Nuclear Engineer Reacts to Kurzgesagt "What Happens if You Destroy a Black Hole?"

แชร์
ฝัง
  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 28 ส.ค. 2024
  • Original Video ‪@kurzgesagt‬ @fZPc
    Nuclear Engineer Reacts to Kurzgesagt "What Happens if You Destroy a Black Hole?"

ความคิดเห็น • 406

  • @vettir
    @vettir ปีที่แล้ว +816

    The spin limit works because a spinning black hole causes frame drag around it, resulting in, essentially, anything aimed to add spin in the same direction simply being flung out because the frame dragging speeds it up.

    • @WhyneedanAlias
      @WhyneedanAlias ปีที่แล้ว +47

      Yes, and to add to that, you can still throw stuff inside, but you'd have to aim it against the direction of frame dragging or diractly above the poles. Later option does not add to angular momentum and the first option would actually decrease it so the black hole would just stop gathering angular momentum at some point (below that critical point where the horizon dissolves)
      At least that's how I understood it, I have not studied general relativity...yet

    • @WhyneedanAlias
      @WhyneedanAlias ปีที่แล้ว +5

      Although what I am not quite sure about is why dropping particles with quantum spin or regular objects which rotate at the poles of the black hole doesn't work - The angular momentum of those objects should be added to the black hole's

    • @vettir
      @vettir ปีที่แล้ว +9

      Theoretically possible, but in practice absurdly difficult. You'd have to first, isolate a bunch of fundamental particles, and second, ensure their spin stayed in a specific way. Your best bet would be bosons, as fermions would rapidly cancel out their spins as they interacted. But even creating bosons with the correct spin is difficult at best. And even if you could do this, the angular momentum of the easiest Bosons to set with a specific spin (photons) is still going to be on the order of the planck spin per photon. And even then interactions with other things could alter their spin.
      As for why photons, I'd recommend reading the article by Isaac Asimov called "The Left Hand of the Electron", carried in his collection of articles by the same name. There are places you can find this for free, although the legality of those is questionable.

    • @particlephysics_lee
      @particlephysics_lee ปีที่แล้ว +6

      ​@@WhyneedanAlias
      r = M + sqrt(M^2 - a^2)
      The simplified formula for the kerr black hole event horizon
      As you can see, the spin rate for the black hole (a) needs to be equal or smaller than M
      If a is larger than M, you have an imaginary number in the finished equation, which makes the event horizon "unreal", thus you can see the singularity as there's no event horizon
      I wanna say that you should not use this simplified formula to calculate the event horizon itself
      The formula is only there to show the limit of a or the spin

    • @invisibleaccount9284
      @invisibleaccount9284 ปีที่แล้ว +10

      Frame drag is such a cool term

  • @WhyneedanAlias
    @WhyneedanAlias ปีที่แล้ว +406

    Fun fact, the idea that there cannot be naked singularities is actually called the cosmic censorship hypothesis.
    Also I find spinning black holes really interesting, at least if you follow general relativity (which we cannot be sure holds beneath the horizon) there should actually be an inner event horizon in addition to the regular one where sub-lightspeed travel becomes possible again and time and space flip back to their ordinary roles. You would be able to move around freely in there around the singularity but never be able to leave. With additional charge/rotation the inner one grows and the outer one shrinks until the'd meet and disappear.
    PBS Spacetime has great videos on topics like that

    • @sephrot6830
      @sephrot6830 ปีที่แล้ว +11

      i like how you say you find spinning black holes interesting like black holes arent spinning

    • @WhyneedanAlias
      @WhyneedanAlias ปีที่แล้ว +48

      @@sephrot6830 I mean the idealised Schwarzschild Black Holes which usually everyone talks about aren't spinning. But yeah, in reality every Black Hole should be spinning.

    • @kennyholmes5196
      @kennyholmes5196 ปีที่แล้ว +13

      Doesn't that also do crazy things to the singularity, like turning it into a ring?

    • @shuttlegaming1255
      @shuttlegaming1255 ปีที่แล้ว

      yes@@kennyholmes5196

    • @TheRhuen
      @TheRhuen ปีที่แล้ว +7

      @@kennyholmes5196 no, a ringulairy or a spiralarity to use made up fantasy-scifi terms would probably require black holes made of compressed different physics colliding, or in other words different universes with different base quantum forces smashing into each other. Within our own universe the singularity is a *point* but not a point of infinite density and energy with space and time inverted *yet can somehow also fade away over time despite this clear contradiction, but I don't have Stephen Hawking's brain in a jar to question about that*,

  • @retronicotine
    @retronicotine ปีที่แล้ว +355

    This has gotta be one of my favorite videos of yours, added a ton of additional information and made it more then just a reaction, keep it up man. loving the channel so far

    • @tfolsenuclear
      @tfolsenuclear  ปีที่แล้ว +36

      Thanks so much!!

    • @gdude2775
      @gdude2775 ปีที่แล้ว +10

      I agree he makes the videos better not just sitting there watching it.

    • @emikochan13
      @emikochan13 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      that's how good reaction videos are, but it does seem there are quite a few silent reacters on youtube :P

    • @lilysantiago679
      @lilysantiago679 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Cen sor.

  • @Jan_Koopman
    @Jan_Koopman ปีที่แล้ว +35

    "I wanna cuddle a black hole!"
    Famous last words

    • @zer0thefalsegod565
      @zer0thefalsegod565 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      i would cuddle one to i thank it would be cold

    • @vincentvu1370
      @vincentvu1370 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      black holes are hot at one part but cold at another

    • @vincentvu1370
      @vincentvu1370 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      so you would be cold and hot

  • @jiggyjustin2292
    @jiggyjustin2292 ปีที่แล้ว +152

    Your explanations are so clear and easy to grasp, love the additional info and content

  • @Rathmun
    @Rathmun ปีที่แล้ว +59

    9:09 "How's the limit of spin work?" The search term you want is "Frame Dragging" When a massive object is spinning, it actually drags Space-Time in the vicinity with it, spinning the very fabric of reality. If the local space-time is twisted _enough,_ you might reach a point where there is no trajectory from the outside of the black hole to the inside. The phase space of possible trajectories has a hole in it.

    • @lilysantiago679
      @lilysantiago679 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Banana mode activated.

    • @DavidMuri-rm4ym
      @DavidMuri-rm4ym 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      Well, if the spin limit exists, then what equation describes it the spin limit? And what does it look like? Is it m X sv = st curvature m = mass sv = spin velocity and st curvature = space-time curvature, would it be correct to assume the equation looks something like this?😅😅😅😅😊😊

    • @EliasMheart
      @EliasMheart 8 ชั่วโมงที่ผ่านมา

      Doesn't that mean that you created a pocket universe in which the black hole now hangs out alone?
      ... Actually, this sounds amazingly useful. You can hardcore slingshot with no risk of radiation or whatever. (Not being a meaty being is advised due to the strong g forces)

  • @VECT0R777
    @VECT0R777 ปีที่แล้ว +41

    I watched that video yesterday. It was just as enjoyable as the first time. Great reaction!

  • @MrDevintcoleman
    @MrDevintcoleman ปีที่แล้ว +32

    As a layman who became fascinated with space and theoretical physics in 7th grade when I asked my school librarian where I’d look for books on black holes and she said “they’re called dark holes and they’re not real,” I’m incredibly proud of the fact that every thought I had about this Kurz video when I watched it was also something Folse brought up!

    • @nickgames3856
      @nickgames3856 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      Wtf bro, how old are you, blacknhones are not a new thing, like eintein found out about it and it's theoretical existence was confirmed a loooong time ago.

    • @greenuparrow
      @greenuparrow ปีที่แล้ว +13

      @@nickgames3856 I guess their librarian didn't care much about physics

    • @nickgames3856
      @nickgames3856 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@greenuparrow Still, they are school staff, they should be encouraging students to explore and fulfill their curiosity. For example, I have a theory that a naked singularity might be the awnser for a lot of problems that we have in today's society, it could completely wipe out any current knowledge we have about physics. Maybe even breaking extremely important space-time laws, like spontaneus creation of matter, etc. According to the big bang theory, the universe started as a singularity. But the only thing preventing the singularities to interact with space-time is the black hole gravitational force itself, which is so extreme that even light itself can't escape. The big bang was a naked singularity, and we have a ton of them throughout the universe, but they can't interact with space-time, matter because of the black hole itself. So what happened with the big bang? How and why is the big bang singularity different than a black hole singularity, and why was it naked and why did it collapsed???!!!!
      I could only think about that because I have read a bunch of books about space, physics and Einstein's studies. Maybe that librarian just wiped out the possibility of a kid to get interested in physics and create a awesome theory that could change humanity forever. Einstein would never become Einstein if he didn't read his first physics book to get interested in the subject.

    • @LMT_Light
      @LMT_Light ปีที่แล้ว

      Same, but rn I'm exploring particles and force of nature ( the 4 ) 7th going to 8th, People say in science in way ahead of my class but the fact I got 80s in asexual reproduction makes me question

    • @MrDevintcoleman
      @MrDevintcoleman ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@nickgames3856 I’m 33, and she was an older woman. I don’t want to call her elderly because the last time I saw her was when I was in middle school and I might have thought someone in their 50s was elderly lol

  • @LamirLakantry
    @LamirLakantry ปีที่แล้ว +37

    The reason why overfeeding spin is difficult, (in my laiman understanding) is because it makes the ergosphere stronger. That is the region of space around the black hole where space-time is being dragged around faster than light. Even in current black holes, the rotation stops objects from falling in, and it's only thought a friction prosess in the ecrecion disk that forces any matter past the horizon.

    • @lilysantiago679
      @lilysantiago679 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I already did that. I tried to shoot lasers into the black hole. And it didn't work. So, screw the electromagnetic waves. So I tried to heat it up. And it still doesn't work. 😂 So, I threw something into the black hole to see if it will be swallowed or not. But when I threw something near it, I see something unexpected. It burns up. So, I will not do that.

  • @ascohn
    @ascohn 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Tyler's empathic "aw" expression when the black hole has a sad face is literally the cutest thing on the internet right now.

  • @particlephysics_lee
    @particlephysics_lee ปีที่แล้ว +12

    I'll explain the "Spin limit"
    The formula for the event horizon of a spinning black hole is very long and complicated, however, if you simplify the formula
    (Let's say G = c = 1), and the observing angle is 90deg downwards, the event horizon of the Kerr black hole will look like this
    r = M + sqrt(M^2 - a^2)
    r = Event horizon radius
    M = black hole mass
    a = the spin of the black hole (J/M)
    As you can see, because (M^2 -a^2) is square rooted, a^2 needs to be smaller or equal to M^2, or a

    • @particlephysics_lee
      @particlephysics_lee ปีที่แล้ว

      For example, let's say that a black hole with a mass of 1 and has a spin of 3
      The equation will look like this
      r = 1 + sqrt(1 - 3^2)
      r = 1 + (2√2)i
      The radius has an "unreal" number, so the event horizon is NOT real, thus you can see whatever the fuck is behind the horizon, and a naked singularity

    • @tfolsenuclear
      @tfolsenuclear  ปีที่แล้ว +8

      Thanks for the detailed explanation!

    • @particlephysics_lee
      @particlephysics_lee ปีที่แล้ว +4

      @@tfolsenuclear Thanks for replying!
      It bothers me a lot when ppl ask about this topic, which is understandable considering how complicated it is
      If you wanna know more, the same is also true for charged black holes
      At one point the event horizon will be 0, and then a negative number
      Another naked singularity

    • @user-dd7hv2sx5b
      @user-dd7hv2sx5b 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      SO IF THE BLACK HOLE WILL PRODUCE MORE ENERGY THEN IT WEIGHTS IT WILL CREATE A NEW DIMENSION IN THEORY?

  • @fewrwaawrwqa2590
    @fewrwaawrwqa2590 ปีที่แล้ว +20

    I knew you were gonna make a reaction video on this! Great job, you made this video so quickly!

  • @andregon4366
    @andregon4366 ปีที่แล้ว +6

    There's another method.
    The insane method: Use negative mass.
    Negative mass has anti gravity, is attracted to mass, repels mass, and moves to the opposite direction of the force being applied to it.
    As far as I know, negative mass are the weirdest particles known in the universe.
    Do you want to break physics while breaking physics? Use negative mass.
    It will make dividing by 0 make sense by comparison.

    • @phillip6083
      @phillip6083 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      But so far negative mass particles are only theoretical.
      But i like how you think.

    • @mongolianbeef847
      @mongolianbeef847 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      the stuff kurzgesagt refers to as exotic matter?

    • @andregon4366
      @andregon4366 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@mongolianbeef847 You can't get more exotic than negative mass.
      But negative mass is brought up so few times I wouldn't be surprised if Kurzgesagt didn't even think of it, let alone take it in consideration.

    • @mongolianbeef847
      @mongolianbeef847 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@andregon4366 is that a no

    • @andregon4366
      @andregon4366 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@mongolianbeef847 More like a probably not.
      But either way we're assuming things over a video about an hypothetical scenario.
      So, who cares?

  • @troublesometoaster4492
    @troublesometoaster4492 ปีที่แล้ว +20

    I love how Tyler tells you when he doesn't know something rather than making up Folse information.
    (sorry, I had to)

    • @tfolsenuclear
      @tfolsenuclear  ปีที่แล้ว +6

      Yes! I love cheesy puns!

    • @MetalLP
      @MetalLP ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Yes or like trying to quickly search it on wikipedia and without deeper knowledge present maybe the right information, but wrongly interpreted.

  • @rams8571
    @rams8571 ปีที่แล้ว +8

    i like how you've gotten a little louder in ur intros lol, sometimes in the past I could barely hear you until you started reacting... keep it up!

  • @samuels1123
    @samuels1123 ปีที่แล้ว +18

    I wonder, if you have a high enough mass black hole, can you spin the singularity enough to create an empty orbit? a ring of infinite density, forming a sort of torus which probably can never have a hole for the force necessary to stabilize it.
    Also, I suspect there is a possibility that black holes could simply un-implode under such extreme forces, with the singularity's effects being undone a massive mess happens with spacetime, but it would then just release the mass as energy now that gravity can't hold it together.

    • @kennyholmes5196
      @kennyholmes5196 ปีที่แล้ว +11

      There's actually a term for that: a Ringularity. Kurzgesagt even talks about it when discussing wormholes in another video.

    • @jaymethodus3421
      @jaymethodus3421 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      A. Pretty sure you are correct. It is a type of “4 dimensional” toroidal “structure”(more so an infinitely detailed probability point cloud gradient, no defined ‘surfaces’ or actual spatial relevance) that is still represented as a single infinitely dense point from our perspectives.
      B. I think this type of black hole is a remnant of the 1st Black Hole Era of the universe. It’s a ‘cooling’ core that manifests in 3d reality as an exotic state of matter as it drops energy levels. I’m fairly sure this is dark matter, and
      C. I’m fairly sure it releases it’s excess energy not as mass but as an outward spacial “pressure”(imagine space uncoiling from within somehow?). This would explain expansion maybe, idk

    • @user-dd7hv2sx5b
      @user-dd7hv2sx5b 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      ​@@kennyholmes5196WHAIT...
      SO BY CREATING A BLACK HOLE I CAN CREATE A NEW DIMENSION?...

  • @ancipital
    @ancipital ปีที่แล้ว +4

    just found the answer to a question I asked a couple of years back is what happens when a black hole finally evaporates via hawking radiation because at some point, it will have no more matter to consume to sustain itself - so there must be a point at which the singularity cannot be sustained.
    Based on what I have just read from an article 2 years ago, it seems in its final death throes, it will expend the last of itself in a huge flash of light and energy from a very tiny region of space.
    The other interesting theory I've read recently, is that our universe is actually a singularity of a universe outside of our own, so the reason we can never get outside of our universe is basically because the edge of our universe is actually the event horizon which as per the video can never be crossed in the other direction!
    Anyway, it's too late to think about this as midnight where I am and time for bed!

  • @fuseblower8128
    @fuseblower8128 ปีที่แล้ว +8

    I still want that anti-matter moon though. Not to fling at a black hole but just to show off to aliens

  • @LoneTiger
    @LoneTiger 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    You know you screwed up, when you broke physics and reality, and became a talking sofa. 😹

  • @marionetteking4036
    @marionetteking4036 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I imagine it's like a merry-go-round at a playground. The faster the spin, the more difficult it is to get on and stay on

    • @user-dd7hv2sx5b
      @user-dd7hv2sx5b 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Interesting Allegorry.

  • @Шангрин
    @Шангрин 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    1: Oh no... where are my socks..
    2: Did you get them lost?
    1: Yes!
    2: How?
    1: i lost it in a naked singularity

  • @steventreadway9966
    @steventreadway9966 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    America’s most produced nuclear warheads have variable yield settings. The same warhead can be set from 25 kiloton to 20 megaton depending on settings. Lots of things have to happen at fraction of a second to increase or decrease the power of detonation. Don’t take my word for it, there’s a wealth of info on the subject right here on TH-cam.

  • @JoshStLouis314
    @JoshStLouis314 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    Good point to clarify that E≈(delta)mc² for something that doesn't completely convert mass to energy.

    • @user-dd7hv2sx5b
      @user-dd7hv2sx5b 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      OHH, SO IT'S BECAUSE OF THE EMPTY NOT EXISTING MASS?
      I THOUGHT IT'S BECAUSE OF THE PRODUCING ENERGY.

  • @Onionbagel
    @Onionbagel ปีที่แล้ว +66

    You better be careful. Your channel growing at a steady pace, I'm proud of you! But all these reaction videos could lead to a copyright strike.

    • @unnamellie
      @unnamellie ปีที่แล้ว +22

      React content is usually strike-free, and he does add some information in these videos, so I don't think there is a danger of that🤔

    • @coltafanan
      @coltafanan ปีที่แล้ว +6

      Which would be stupid because commentary is under fair use

    • @Metal00m
      @Metal00m ปีที่แล้ว +3

      he's running out of Sam O'Nella

    • @Onionbagel
      @Onionbagel ปีที่แล้ว +3

      @@coltafanan Fair use does not fully protect you from copyright strike or claims. This has been debunked many times.

    • @platdragon9526
      @platdragon9526 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      He mostly reacts to science youtube channels, which if you don't know, are mostly very open to people just reacting of it since they all (at least the popular ones) just want the knowledge to get out there. Hell people like xqc reacts to like 40mins videos that takes like 4 months to make and the only reaction he does is laugh and some shit and he ends up pretty fine.
      A more possible way for him to get copystriked is when a video he reacted had some copyrighted content but then again these massive science channels know what they're doing enough to avoid this.

  • @LMT_Light
    @LMT_Light ปีที่แล้ว +1

    " i wana cuddle a black hole " famous last words 😂

  • @jefersoncruzdeoliveirafilh5832
    @jefersoncruzdeoliveirafilh5832 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    that is mindbreaking
    9:35 "there is a catch though" (epic music intensifies)

  • @edbertoli1
    @edbertoli1 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    The severe warping of spacetime at the event horizon means that, from a distant observer's point of view, time will essentially stop there. Anything falling into it will appear to stand still and never actually cross through. That would make it tough to deliver a nuke, or anything else for that matter...

    • @thomasfleming7606
      @thomasfleming7606 ปีที่แล้ว

      It would eventually redshift and disappear.

  • @44Hd22
    @44Hd22 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    9:06 maybe it can still work because the black hole will get smaller because of the hawking radiation so if it has more spin than the smallest black hole would it work?

  • @shamitsalgaonkar403
    @shamitsalgaonkar403 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    This guy gave the answer before even the video started 😂😂❤❤

  • @Boppin.
    @Boppin. ปีที่แล้ว +14

    Apparantly with spin the way it limits itself is that the black hole will preferentially swallow photons with negative angular momentum that are generated by the accretion flow

    • @NonsensicalSpudz
      @NonsensicalSpudz ปีที่แล้ว +3

      of course of course

    • @Four_Shadowing
      @Four_Shadowing ปีที่แล้ว +6

      I like your funny words magic man

    • @Boppin.
      @Boppin. ปีที่แล้ว +4

      Simpler terms: it absorbs the light orbiting it in reverse (opposite the direction of its spin) which results in a momentum transfer that slows it's spin.

  • @ade8890
    @ade8890 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    I found the spin comparison to electrons and black holes confusing.
    I'm a physics laymen, but I thought electron spin has nothing to do with rotation, it's just what we label one of the variables used to describe particles.
    Whereas for black holes, I think they're actually talking about angular momentum. But I know next to nothing about spin, so maybe either way there'd be a limit.

  • @mmmk1414
    @mmmk1414 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    I heard somewhere that spin doesn't mean rotation to particles, it more like a character of the particles

  • @demigreen6495
    @demigreen6495 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    I need more of these react videos!!! Hearing a real scientist’s insights is so fascinating! Thank you for this it was very entertaining and I subscribed!

  • @theaureliasys6362
    @theaureliasys6362 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    To add to the timing issues: gravity warps time. This makes stuff difficult.

    • @user-dd7hv2sx5b
      @user-dd7hv2sx5b 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      And The Higher Gravity And Speed The Slower Time Will Be.

  • @gettothepoint2707
    @gettothepoint2707 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Woaw! We've got an audience it seems! Kudos to you!

  • @lazylasagna5181
    @lazylasagna5181 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    i think the reason for not being able to overfeed the spinning black hole is inertia objects with mass can't be accelerated instantly and the quick spin of the black hole is like a table cloth being pulled out too fast to act on the objects. in this case the quickly moving force is the frame drag of the black holes rotational axis this positions the object and the space around it outside of the blackholes influence

  • @Treviisolion
    @Treviisolion ปีที่แล้ว +12

    On the topic of green glows, I’ve noticed that in real life examples of radiation associated with nuclear energy and nuclear disasters which we can actually see, they tend to be blue. Thing likes ionizing radiation hitting air, certain isotopes of cesium which appear to produce blue ‘sparkles,’ and though not dangerous, Cherenkhov radiation. Meanwhile the green glow seems to come exclusively from certain fluorescent paints such as those used for the radium watches and uranium glass.
    Given that radiation is typically invisible, do you think it was better that green ended up representing radiation over blue or would it have been better were it the other way around, or should there have been some other visual representation to adopt that the public could use as a shorthand for radiation that would have been preferable to a blue or green glow?

    • @fusionwing4208
      @fusionwing4208 ปีที่แล้ว +8

      Ive grown to think that radiations representative color should be a yellowish color, the same color used for nuclear waste containers in fiction, and the symbol of nuclear itself.
      Green to me represents acid/poison honestly, while red represents heat/lava, and blue represents cold/water.

    • @spacejunk2186
      @spacejunk2186 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      I though the color became green since radium glows kinda green and glass with uranium in it looks green also. Both of theese things were sold to the public as awesome physics merch in the past. Thus radioactive = green.

  • @midsuxo5003
    @midsuxo5003 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Why do i always get existential dread when big numbers of years show up. It's like being faced with a reality when you are not a thing anymore and i get chills just from that

  • @LuneLovehearn
    @LuneLovehearn 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    This reminds me of the hitchhiking guide to the universe where they use an improbability engine to travel faster than the speed of light, so its like using the naked singularity principle, as they turn into very improbable things while traveling then using a probability system to restore themselves to normal.
    Also the black hole bombs theory.

    • @user-dd7hv2sx5b
      @user-dd7hv2sx5b 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      In Star Wars Universe They Are Using The Other Dimension - The 4 Th Dimensional Hyper Space To Travel With A Speed Of Light.

  • @lazylizard8003
    @lazylizard8003 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    Can you do a reaction to minutes physic video "the unreasonable efficiency of black holes"? Great video and awesome channel. They talk about the thing about E=delta mc^2 for nuclear reactions

  • @LeAbstracted
    @LeAbstracted 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I really enjoyed how you pointed out the timing- I was thinking that too! 😂

  • @Luigi2262_
    @Luigi2262_ ปีที่แล้ว +27

    Technically, there's another possibility here. In a past video, they mentioned a wormhole would likely use exotic matter with negative mass to keep it open. Could that stuff destroy a black hole?

    • @Boppin.
      @Boppin. ปีที่แล้ว +13

      Maybe but exotic matter is entirely hypothetical

    • @ronalddavidrojas5795
      @ronalddavidrojas5795 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      And also it turns antimatter into matter but like you said it has negative mass so I'm not sure

    • @Luigi2262_
      @Luigi2262_ ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@Boppin. To be fair, so is attempting to destroy the event horizon

    • @haqeeqee
      @haqeeqee ปีที่แล้ว +1

      I had the same thought but then I realised that exotic matter would be probably just be flung away from the black hole.
      Pushing exotic matter into a black hole would probably be as difficult as it would be for regular matter to escape a black hole i.e impossible.

    • @11cookeaw14
      @11cookeaw14 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@haqeeqee Nope, it would be attracted to the black hole. Remember F=ma, F=mg --> ma=mg, a=g. Also remember the equivalnce principle.

  • @therealswitt4554
    @therealswitt4554 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    I have my own theory on why a blackhole would reject certain objects if you add too much speed, it could be centrifugal force. I know that if you spin a bucket of water fast enough, the water will stay in the bottom of the bucket, even when flipped upside down, so I could assume that logic could somewhat apply here.

  • @faltuyoutuber4570
    @faltuyoutuber4570 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Singurality chan is so shy that She would destroy reality itself after being seeing naked 😂

  • @LuneLovehearn
    @LuneLovehearn 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    As side note, Black holes could be used as power source like how you do it with a nuclear power plant. They say you could build the equivalent to a dison Sphere on it.

    • @user-dd7hv2sx5b
      @user-dd7hv2sx5b 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      According To "The Kurdashev Scale [System]" Created By Our Russian Guy Physist Anatoliy KurdashevType 2 Civilization [We Are Only Type 1 + Civilization On The Current Moment (Planetary + Level Civilization)] Type 2 Civilzation Will Be Able To Use The Energy Of The Neutron Stars So For The Civilizations Bigger Then Type 1 + THINGS LIKE THESE WOULD BE ACTUALLY POSSIBLE.

  • @Catzillator
    @Catzillator ปีที่แล้ว +1

    yup you said it since the start very accurate - wait out.

  • @bocahcebol2815
    @bocahcebol2815 ปีที่แล้ว

    Finally i know where my pen, small piece lego and other thing missing without context

  • @ryujibackyeah4189
    @ryujibackyeah4189 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    me brain hurt

  • @lucasdesvignes7190
    @lucasdesvignes7190 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    i like your vids !
    (could you rotate a lil bit your camera for reactions ? i feel like you look straight into my soul during the whole video ) 🤣

  • @JohnRandomness105
    @JohnRandomness105 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    2:50 The energy in a particle, or the energy released from the particle in a nuclear reaction such as an alpha decay.
    4:00 Interesting problem: creating a million antiprotons and antineutrons per second, how long will it take to create a gram of antimatter?
    8:20 My hunch is that if you try to overcharge the black hole, the charge just won't go in. Likewise, sending high-angular-momentum mass toward the black hole means that the mass will bypass the black hole.

  • @helloyes2288
    @helloyes2288 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

    As i understand it you see the singularity from inside the black hole but it'd be everywhere around you and closing in in a way that's like an inverse of looking out into normal space and seeing the big bang receding in all directions and expanding.

  • @EngineerAAJ
    @EngineerAAJ ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Wait, does that mean that the hawking radiation travels back in time?

  • @ArmyGuyClaude
    @ArmyGuyClaude ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Could a person "hypothetically" experience the end of the universe by crossing the event horizon then?

  • @SergeantRen2048
    @SergeantRen2048 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    3:49 Antimatter costs $62.5 trillion to make just 1 gram

  • @jeremypreston5009
    @jeremypreston5009 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    "destroy the event horizon"
    Capt Miller has entered the chat

    • @tfolsenuclear
      @tfolsenuclear  ปีที่แล้ว

      That movie was a classic!

    • @jeremypreston5009
      @jeremypreston5009 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@tfolsenuclear it's got one of the most intelligent moments of a horror movie character...
      The video finally gets unscrambled
      "We're leaving"
      Ps thanks for what you do. It's been a long standing frustration of mine that if people who didn't know what they were talking about hadn't ruined nuclear power, we wouldn't be having the energy and climate crisis we're having right now

  • @nintoherobraine7746
    @nintoherobraine7746 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

    the decay rate of black holes depends on their diameter - the frequency of the hawking radiation is the diameter of the black hole. This means that since photon energy is inversely proportional to its wavelength, the time for a black hole to decay increases with the mass. I'm unsure of the exact formular, however. PBS Spacetime has a video explaining it, but i don't know which one it is.

  • @Silhouex
    @Silhouex ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Just a guess but I think the spin limit is because if the spin is equal to or greater than the speed of the particles you're sending at the blackhole the particles would treat the blackhole like a solid object and bounce it away.

  • @Tsbfg
    @Tsbfg ปีที่แล้ว +1

    This is my favorite video of yours. It is so interesting.

    • @tfolsenuclear
      @tfolsenuclear  ปีที่แล้ว

      Thanks! I'm glad you liked it. It's one of my favorite Kurzgesagt videos

    • @Tsbfg
      @Tsbfg ปีที่แล้ว

      @@tfolsenuclear wow, you replied. You are welcome.

  • @CommanderNoob
    @CommanderNoob ปีที่แล้ว

    Next video, Tyler will go through Interstellar Space to find a supermassive blackhole far FAR away, and destroy it himself with the power of a laugh

  • @zhadoomzx
    @zhadoomzx 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I think a nuke detonated near another nuke could cause it to reach super criticality.
    Even if the second nukes own detonation mechanism doesn't trigger, the shockwave of the exploding nuke could compress the other nukes core beyond criticality. Also the exploding nuke will represent a high luminosity neutron source, making sure the chain reaction starts in the other nuke quickly.
    Then the second nukes core might undergo regular chain reaction and explode with similar or even more inertial confinement time as a regular detonation might produce.

  • @davidhand9721
    @davidhand9721 ปีที่แล้ว

    "the charge will cancel out" - not exactly. The electrical potential energy would decrease significantly, so I would think the mass would decrease in total.

  • @WackoMcGoose
    @WackoMcGoose 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I always thought the "throw antimatter at it" thing was solveable by throwing negatively _massed_ exotic matter at the black hole to reduce its summed mass. In fact, if black holes are "elementary particles", it would make sense to conside _white holes_ their antiparticles, rather than an "anti black hole of opposite charge". Although, since their mass is variable, you'd end up with either a smaller black hole or smaller white hole, depending on which was more (anti)massive... they wouldn't perfectly annihalate.

  • @shibomi1
    @shibomi1 ปีที่แล้ว

    8:21 if you think about it since the universe itself expanded from a singularity, then perhaps the limit of a Blackhole is all the matter and energy in the universe minus 1 particle. Add the one particle and you might get another big bang.

  • @spacelem
    @spacelem ปีที่แล้ว

    I thought the same about the epic music! Similarly for the one where they show you the biggest stars ever to exist, and the one where they explore all of time back and forth.

  • @tanbui7163
    @tanbui7163 ปีที่แล้ว

    if an person fell into a black hole, they will turn to pasta

  • @DimiDzi
    @DimiDzi ปีที่แล้ว +1

    just use incredible gravity to rip it into smaller holes that combined have more surface to mass ratio and evaporate them quickly

  • @SeabeeTrooper
    @SeabeeTrooper ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I had this Kurzgesagt video on my watch later, then I saw this video on my home page and had to watch your video instead.
    Keep up the good work, boss!

  • @artor9175
    @artor9175 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Isn't everything falling into a black hole doing so at the speed of light already? I don't see how you could increase the spin any faster than normal with that method.

    • @kennyholmes5196
      @kennyholmes5196 ปีที่แล้ว

      Simple: Angular momentum is increased. Sure, it's infinitely dense and infinitely small, but it still came from something that itself was spinning. Think of it like a swivel chair being spun, with a board painted black attached to it. Then, you shine a light on the board. The photons of the light get absorbed and impart their momentum to the board, and by extension, the swiveling part of the chair, causing it to spin faster.

  • @phantomflows0
    @phantomflows0 3 วันที่ผ่านมา

    theoretically speaking, if you had an unbreakable link, and you connected it to say a planet that in it's rotation allowed an object at the end of the link to enter the event horizon but then pull it back out, would it be able to be pulled out or would is just stop the planet from rotating at all?

  • @gstrager9997
    @gstrager9997 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Golden Experience Requiem

    • @user-dd7hv2sx5b
      @user-dd7hv2sx5b 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Reqieum Works Different.
      Reqiuem Just Creating A New Dimension With Limitless Timeloop.

  • @KanedaSyndrome
    @KanedaSyndrome ปีที่แล้ว

    We need a Nolan movie about a mad scientist villain succeeding with doing this.

  • @techmouse.
    @techmouse. ปีที่แล้ว

    I love that music too. I wish I could find it so I can listen to it all of the way through.

  • @YouTrolol
    @YouTrolol ปีที่แล้ว

    ~11:11, wouldn't the reason you can't see somebody that falls into a black hole be because the photons that would bounce off the person and reflect to your eye also be captured and sucked in, so there's literally nothing to see? I don't get how that mean's you're going to the future.

  • @Mokrator
    @Mokrator ปีที่แล้ว

    @9:15 maybe things can fall into the blackhole as matter collides into the aggregation disc with other matter and gets slowed down, so if the spin is higher than the speed needed to get excape velocity, matter hitting something would get accellerated not slowed down (but i can not imagine what it could be spinning faster than excapevel without escaping itself)

  • @evihofkens9530
    @evihofkens9530 ปีที่แล้ว

    True, a way for the universe to prevent its self-destruction by the creation of a singularity (or ringularity) spewing out a new universe, is to put a 'patch' over it, an event horizon.

  • @thou_dog
    @thou_dog 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    The naked singularity is the Terrible Secret of Space?
    Makes sense. Eat some bread, climb some stairs :)

  • @spudthespudgungamer7112
    @spudthespudgungamer7112 ปีที่แล้ว

    We probably wouldn't see anything as Light still needs to reflect off it, and I doubt a singularity gives off light. So, probably just gravitational lensing and that's it.

  • @NguyenMinh792
    @NguyenMinh792 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

    5:01 the black hole has mood!

  • @SubZero-cv5hk
    @SubZero-cv5hk ปีที่แล้ว

    I personally find black holes fascinating and thinking about what's 'beyond' the singularity I found that maybe our universe itself is a massive (for an outside observer) black hole.
    Since the schwarzschild radius increases when the black hole increases in mass, it would explain why from our perspective the edge of the universe is drifting away. the edge of the visible universe is accelerating because the closer you are to a black hole, the slower time is running, so equally if you look outwards, time must be running faster from your perspective, thus the growth of the event horizon/edge of the visible universe would look accelerating to us.
    Furthermore, since it is a point of infinite density, bends space and time infinitely AND our laws of physics (looking at plank length specifically) don't apply anymore, I don't see a reason where entire universes couldn't be shrunk into a singularity, for an outside observer. since size is relative when
    Our 'big bang' thus would be the birth of the singularity we live in, equally every black hole in our universe would contain their own universes (hello there multiverse), with their own set of physics, since size is relative, our plank length could be their plank length but for an outside observer infinitely smaller, while for them it would be just the plank length.
    The mass thats being sucked in from outside would be converted to dark energy, since the definitions I found claim that with the expansion of space (event horizon) more of dark energy should come into existence, it would explain both the increase in dark energy and the expansion of event horizons when matter falls into a black hole
    Also, a black hole would therefore in a way be at the very same time a white hole, just for another universe, only spitting out dark energy (but still spitting out smth nonetheless) but no actual matter with mass. cosmic background radiation could maybe be just matter crossing the event horizon and being converted, or a side effect of the conversion process.
    It's just a little theory of my own and unless somebody sticks their head into an event horizon or we find a way of flying to the edge of the visible universe to see if there's actually more universe, or what else may lie beyond the edge, we'll probably never know for sure.
    I'm pretty sure there's something that's very strictly ruling this out as a possibility that I don't know of, otherwise I can't explain how I never heard of such a theory anywhere else. 🤔

    • @stukskekrapuul
      @stukskekrapuul ปีที่แล้ว

      reminds me a bit of the movie Lucy in the end they keep zooming out until they hit like a white universe where matter gets sucked in to our own it's just an artist visualization but damn it looks cool

  • @maestrulgamer9695
    @maestrulgamer9695 ปีที่แล้ว

    9:20-The problem with this idea is that it contradicts with how supermasive black holes are hypothetically created.
    Overfeeding would only allow the black hole to increase in mass faster.
    Best case scenario,a sudden change in the amount of mass eaten would cause the black hole to shoot out some of the mass and shrink the event horizon,basically causing a gama ray burst!

    • @UberMangaka
      @UberMangaka ปีที่แล้ว

      to be fair the natural way a black hole would be overfed (say, via an early universe Black Hole Star) is more general, and the means by which they would 'overfeed' to accomplish the dissolution of the event horizon is very specific and deliberate.
      They didn't explain the precise specifics and it's likely a process involving a lot of mathematics and nomenclature that's beyond me but suffice it to say the exact method used may be very different process than what would naturally occur during simple overfeeding.

  • @hyper9532
    @hyper9532 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

    1:18 bro just took every single nuke from north korea and starts going: boom BOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOM BOOM BOOM BOOM. And just destroys it with all of there ability.

  • @davidconner-shover51
    @davidconner-shover51 ปีที่แล้ว

    I'm more afraid of meeting a high choral singer than a nekkid singularity

  • @Haggispk
    @Haggispk ปีที่แล้ว

    Quasar is my favorite track out of all of their videos currently

  • @dracothewarrior4316
    @dracothewarrior4316 ปีที่แล้ว

    this poses an interesting question: what *would* a naked singularity look like?

  • @i_am_the_monkey_king
    @i_am_the_monkey_king ปีที่แล้ว

    It's kinda cool how the singularity can actually warp reality in such a way that it acts like the Infinite-Sided 🎲 from Gravity Falls. It's a super cool concept.

  • @JadianRadiator
    @JadianRadiator 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I've gotta split this hair.
    Because of time dilation we're actually traveling a fraction of a second per second.

  • @maxikle
    @maxikle 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    What really are white holes? Energy cannot newly be created, otherwise there would need to be a "deletion unit", which takes away that energy. Black holes aren't that, as they can emit mass through hawking radiation. Is there anti-hawking radiation? Something that pulls in a tiny bit of mass to equalize the negative mass of a white hole? That shouldn't work, as the theory for a white hole is, that it violently ejects matter / energy. Anti-hawking radiation would be too slow.
    If it loses more mass, which it already doesn't have, wouldn't that make the plane in space-time bend further and further upwards, until infinity? That would affect everything in the universe, eventually, if I understood correctly.

  • @FalcoGer
    @FalcoGer ปีที่แล้ว

    3:40 the problem with throwing antimatter into a black hole is that it doesn't matter. Pun not intended. It would be the same result as throwing the antimatter into matter and then throwing half the resulting radiation into the black hole.

  • @charlesnathansmith
    @charlesnathansmith ปีที่แล้ว

    Susskind had an idea that if you produced entangled particles and separated them, then formed one black hole with one set and another with the other set, then the black holes would also be entangled, and space they each contained would be meaningfully connected in some sense. Not exactly anti-black holes, but an odd thought nonetheless

  • @MetalLP
    @MetalLP ปีที่แล้ว

    Even if you were able to overcharge or overspin a black hole, I just don’t understand, how could event horizon “disolve”. It’s not a thing, it’s some sort of borderline.
    I could imagine, you can make it smaller by overcharging and overspinning. Maybe theoretically it could be as small as singularity (I know it mathematicaly doesn’t make sense, ‘cause it’s infinitely small but let’s suppose). But either way, you wouldn’t still see the singularity, because it would still devour everything even light.
    Also one important thing, we need to point out is, that the “sphere of blackness” around the black hole isn’t the event horizon, but ISCO (inner most stable circular orbit).

  • @Sir_Uncle_Ned
    @Sir_Uncle_Ned ปีที่แล้ว +5

    Wait. If a singularity is in the future rather than just in front of you, could we use that effect to create a one-way time machine?

    • @ArmyGuyClaude
      @ArmyGuyClaude ปีที่แล้ว +6

      If you mean crossing the event horizon is more like opening a doorway from 3 spatial + 1 Time dimension universe to 1 spatial + 3 Time dimension universe then more than likely. In this scenario the 3 time dimensions work like the old spatial dimensions did. 1 for going forward and backgrounds in your current time line. 2 to go to different timelines you're apart of (going sideways), and 3 to go to timelines you never existed in. But I think the implication for what the video was trying to express is that it goes from a 3 spatial + 1 time to a 1 spatial + 1 time. Kind of like a funnel instead of a door. Meaning there is no stepping to a different timeline or side stepping to a different outcome. There would only be 1 outcome. Going forward in time. You probably wouldn't even be moving spatially. This does bring me to a question though. Could a person experience the end of the universe because of this?

    • @victoriamacarthur8906
      @victoriamacarthur8906 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      If You Mean A One Way Time Machine Into The Afterlife Then, Yeah Totally!

  • @bsl275
    @bsl275 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Wait, so is the Infinite Probability Drive in "Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy" just a naked singularity?

  • @manw3bttcks
    @manw3bttcks 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

    5:15 the charge of the 'anti-black hole' is wrong, the anti hole could have either positive, negative or no charge just like a black hole. The video at 5:15 suggests a anti hole would simply have a positive charge (opposite charge of the black hole)

  • @tophus5583
    @tophus5583 ปีที่แล้ว

    The existence of a singularity is so wierd and mindblowing, like light being a particle and a wave at the same time. I think a singularity is trapped in some kind of loop, a limbus if you will.
    Let me try to simplify: Because of the gravitational pull everything is sucked into the Black Hole. Infinite mass compressed into zero space, forming the singularity in the process. But here's the catch: The singularity will actually never be formed in the first place, because of its properties to bend spacetime. So nothing sucked in will ever reach the center of the Black Hole to create the singularity. But theoretically it will exist and the possibility of its creation in the future is enough for its properties to effect its past.
    So it will be there and will never be there simultaneously. The singularity will create itself while also stopping itself from ever being created. As I said, a wierd one. But I could also be wrong about it, though.

  • @Damariobros
    @Damariobros ปีที่แล้ว

    Is it possible that the black hole forming is simply its mass spontaneously collapsing into energy and being flung across time? I had always thought it was the formation and the separation of matter-antimatter pairs due to the ambient fluctuation of space-time, and the antimatter gets flung into the black hole instead of immediately annihilating its counterpart. But if antimatter doesn't affect a black hole except to make it bigger, then perhaps the only explanation is, it's just a product of mass/energy that's no longer in this age. Like if you put your hand in a river and sweep away water, there's a dip where your hand was and that water that was there is now downstream.
    If time and space switch past the event horizon, then perhaps it's mass that got pulverized into energy and blasted across time.

  • @Tekdruid
    @Tekdruid ปีที่แล้ว

    "What actually transpires beneath the veil of an event horizon? Decent people shouldn't think too much about that."
    - Academician Prokhor Zakharov, "For I Have Tasted The Fruit" (Sid Meier's Alpha Centauri)

  • @Coinpease
    @Coinpease ปีที่แล้ว

    So just an inquiry about your first comments on nukes. It's my understanding that thermonuclear bombs use a fission trigger and the bomb is designed to implode quickly to create a super pressured space with a hydrogen cell causing the fusion reaction, which yields much higher. Is it not possible that you'd get some extra yields from the trigger mechanisms if they blew up together or is there like no allowance at all within those systems? Would it blow up any atomic bombs still lying around (if there is any still)?

    • @manw3bttcks
      @manw3bttcks 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      The compression has to be super symmetrical, the old FatMan A bomb from world war 2 was difficult to get to work correctly because the compressing explosives has to trigger at multiple detonators at exactly the same time. The shock wave needs to be spherically symmetric from the outside to the inside.
      Even a few tiny gas bubbles in the explosives would have disturbed the shock wave turning the bomb into a 'fizzle' (low grade explosion with poor yield). So like the engineer said, one A bomb next to another would just tear up the 2nd bomb and the 2nd bomb doesn't explode

  • @W.H.V.
    @W.H.V. ปีที่แล้ว

    In the class hierarchy, black holes are the Kims

  • @Omba820
    @Omba820 ปีที่แล้ว

    What i have learnt from your video
    The best way to destroy a nuke permanently is with another

  • @average7374
    @average7374 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

    He’s staring into my soul