Black holes are incredibly dense, packing an enormous mass into a tiny space. A teaspoon of black hole material would weigh billions of tons on Earth.
Black holes are incredibly dense, packing an enormous mass into a tiny space. A teaspoon of black hole material would weigh billions of tons on Earth.
At the heart of a black hole lies a point called a singularity, where gravity becomes infinitely strong and the usual laws of physics break down
The first-ever image of a black hole, captured in 2019, provided visual evidence supporting Einstein's theory of general relativity.
The extreme gravitational forces near a black hole's event horizon open the door to theoretical concepts like time dilation and the potential for time travel, adding a touch of science fiction to their already mysterious nature
Black holes have a mysterious edge called the event horizon, hiding what happens inside and puzzling scientists.
The strong gravity around black holes bends light, creating a fascinating effect called gravitational lensing, like a cosmic dance of distorted images.