A new "immersive visualization" will allow users to experience the plunging into a black hole and falling beyond the "point of no return" within the phenomenon, the NASA said in a news release.
It's a question that has dogged humanity since we first learned about black holes a little over a century ago: What the heck would it be like to plunge beyond the point of no return? We still don't ...
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He started with a black hole with a mass equivalent to about 4.3 million Suns, and, together with data scientist Brian Powell, also of Goddard, fed their data into NASA's Discover supercomputer.
Nasa has released footage simulating what it's like being sucked into a black hole, a region of space with such strong gravity not even light can escape. The simulation was processed by a ...
(via NASA Goddard) This new, immersive visualization produced on a NASA supercomputer represents a scenario where a camera — a stand-in for a daring astronaut — just misses the event horizon and ...
Anyone who has watched Matthew McConaughey plunge into a supermassive black hole in "Interstellar" may think they have a rough idea of what it'd be like to encounter one of these terrifying cosmic ...
We've all heard about the possibility at school or through films, getting sucked into a black hole would be one of the most torturous and painful deaths in the universe. But there's so much more ...