[QUOTE=Xain777;24284923]say a super black hole with about the mass of a galaxy ran into its twin travelling at an angle and rotating counter to the first. would that destabilize a black holes gravity long enough to get a black string?
for bonus points add in a line of black holes of equal mass moving like gears, each counter to the ones next to it[/QUOTE]
It'll be like the two biggest trolls raging, and we're all standing back, staring at them all :psyduck: Then the trolls would rage so much they'd rage into one giant troll.
Fin.
[QUOTE=Kade;24263132]The black whole isn't 'erupting' as such; no matter is actually escaping from beneath the black holes event horizon. This effect is caused by the black holes rotation, which causes it to have a magnetic north and south pole. As matter falls into the black hole it tends to accumulate at the poles similar to the aurora at the earth's north and south polls. But the physics are slightly different around a black hole due to it sheer mass and spin rate. These streams of particles become super energetic and shoot out from the poles before they get beyond the event horizon. It is these super energetic jets which are referred to in the OP as a eruption.[/QUOTE]
Rated informative
[QUOTE=Canuhearme?;24262604]These things are powerful, a single quasar can give off an energy output up to a thousand times greater then the [I]entire Milky Way.[/I][/QUOTE]
:psypop:
[QUOTE=massn7;24298469]:psypop:[/QUOTE]
I concur, that's fucking nuts.
My brain just shit itself.
If they can see this that far away, can they see me undress myself near my window?
Also, when you think about this all, it's fucking amazing to try to wrap your mind around the fact that this event actually occurred maybe millions or billions of years ago...
I don't know if anyone explained it yet but, at the event horizon there is a bunch of Turbulence and all that matter is moving at nearly the speed of light, so some matter goes into the black hole, and some gets knocked out into a big ass cosmic blowtorch.
It's kind of a simple explanation, and some of it might not be 100% correct, but that's my understanding of it.
Also, I may have misread the OP.
[editline]05:33PM[/editline]
[QUOTE=Kade;24263132]The black whole isn't 'erupting' as such; no matter is actually escaping from beneath the black holes event horizon. This effect is caused by the black holes rotation, which causes it to have a magnetic north and south pole. As matter falls into the black hole it tends to accumulate at the poles similar to the aurora at the earth's north and south polls. But the physics are slightly different around a black hole due to it sheer mass and spin rate. These streams of particles become super energetic and shoot out from the poles before they get beyond the event horizon. It is these super energetic jets which are referred to in the OP as a eruption.[/QUOTE]
Better explanation.
[QUOTE=Canuhearme?;24262604]Which is exactly why this is so fascinating, we rarely see a quasar that happened less then a billion years ago.
These things are powerful, a single quasar can give off an energy output up to a thousand times greater then the [I]entire Milky Way.[/I][/QUOTE]
Holy shit that just put this into perspective for me.
That's so much energy being released.
New fucking band name!! I called it!
WE ARE....INTERGALATIC SUPER VOLCANO!
This just in: "Black holes erupting" replaces "big bang/big crunch cycle" creationists whacking it with inflatable hammers.
Seriously, if black holes suck in and out... wouldn't that be a valid way to stir things up compared to Big-bang/big-crunch cycle(s)? or am i thinking to far?
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