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Now reading: Chapter 695 457: An Encounter with Legion Members, the Preci from Global Lords: I Have Information System, a Game novel by Chinese Blacksmith.

[This chapter is a non-intrusive anti-theft section]

[Don't ask why it's non-intrusive because the author can easily replace it with the official chapter]

[Official readers follow the usual rule, refresh at 6 AM]

[Pirated readers are welco to subscribe officially; you can manage to subscribe just by looking at the ads]

[The author works hard to write; surely you wouldn't mind watching so ads?]

[I heard that Uncle Wang next door hasn't felt fatigue since subscribing to the official version, his back no longer aches, his legs are strong, he can even jump from the fifth floor without effort, and found an eighteen-year-old girlfriend the next day]

[What are you waiting for?]

[Quickly join the official family and enjoy the warmth of ho]

Xinfan Technology News, Beijing Ti, August 27. Among all astronomical concepts, black holes may be the most peculiar of all. Black holes have extre density, even light cannot escape, like a terrifying giant black receptacle. Since ordinary physical laws fail in black holes, they seem to be tailored for sci-fi stories. However, a great deal of direct and indirect evidence confirms that black holes indeed exist in the universe.

Einstein's Prophecy

Black holes are an inevitable result of Einstein's theory of general relativity.

German astronor Karl Schwarzschild first predicted the existence of black holes in 1916, considering them an inevitable result of Einstein's theory of general relativity. In other words, if Einstein's theory is correct (all evidence points to this), then black holes must exist. The works of Roger Penrose and Stephen Hawking gradually solidified the theoretical foundation for black holes. Their research showed that any celestial collapse forming a black hole would lead to a singularity where conventional physics laws entirely break down.

Gamma-ray bursts

Ground-based observation equipnt has detected gamma-ray bursts generated during the formation of black holes.

In the 1930s, Indian astrophysicist Subrahmanyan Chandrasekhar studied the fate of exhausted stellar nuclear fuel. It was discovered that the ultimate result depends on a star's mass. If the star is massive, say twenty tis the mass of the Sun, its dense core (which alone can reach two to three tis the solar mass) will directly collapse, eventually forming a black hole. The collapse speed is extrely fast, happening in a matter of re seconds, releasing astounding energy in gamma-ray bursts equivalent to the energy released by an ordinary star throughout its long life. Ground-based telescopes have detected multiple gamma-ray bursts, so even emitted from galaxies billions of light-years away, confirming the observation of black hole formation processes.

Gravitational waves

Pictured is an artist's rendering of the concept of gravitational waves. The gravitational interaction between two black holes will create ripples in space-ti that radiate outward in the form of gravitational waves.

Black holes are not always solitary; sotis they appear in pairs and rotate around each other. The gravitational interaction between two black holes will create ripples in space-ti that radiate outward in the form of gravitational waves, one of Einstein's relativity predictions. With help from observatories like LIGO and Virgo, we now have the ability to detect gravitational waves. In 2016, scientists announced the first discovery of gravitational waves created by the rger of two black holes. Since then, multiple gravitational wave events have been detected. With continuously improving detector sensitivity, scientists have even detected gravitational waves generated by events other than black hole rgers, such as collisions between black holes and neutron stars.

Hidden companion stars

Pictured is an imagination of the star trajectories in the three-star system HR6819.

Gamma-ray bursts or gravitational waves are both events that occur in a short ti and can be detected across half the universe. But considering their nature, most black holes are hard to detect. Black holes do not emit any light or radiation and can silently lurk in space, with astronors often unaware of their existence. Yet, there is a thod to detect their presence: using the gravitational effects of black holes on other stars. In 2020, when astronors observed the seemingly ordinary HR6819 star system, they found the trajectories of the two stars sowhat strange, unless there was a completely invisible celestial body at play. When calculating its mass, researchers realized the only truth: this celestial body must be a black hole. It is located just a thousand light-years away from Earth, right in the Milky Way Galaxy, making it the closest black hole discovered so far.

X-ray emissions

The black hole CygnusX-1 is devouring material from its huge blue companion star.

In 1971, scientists found evidence of black hole existence while researching a star system in the Milky Way Galaxy known as CygnusX-1. The X-ray emissions from this system are extraordinarily bright, but these emissions are not directly from the black hole or its visible companion star. Instead, they are generated by the accretion disk ford when the black hole devours stellar material. Just as ntioned for the HR6819 star system, astronors can also use the visible star's trajectory to estimate the mass of the hidden celestial body in the CygnusX-1 system. The final calculated result shows the mass is about 21 tis the solar mass, considering the relatively small space occupied by this celestial body, indicating it can only be a black hole, without the need to consider other possibilities.

Supermassive black holes

The center of the Milky Way Galaxy also contains a supermassive black hole.

Aside from black holes ford by stellar collapse, evidence suggests that galactic centers may harbor supermassive black holes, with mass reaching several million or even billions of tis that of the Sun, possibly existing since the early universe. In so-called "active galaxies," the evidence of the existence of supermassive black holes is spectacular. According to NASA, these galactic centers surrounded by accretion disks release extrely strong emission across various wavelengths. There is also a black hole in the center of the Milky Way Galaxy, as we observe the astonishing rotation speeds of stars in that region, reaching 8% of the speed of light, indicating they are surely orbiting a celestial body that is extrely small but extrely massive. Current estimates suggest the black hole at the center of the Milky Way Galaxy is about 4 million tis the mass of the Sun.

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