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What's Inside a Black Hole?
3m 36s
Here are three mind-blowing ideas for what may be inside a black hole.
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Video description: Time. We waste it, save it, kill it, make it. The world runs on it. Yet ask physicists what time actually is, and the answer might shock you: They have no idea. Even more surprising, the deep sense we have of time passing from present to past may be nothing more than an illusion. How can our understanding of something so familiar be so wrong?
Here are three mind-blowing ideas for what may be inside a black hole.
As a kid, Janna Levin loved cosmology—now, she’s an award-winning author and host of “Black Hole Apocalypse”
Chung-Pei Ma is both a gifted violinist and one of the world’s foremost black hole hunters.
NOVA has teamed up with Cook's Illustrated to cook up a recipe for stars and black holes.
Andrea Ghez asks the ultimate question: Is there a supermassive black hole at the center of our galaxy?
As a child, theoretical astrophysicist Priya Natarajan loved atlas. As an adult, she maps the cosmos.
Black holes are the most enigmatic and exotic objects in the universe. They’re also the most powerful, with gravity so strong it can actually trap light. And they’re destructive. Anything that falls into them vanishes…gone forever. But now, astrophysicists are realizing that black holes may be essential to understanding how our universe unfolded—possibly leading to life on Earth and us.
Black holes are the most enigmatic and exotic objects in the universe. They’re also the most powerful, with gravity so strong it can actually trap light. And they’re destructive. Anything that falls into them vanishes…gone forever. But now, astrophysicists are realizing that black holes may be essential to understanding how our universe unfolded—possibly leading to life on Earth and us.
Black holes are mind-blowing. Discover the FOUR types of black holes that exist in the cosmos.
66 million years ago, a seven-mile-wide asteroid collided with Earth, triggering a chain of events that coincide with the end of the dinosaurs. But experts have long debated exactly what happened when the asteroid struck and how the giant beasts met their end. Now, scientists have uncovered compelling new clues about the catastrophe.
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If a neuroscientist designed a haunted house, would you dare to enter?
From lobster claws and dog teeth to bee stings and snake fangs, every creature depends on a weapon. But some are armed to extremes that make no practical sense—whether it’s bull elks with giant 40-pound antler racks or tiny rhinoceros beetles with horns bigger than their body. What explains giant tusks, horns, and claws that can slow an animal down and even impair health and nutrition?
Beetles make up the largest group of insects on Earth. Why do so few of them have massive pincers?
Fiddler crabs' large claws look intimidating, but is deadly combat their main purpose?
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