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Biggest black hole in the cosmos discovered (18 billion suns)
New Scientist ^
 | 1/10/08
 | David Shiga
Posted on 01/10/2008 12:52:18 PM PST by LibWhacker
click here to read article
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To: SolidWood
    Women and children would be hardest hit. Especially suns.
 
21
posted on 
01/10/2008 1:08:20 PM PST
by 
weegee
(Those who surrender personal liberty to lower global temperatures will receive neither.)
 
To: HamiltonJay
    Blackholes have immense mass, right? The forces of the smaller one, as it catapults about the larger one, might just be enough to counter the pull for a million or so orbits.
 
22
posted on 
01/10/2008 1:09:08 PM PST
by 
CarrotAndStick
(The articles posted by me needn't necessarily reflect my opinion.)
 
To: Mikey_1962
    Did the dirty crack originate on Ura**s?
 
23
posted on 
01/10/2008 1:09:13 PM PST
by 
weegee
(Those who surrender personal liberty to lower global temperatures will receive neither.)
 
To: HamiltonJay
    ***Why hasnt the smaller been completely swallowed by the larger?***
My question precisely. Unless, the smaller mass has more density by virtue of its diminuition.
 
24
posted on 
01/10/2008 1:09:18 PM PST
by 
sodpoodle
(Despair - man's surrender.  Laughter - God's reward.)
 
To: LibWhacker
    18 Billion Suns = 18 GigaSuns? Is a standard Sun a unit of measure?
 
To: CarrotAndStick
    Or maybe the universe will have a divide by zero error and we’ll all see the Blue Screen of Death.
 
26
posted on 
01/10/2008 1:09:51 PM PST
by 
weegee
(Those who surrender personal liberty to lower global temperatures will receive neither.)
 
To: LibWhacker
    I was trying to think of some sarcastic, witty and clever comment relating this to the size of Herself’s butt or thighs or O’Blama’s coming burnout, etc., but just couldn’t stretch it long enough.
The universe is one big mother.
OK, is this big black hole as dangerous to existance as all leftism and socialism?
I personally have decided that leftism is the most dangerous force in the universe. It destroys everything.
So there.
 
27
posted on 
01/10/2008 1:09:53 PM PST
by 
garyhope
(It's World War IV, right here, right now, courtesy of Islam.)
 
To: LibWhacker
    Is he running for office?
 
28
posted on 
01/10/2008 1:10:48 PM PST
by 
Beckwith
(Dhimmicrats and the liberal media have chosen sides -- Islamofascism)
 
To: weegee
    Any daughter stars? 
 Garde la Foi, mes amis! Nous nous sommes les sauveurs de la République! Maintenant et Toujours!
 (Keep the Faith, my friends! We are the saviors of the Republic! Now and Forever!)
LonePalm, le Républicain du verre cassé (The Broken Glass Republican) 
29
posted on 
01/10/2008 1:11:23 PM PST
by 
LonePalm
(Commander and Chef)
 
To: garyhope
30
posted on 
01/10/2008 1:11:51 PM PST
by 
weegee
(Those who surrender personal liberty to lower global temperatures will receive neither.)
 
To: LonePalm
31
posted on 
01/10/2008 1:12:20 PM PST
by 
weegee
(Those who surrender personal liberty to lower global temperatures will receive neither.)
 
To: cripplecreek
    I read an article recently that said that when two black holes merge, one-third of the total mass is converted into pure energy. In this case, the energy locked up in the mass of six billion Suns. Presumably, that energy escapes during the collision, though I can’t imagine how. The mind boggles... I don’t know if a million light years would even be a safe distance... Anyone?
 
32
posted on 
01/10/2008 1:13:30 PM PST
by 
LibWhacker
(Democrats are phony Americans)
 
To: LibWhacker
    This black hole is a whole lot of nothing.
 
To: advertising guy
    how in hell do they know there are 18 billion?
 Good questions. Also, why is the more "massive" black hole illustrated as a larger black cirlce and the smaller black hole as a smaller black circle. The way I understood black holes, all accretion goes into a singularity that is by all indications, smaller than an atom. So, shouldn't both black holes be illustrated as being the same size? Perhaps they need a different way of illustrating weight for celestial bodies.
34
posted on 
01/10/2008 1:15:01 PM PST
by 
adorno
 
To: LibWhacker
    I would have thought the biggest black hole in the universe was either Barack Obama, Jesse Jackson, or Al Sharpton.
 
To: G L Tirebiter
    Yes, it is. Astronomers often speak in terms of how many solar masses an object contains: black holes, giant stars, galaxies, etc.
 
36
posted on 
01/10/2008 1:15:53 PM PST
by 
LibWhacker
(Democrats are phony Americans)
 
To: weegee
    Why yes, and it has the mass of 18 billion moons.
 
37
posted on 
01/10/2008 1:15:56 PM PST
by 
ovrtaxt
(In my fantasy world, the Dems run a Zell Miller/ Lieberman ticket...)
 
To: wastedyears
    Now you've done it !!!
 That idiot O'reilly will label us racist again because YOU mentioned Obama in a thread about black holes. /sarcasm
 Nam Vet
38
posted on 
01/10/2008 1:17:56 PM PST
by 
Nam Vet
(Timely reporting from Attila's right flank)
 
To: adorno
    I thought blackholes had a difference in mass, depending on the amount of matter that went into it... more mass absorbed = more massive blackhole, with bigger gravity effects surrounding it.
 
39
posted on 
01/10/2008 1:18:12 PM PST
by 
CarrotAndStick
(The articles posted by me needn't necessarily reflect my opinion.)
 
To: G L Tirebiter
    Is a standard Sun a unit of measure?
 
 In fact it is. Although it's usually called a 'solar mass' in astronomy. The sun is used to determine the necessary mass for stellar ignition, calculating novas, neutron stars, supernovas, black holes, etc.
 
 It's the closest, most observable frame of reference we have.
40
posted on 
01/10/2008 1:19:13 PM PST
by 
zencat
(The universe is not what it appears, nor is it something else.)
 
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