It seems that according to the latest expert opinions, a supermassive black hole is able to spin fast enough to warp space-time. Check out the latest reports about the matter below.
Supermassive black hole warps space-time
Scientists say Sagittarius A, a supermassive black hole 26,000 light years from Earth, spins so fast it warps the fabric of space-time around it. Astrophysicist Dr. Paul Sutter joins NBC’s Ellison Barber to explain the discovery.
Black holes are the exit points for information data of the simulation; white holes would be the entry point for the information data, aka the code of the universe. This is why all physics breaks down when anything gets close and why it’s impossible for us to see what is on the other side.
Black holes can be sources of nuclear power
Black holes are often associated with fear and dread due to their reputation of being inescapable and consuming everything that comes near them. However, these beliefs are not entirely accurate and can even be incorrect.
Recently, two physicists from Tianjin University in China, Zhan-Feng Mai and Run-Qiu Yang, have discovered a way to extract energy from these ultradense objects.
They found that small black holes could potentially be used as rechargeable batteries and nuclear reactors, providing energy on a massive scale of gigaelectronvolts.
It is important to note that the energy extracted does not come from within the black hole, but just outside it, where the strongest known concentrations of gravity in the Universe exist.
Black holes are present in our Universe but are not always easy to detect. They can have a mass ranging from five times the mass of the Sun to tens of billions of solar masses.
Primordial black holes are a different weight class and could be as small as subatomic sizes. These black holes are believed to have formed due to overdensities in the primordial plasma after the Big Bang, while stellar black holes are formed from the collapsed cores of massive dead stars.
Check out one of our previous articles in order to learn more about how black holes can be sources of nuclear power.




