• @[email protected]
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    thinking about the universe is already traumatizing

    Where does it end? How are we floating? What if we fall? Where does it come from?

    I don’t think about that a lot so it doesn’t give me anxiety

  • @[email protected]
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    2 days ago

    graph function singularities exist as physical features in our world

    Do they, though…?

    As I (mis?)understand it, as a massive star begins to collapse, getting denser and denser, the gravitational gradient gets steeper and steeper… and time (from the perspective of an outside observer) gets slower and slower… to the point that, from our point of view, the full collapse (or maybe even any collapse below the Schwarzschild radius?) hasn’t happened yet, and won’t happen until the extremely distant future, beyond the end of the universe…

    So, in that sense, from the point of view of “our world”, no singularities (except possibly the big bang) would ever exist (yet), all of them being censored not only by event horizons, but by being shoved into the perpetually far future, beyond time itself…

    And, speaking about event horizons, isn’t the whole “light isn’t fast enough to escape” concept a misinterpretation of sorts…? As I (again mis?)understand it, it’s not a matter of speed, but of geometry… The way space-time is twisted in such a gravitational gradient, once you get past the event horizon there are no longer any directions pointing towards the outside.

    Which is another from of cosmic censorship (or a different effect or interpretation of the above), preventing anything inside the event horizon from causally interacting with the outside universe…

    So, if these singularities are hidden beyond sight, causally, visually, and geometrically isolated from the rest of the universe, and perpetually shoved into the far future… can they really be said to exist in our world…?

    (Of course there’s always the big bang, but we can’t really observe that one, only its effects, and it’s not necessarily exactly what the original post was talking about anyway…)

  • @[email protected]
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    302 days ago

    Why is nobody talking about how

    marauding black death wrapped in a spherical gradient of tortured spacetime

    is such a fucking cool sentence

    • @[email protected]
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      I’m just excited to see people having knock down drag-out fights about how scientifically accurate tumblr prose is on a comm that’s not my responsibly to moderate!

  • Jerkface (any/all)
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    142 days ago

    Keep in mind that all the cliches about black holes are about non-rotating black holes, which don’t exist in reality. In reality, a spinning black hole has a ring singularity, not a point, and behaves much weirder and even less intuitively than the hypothetical non-rotating counterpart as it smears out spacetime into taffy.

    • @[email protected]
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      12 days ago

      Is it theoretically possible to shoot something through the ring? Or does the even horizon completely envelop it?

      • @[email protected]
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        52 days ago

        The Black hole isn’t a ring, it’s a fuckin sphere, the ring surround it in it’s equator. Grinded material more and more acelerated until almost the speed of light nearby the hole, from where it falls into the hole to end as something nobody knows. Like the swirl formed when you take out the plug of the sink, but the hole in the middle is a sphere.

        • Jerkface (any/all)
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          You are describing a Schwarzschild black hole. I am describing a Kerr black hole. A Schwarzchild black hole’s singularity is not a sphere, it is a point. Because a Kerr black hole forms a ring, there is a path where gravity partially cancels out, and so the event horizon is not spherical.

          Schwarzschild black holes describe black holes in a simplified state in which we don’t expect to find actual objects. It vastly simplified the math, and for decades no one was able to work out the more complex situation we do expect to find in reality. My point above was that popular understanding of black holes is based on Schwarzchild black holes, and so a lot of the tropes don’t fully grasp how weird real black holes are.

        • @[email protected]
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          31 day ago

          The original comment were referring to the ring singularity which is different from the accretion disk.

          The singularity is unseen, we suppose it’s a ring in rotating back holes, but we have no idea. As anything inside the event horizon, we cannot see what’s going on in there.

          The accretion disk is the disk of matter falling into the black hole, it’s outside the event horizon and can be observed.

          • @[email protected]
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            11 day ago

            Supposing the singularity as an unidimensional something what we don’t know. In any case we can’t see the black hole as such, but the gravitation it causes, form a sphere arround the singularity, visible as such by the accretion disk. If not, we only can observe an black hole by its influence, eg, the gravitation lense effect.

      • Jerkface (any/all)
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        It is, and you won’t believe what happens!

        What? What do I look like, PBS Spacetime??

  • @[email protected]
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    I’ve heard that ‘our reality is made of math’ before. Does this mean that we do in fact live in a simulation, even if that simulation wasn’t necessarily programmed by ‘higher dimensional’ beings?

    If that is the case, could we conceivably ‘hack’ the universal code and unlock cheat mode?

    • @[email protected]
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      82 days ago

      We don’t need to “live in a simulation” for “our reality to be made of math”. Math could very well exist outside of anything, as a formal concept. This is the old debate asking whether math is invented or discovered. If it is discovered, then it can exist without any reality, as a pure abstract concept.

      • @[email protected]
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        42 days ago

        It’s confusing. I don’t understand what the difference is between something which is made of ‘a pure abstract concept’, specifically math, and a simulation- which is also made out of math.

        I’m not saying it’s something ran on a computer somewhere, just that the abstract concepts that make up our universe, if it is “made of math”, clearly has rules that it obeys- like the speed of light in a vacuum or the other constants. Which would seem to be analogous to parameters in a more traditional simulation. If ‘math’ is something that exists independent of sentient beings, couldn’t whatever that is be the ‘thing’ that the ‘simulation’ is ran on?

        I guess where I’m getting hung up is the idea that the universe can be ‘made of’ something that has no ‘reality’. Am I just misunderstanding what it’s meant by ‘made of math’? Like even if math is ‘discovered’, how would that be any different than us inventing it, if it exists ‘without any reality’?

        To be fair, there is lots of stuff I don’t understand, but I am trying- go easy on me.

        I was being cheeky about the ‘cheat mode’ thing (unless it’s real then I’m in).

        • @[email protected]
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          21 day ago

          Don’t worry, it’s confusing for everyone (including me), this is a very fascinating, yet forever (I think) out of human reach, question.

          What I was trying to say is that our entire universe/reality could be like a “conway game of life” : In this “game”, every step is fully determined by the previous one, in order to know what the next step is going to be, we human run a simulation, on a computer, or on paper or whatever… But is it to say that all the future steps don’t exist before we “simulate”, we could consider that, since they are all predetermined, the steps exist even if we don’t know what they are, they could simply be. Just like the number “1” could be a fundamental truth, that could exist outside of any universe.

          If mathematics is discovered rather than invented, then that would imply that it exists without anyone or anything, an undiscovered theorem would still be true. The universe could be a big mathematical game of life that exists because it cannot be any other way, and that is fully determined. Then again this could also not be. Who knows !

          Stephen Wolfram is a very controversial physicist, who explored those abstract and unprovable concepts, even though his statements should be taken with a grain of salt, it is nonetheless very interesting philosophically: he came up with the concept of the ruliad and the idea of computable irreducibility, if you want to explore these philosophical questions you can look it up, he has a few ted talks and YouTube videos where he details his thought. I cannot stress enough that he should be listened to with extreme skepticism, this is not science “yet”, and it might never be.

          • @[email protected]
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            124 hours ago

            I appreciate you taking the time to reply in detail, thanks :)

            I’ve never heard of the Ruliad before- I will definitely look into that.

        • @[email protected]
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          32 days ago

          I feel like there is a misunderstanding in this thread.

          The universe is described by math. Math itself is also very fundamental though.

          However even the Singularities are disputed and generally not liked by physicist. We try to find other explanations for how black holes work (lots of papers on this). Moreover, we never really have a singularity, but ringularities, as all black holes rotate changing the singularity to a singularity (they probably also have a charge but that is a different matter).

          And on the other hand, if you are a follower of the simulation argument (I know a few physicists that are) there are also counter arguments against this (which I believe are more likely).

          https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Simulation_hypothesis

  • MudMan
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    883 days ago

    I’m not an astrophysicist, but that ends up being the weird perception thing about them, right? Mostly they’re like a star of the same mass, and then a few will get really big and be at the center of a galaxy, but the perception is that of a natural disaster.

    Big ball of plasma in the center of the solar system that will definitely eventually explode and wipe out anything left alive on any surrounding planet? NBD. An object of the same mass but it’s smaller so it doesn’t shine? People picture it as being more immediately violent for some reason because the “light can’t escape” thing sounds so wild.

    • @[email protected]
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      31 day ago

      They are like stars in the sense of orbital mechanics.

      But a star can be completely understood by the laws of physics we know. While a black hole breaks our understanding and we have no idea what’s going on in there.

      It’s the fear of the unknown.

      • @[email protected]
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        21 day ago

        I don’t know. Isn’t it rather that they were predicted by the laws of physics we know (or got to know with Einstein) and everything about them can be fully described and is known by our current understanding of these physics?

        But I get what you mean. They are a symbol of the weird counterintuitiveness of the theory of relativity.

        • @[email protected]
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          31 day ago

          Sort of. They were predicted by Einstein theories. But in a way so absurd that it was supposed to be just a faulty part of the theory when you push it to a extreme. Basically the “infinite collapse” that occurs and that should put all mass in a infinitely small space.

          That cannot be true, it collides with quantum theory.

          We have observed the space surrounding black holes, and that is spot on with the theory. But we know nothing about what occurs inside them. We don’t know the density of the singularity, it’s structure, how that matter behaves at quantum levels. We know nothing about that.

          Once you enter a black hole is not only that you would be torn to pieces and pieces to atoms, we don’t even know if atom structure would even exist in there. Maybe even boson-fermion structure doesn’t even exist inside a black hole.

    • @[email protected]
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      Pop sci-fi seems to be fond of intermediate-mass black holes (EG Interstellar, Star Trek StrangeNew Worlds), and for something kinda the size of a star, they are “scary.”

      In other instances (like in TV Foundation), a close orbit to the accretion disk is a source of suspense.

      And then there’s the “stealth” aspect. Stellar-mass ones and below are very small and (potentially) quiet for something with the mass of a star, eg easy to stumble upon.

      And in some very advanced universes (eg the online Orion’s Arm), even with “hard” sci fi, swimming through a star’s nuclear plasma is totally doable. But a black hole is an impossible boundry of physics, and an particularly extreme object useful for astroengineering.

    • @[email protected]
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      Yeah, black holes in media where they are depicted as a giant space vacuum cleaner is a big pet peave of mine. Unless you get really close, nothing is remarkable about the orbital mechanics of a black hole. The equivalent mass star would have burned you up at a much further distance than the gravity starts to become noticeably wonky.

      It’s a shame that writers focus so much on the gravity and neglect accretion disks and astrophysical jets which do extend large distances and are visually stunning as well.

    • Skua
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      433 days ago

      To be fair I think “light can’t escape” thing really just is that wild, it’s pretty captivating. The idea of it being the death of a star, one of the most important things to all life we know about, only adds to that sense. Stars are massive billion-year explosions, yes, but they also bring warmth and light and beauty. Black holes are the death of all of that, even if it’s not technically more dangerous from the same distance

    • @[email protected]
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      113 days ago

      Big ball of plasma in the center of the solar system that will definitely eventually explode and wipe out anything left alive on any surrounding planet?

      The sun isn’t heavy enough to go supernova. (Unless it has a companion, but there’s no evidence of one so far.)

      • MudMan
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        143 days ago

        It will still expand and shed enough stuff to effectively blanch whatever part of the solar system it doesn’t actually engulf, though.

        It doesn’t even have to go supernova to kill everything, which is kind of the point.

  • @[email protected]
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    463 days ago

    My understanding is that the singularity is not proven to exist and many physicists believe it is an artifact of our incorrect understanding of the physics involved.

    • Skua
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      203 days ago

      Well, what exactly is inside the event horizon is unproven because we cannot possibly look. All of the rest of the physics seems to check out, though, and we know that there are things out there that behave just like our models of black holes predict. It’s an incomplete understanding rather than a necessarily incorrect one. If it is something else, it’d have to be something that looks more or less exactly like a black hole to an outside observer

      • @[email protected]
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        I would think an object of extremely high density could be difficult to distinguish from a point of infinite density, especially given the nature of the event horizon.

        I’m not saying the models are definitely wrong but usually when one of your terms goes to infinity it is a good reason to be skeptical.

      • Jerkface (any/all)
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        All of the rest of the physics seems to check out, though

        You know, except for the actual singularity which has no interpretable meaning in physics

        • Skua
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          32 days ago

          The comment above was about the singularity, so “the rest” clearly does not include the singularity

          I don’t think “no interpretable meaning in physics” is a reasonable description, though. In classical mechanics, sure, but we’ve got plenty of physics that doesn’t work in classical mechanics

            • Skua
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              22 days ago

              Non-classical mechanics includes things like quantum physics and (depending on who you ask) special relativity. They feel extremely counterintuitive but they provide pretty reliable explanations for how things work. That infinite density doesn’t make sense in our regular understanding of the world doesn’t necessarily mean it’s not a useful model. That doesn’t mean it’s necessarily true, of course, but the fact that it seems weird isn’t really important. It might just be that physics inside a black hole permit for something that we can best describe as infinitely dense

      • @[email protected]
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        133 days ago

        All of the rest of the physics seems to check out, though

        What is the entire problem, because all of the rest of the physics don’t get you coherent answers around a black hole.

        • Skua
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          43 days ago

          In one, you mean? They get you perfectly fine answers around one

          • Tlaloc_Temporal
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            220 hours ago

            There’s lot’s of issues with current physics, mostly in cosmology. String Theory was partly invented to describe the interior of a black hole. The characteristics of the Higgs field are still unknown. Gravity is still not unified with the other forces, despite appearing to couple with everything. Our current best models for the formation of the universe predict huge amounts of invisible matter, and we have no idea what that could be, from new particles to microscopic black holes formed in the first nanoseconds of the universe, to reinterpretations of relativity. Those same models also predict that out universe is dominated by strange energy inherent to space itself, which has no basis in the Standard Model at all. I wouldn’t call these perfectly fine answers.

            And even if the nature of the interior of a black hole what the only issue, the final part of physics we haven’t explained, I would say we’ve thought that before. About a century ago, the scientific community though they had mostly solved physics. The last big question was why ultraviolet light didn’t extend out to infinite energy as predicted. Then photons happened and we discovered quantum physics.

      • @[email protected]
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        All of the rest of the physics seems to check out

        If the whole universe comes from the singularity and you need just a tiny fraction of it in a limited space to create a black hole, why the universe even exists and even more so, it’s expanding each day faster?

        • @[email protected]
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          Different things.

          The singularity of a black hole is located in space.

          The initial singularity of the big bag happened “everywhere” the whole universe was supposed to have infinite density.

          The mass of the black hole is finite. It’s very dense but it have a quantifiable amount of mass.

          For the big bang the mass was also infinite as far as we know. Everything was singularity, every “energy” in your body was part of that infinitely large singularity. Not only everything but everywhere. Where you sit there was singularity during the big bang. As far as we know every single point in space was part of the initial singularity. We don’t come from a single point that exploded towards empty space. Expansion is more like the surface of a balloon. Maybe it’s better to think of it as stretching rather than expanding.

          Beyond that we don’t know much about both, there are barriers which prevent direct observation of both.

          The expansion of the universe is a completely different matter, as it’s not only expanding, it’s expanding faster that out gravitational models predict, like the universe is not only “ignoring” black holes, it’s expanding despite all observable matter, and all untraceable matter (dark matter), and it’s expanding faster and faster driven by an unknown phenomenon we call “dark energy” for giving it a name, because we have remotely not idea of what’s going on.

        • Skua
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          22 days ago

          The theories on why are a fair bit beyond my knowledge of physics, but I do know that they’re not necessarily the same kind of singularity. Inside a black hole (assuming our models are correct), spacetime curvature goes towards infinity. At the big bang, there may not have even been spacetime as we see it in our current universe, or whatever causes the expansion of spacetime may have been so powerful that it caused the earliest spacetime to not curve despite all the gravity

  • @[email protected]
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    543 days ago

    Tell me you don’t understand black holes using a lot of words.

    As far as gravity goes they are equivalent to the star that they collapsed from and just as deadly.

    The difference is that you can get that much closer before “impacting” with it, but you and superman would be fucked pretty much at the same distance from it.

    And I think you need a lot less than 300 writers to conjure an idea that leverage our fantasy in more and better ways.

    • @[email protected]
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      233 days ago

      Nothing you said about black holes really contradicts what they were saying? Even if a star and black hole can have the same gravity, there is still a shell of space that once you pass you cannot ever return. I’m sure Superman could go into a star and come back out, not so much with a black hole.

      • @[email protected]
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        11 day ago

        No. You can’t ever get out of a lot of shit.

        From a common star, if you can make your mass somehow be almost 0 and your speed being almost c, you can get out.

    • @[email protected]
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      And an infinitely dense point in spacetime doesn’t necessarily exist: it’s just what general relativity predicts is at the center of a black hole.

      The last time our physical model of the universe predicted an infinite value, we ended up discovering new physics eventually (the ultraviolet catastrophe). (Edit: ultrasound was a typo).

      • @[email protected]
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        32 days ago

        And an infinitely dense point in spacetime doesn’t necessarily exist: it’s just what general relativity predicts is at the center of a black hole.

        If the singularity at the center of a black hole didn’t exist, and was just extremely dense instead, would all of the other properties that we know is true about black holes be able to exist? For example we know that Sag A* and that one other black hole we ‘imaged’ give off no light, would that still be possible without a singularity?

        • @[email protected]
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          In General Relativity, the way to get gravity so strong that not even light can escape is with a singularity: a point of infinite density. So, either this infinity physically exists, and maybe we’ll understand how better, or General Relativity may be incomplete: a model that works well most of the time, but doesn’t represent reality correctly at the extremes of heavy mass and small space.

          Or at least that’s how I understand it. This has more info: https://physics.stackexchange.com/questions/18981/why-singularity-in-a-black-hole-and-not-just-very-dense#18987

          This is similar to the ultraviolet catastrophe. Physicists predicted black body radiation using their current physical models, with high accuracy at low wavelengths of light, but at high wavelengths, the predictions diverged towards infinity, which disagreed with measurements.

          (Source: Wikipedia)

          Breakthroughs in quantum physics later reconciled theory with measurements.

          One big difference with black holes is we cannot yet measure the actual density in the interior of the black hole. We just have the prediction that there is a point of infinite density.

          Any physicists around here may have a better understanding than me.

    • @[email protected]
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      I mean, the gravitational gradient is much higher. To me this kind of sounds like saying “there’s nothing that special about a 10 watt laser, an LED lightbulb puts out the same amount of light”, but a 10 watt laser is enough to instantly and permanently blind you.

      Its true that there’s nothing that special about orbiting a black hole, but I think its not really logically inconsistent (inasmuch as a superhero can be logically consistent) to say “even if superman could survive dipping into a sun he probably wouldn’t be too happy if he stuck his arm into an event horizon”.

    • Cat_Daddy [any, any]
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      43 days ago

      You’d also likely burn to death pretty early on in the process. Like, the moment you cross the event horizon, instant death.

          • Cat_Daddy [any, any]
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            22 days ago

            I assumed it would be further inward than the photon sphere because heat radiation is (also an assumption) easier for gravity to hold back than light. I don’t know how “heavy” a star’s heat is, though, so ¯\ˍ(ツ)ˍ/¯

            • @[email protected]
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              22 days ago

              Heat radiation are particles with a mass and a certain speed, they are all by definition heavier and easier to trap than photons.

              In terms of escape velocity, nothing can try to escape faster than light.

  • @[email protected]
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    443 days ago

    “marauding black death wrapped in a spherical gradient of tortured space time” is a great title for a progressive rock or technical death metal song

    • Jo Miran
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      173 days ago

      “In a spherical gradient of tortured space time” is a great title for an ambient or very slow.and moody electronic music album.

    • Phoenixz
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      22 days ago

      I remember reading this single page image from the flash where he was talking about how much he did in an atto second.

      If that’d be true,nthe flash could create black holes at will or even by accident if he isn’t careful

    • @[email protected]
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      22 days ago

      There are math models where dividing by zero makes sense. It’s just that those models don’t suit our world for now.

  • Skua
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    283 days ago

    I suppose cosmic horror elder gods like Cthulhu and such are not all that far removed from the idea of a black hole. Particularly the ones that are less involved with Earth than Cthulhu is. Nobody is ramming a black hole with a fishing boat. But the early writing on them was done at about the same time as a lot of the foundational theoretical work on black holes (not the earliest stuff but I can believe that the writers didn’t know about it)

    • Natanael
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      52 days ago

      Also, extremely pedantic note - black holes were predicted by looking at what happens in the math at extreme densities, long before black holes were actually observed in space

      • @[email protected]
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        42 days ago

        And some of the scientists who worked on those early calculations assumed it meant the physics was incomplete!

    • @[email protected]
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      62 days ago

      If I remember Lovecraft correctly the whole idea was that human mind can’t comprehend such things. And black holes fit very nicely.