rho}} [/latex] Is the mass at which an spherical object becomes a blackhole for any given density rho tdolowy - a pleasure. Keep investigating and "doing science" 1
tdolowy Posted March 26, 2017 Author Posted March 26, 2017 If I have done my sums correctly [latex] m = \sqrt{\frac{3 \cdot c^6}{32 \cdot \pi \cdot G^3 \cdot \rho}} [/latex] Is the mass at which an spherical object becomes a blackhole for any given density rho tdolowy - a pleasure. Keep investigating and "doing science" this is exactly what I was looking for thank you!
koti Posted March 26, 2017 Posted March 26, 2017 Not true at all. Any density can make a blackhole. The OP correctly gave the radius of a glass sphere (at 2400 kg/m3) which would become a blackhole. All you need is a certain mass within a certain radius - NOT a high density Seems that I am the dense one after all. Always thought that certain mass within a certain small radius will have extremely high density without which a singularity would not form.
tdolowy Posted March 26, 2017 Author Posted March 26, 2017 Seems that I am the dense one after all. Always thought that certain mass within a certain small radius will have extremely high density without which a singularity would not form. Not true at all. Any density can make a blackhole. The OP correctly gave the radius of a glass sphere (at 2400 kg/m3) which would become a blackhole. All you need is a certain mass within a certain radius - NOT a high density Thanks for all the answers
imatfaal Posted March 26, 2017 Posted March 26, 2017 Seems that I am the dense one after all. Always thought that certain mass within a certain small radius will have extremely high density without which a singularity would not form. Black holes we know of are dense - the smaller ones very dense. But the maths and we believe the physics allow for blackholes of any size to form - and the bigger they are the smaller the density. this is exactly what I was looking for thank you! Check it is right before you use it! 1
koti Posted March 27, 2017 Posted March 27, 2017 Black holes we know of are dense - the smaller ones very dense. But the maths and we believe the physics allow for blackholes of any size to form - and the bigger they are the smaller the density. Up until now I was convinced that a singularity needs to be ridiculously dense and needs to occupy an extremely small area of space. Apparently I was horribly wrong, thanks for explaining this imatfaal.
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