21ST CENT.ASTRONOMY(LL)W/CODE WKBK PKG.
6th Edition
ISBN: 9780393874921
Author: PALEN
Publisher: Norton, W. W. & Company, Inc.
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Chapter 18, Problem 26QP
To determine
Does the astronomers concerned a tremendous gravitational pull will lead to Earth’s sudden demise.
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The Schwarzschild radius of a certain black hole is 30n
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M x aMo
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what is the mass of the black hole ? give your answer as a multiple of Ms where Ms is the solar mass, Ms = 2.0 * 10^(30)
express your answer as a multiple of the solar mass mass Ms.
Chapter 18 Solutions
21ST CENT.ASTRONOMY(LL)W/CODE WKBK PKG.
Ch. 18.1 - Prob. 18.1CYUCh. 18.2 - Prob. 18.2CYUCh. 18.3 - Prob. 18.3CYUCh. 18.4 - Prob. 18.4CYUCh. 18 - Prob. 1QPCh. 18 - Prob. 2QPCh. 18 - Prob. 3QPCh. 18 - Prob. 4QPCh. 18 - Prob. 5QPCh. 18 - Prob. 6QP
Ch. 18 - Prob. 7QPCh. 18 - Prob. 8QPCh. 18 - Prob. 9QPCh. 18 - Prob. 10QPCh. 18 - Prob. 11QPCh. 18 - Prob. 12QPCh. 18 - Prob. 13QPCh. 18 - Prob. 14QPCh. 18 - Prob. 15QPCh. 18 - Prob. 16QPCh. 18 - Prob. 17QPCh. 18 - Prob. 18QPCh. 18 - Prob. 19QPCh. 18 - Prob. 20QPCh. 18 - Prob. 21QPCh. 18 - Prob. 22QPCh. 18 - Prob. 23QPCh. 18 - Prob. 24QPCh. 18 - Prob. 25QPCh. 18 - Prob. 26QPCh. 18 - Prob. 27QPCh. 18 - Prob. 28QPCh. 18 - Prob. 29QPCh. 18 - Prob. 30QPCh. 18 - Prob. 31QPCh. 18 - Prob. 32QPCh. 18 - Prob. 33QPCh. 18 - Prob. 34QPCh. 18 - Prob. 35QPCh. 18 - Prob. 36QPCh. 18 - Prob. 37QPCh. 18 - Prob. 38QPCh. 18 - Prob. 39QPCh. 18 - Prob. 40QPCh. 18 - Prob. 41QPCh. 18 - Prob. 42QPCh. 18 - Prob. 43QPCh. 18 - Prob. 44QPCh. 18 - Prob. 45QP
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- As an object falls into a black hole, tidal forces increase. Will these tidal forces always tear the object apart as it approaches the Schwarzschild radius? How does the mass of the black hole and size of the object affect your answer?arrow_forwardIf the Sun were to collapse into a black hole, the point of no return for an investigator would be approximately 3 km from the center singularity. Would the investingator be able to survive visiting even 300 km from the center? Answer this by finding the difference in the gravitatoinal attraction the black holes exerts on a 1.0-kg mass at the head and at the feet of the investigator.arrow_forwardUse the result from Exercise 24.21 to calculate the radius of a black hole with a mass equal to: the Earth, a B0-type main-sequence star, a globular cluster, and the Milky Way Galaxy. Look elsewhere in this text and the appendixes for tables that provide data on the mass of these four objects.arrow_forward
- As a person approaches the Schwarzschild radius fo a black hole, outside observers see all the processes of that person (their clocks, their heart rate, etc.) slowing down, and coming to a halst as they reach the Schwarzschild radius. (The person falling into the black hole sees their own processes unaffected.) But the speed of light is the same everywhere for all observers. What does this say about space as you approach the black hole?arrow_forwardA black hole is an object with mass, but no spatial extent. It truly is a particle. A black hole may form from a dead star. Such a black hole has a mass several times the mass of the Sun. Imagine a black hole whose mass is ten times the mass of the Sun. a. Would you expect the period of an object orbiting the black hole with a semimajor axis of 1 AU to have a period greater than, less than, or equal to 1 yr? Explain your reasoning. b. Use Equation 7.6 to calculate this period.arrow_forwardWhat would be the Schwarzschild radius, in light years, if our Milky Way galaxy of 100 billion stars collapsed into a black hole? Compare this to our distance from the center, about 13,000 light years.arrow_forward
- Calculate the deflection of light caused by the gravity of a star of mass 5Msun and radius 1.3RSun.arrow_forwardCalculate the deflection of light caused by the gravity of a star of mass 2.1M sun and radius 2.8Rsun.arrow_forwardControllers want to communicate with a satellite in orbit 480 km above Earth. If they use a signal of fre- quency 100 MHz, what is the gravitational redshift?arrow_forward
- Many galaxies appear to have supermassive black holes in their centers powering active galactic nuclei (also called AGN). The Schwarzschild radius of these supermassive black holes can be estimated in part by watching for changes in the brightness of the surrounding AGN and measuring the timescale of those changes. Assume we observe an AGN and determine it varies with a timescale of 9.85 minutes, which implies a Schwarzschild radius on the order of 1.77x1011 meters. Estimate the mass of this supermassive black hole. kgarrow_forwardThree identical very dense masses of 5600kg each are placed on the x axis. One mass is at x1=-110cm, one is at the origin, and one is at x2=400cm. What is the magnitude of the net gravitational for Fgrav on the mass at the origin due to the other two masses? Take the gravitational constant to be G=6.67*10^-11Nm^2/kg^2 Express your answer in newtons to three significant figures.arrow_forwardA particle maintains a circular orbit around a black hole of mass 10 Solar masses at a distance equal to 2 Schwarzschild radii. Calculate the orbital velocity of the particle and express the answer in units of the speed of light.arrow_forward
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