What would happen if Earth
fell into a black hole?
This article was written by Kevin Pimbblet from the University of
Hull, and was originally
published by The Conversation.Black holes have long been a source of much
excitement and intrigue. And interest regarding black holes will surely grow now that gravitational waves have been
discovered. Many of the questions I
am asked regard how 'true' science fiction concerning black holes might be, and whether worm holes, such as those featured in Stargate, are real or
not.
Invariably though, the one item that is almost
assured to come up is the largely gruesome ways in which black holes might
theoretically affect human beings and Earth itself. There are three
properties of a black hole that are (in principle) measurable: their mass,
their spin (or angular momentum) and their overall electronic charge. Indeed, these are the only three parameters
that an outside observer can ever know about since all other information about
anything that goes in to making up a black hole is lost. This is known as the 'no hair theorem'. Put simply: no matter how hairy or complex an object
you throw in to a black hole, it will get reduced down (or shaved) to its mass,
charge and spin.
Of these parameters, mass is arguably the most
significant. The very definition of a black hole is that it has its mass
concentrated in to a vanishingly small volume – the 'singularity'. And it is
the mass of the black hole – and the huge gravitational forces that its mass
generates – which does the 'damage' to nearby objects.
Space spaghetti
One of the best known effects of a nearby black
hole has the imaginative title of 'Spaghettification'.
In brief, if you stray too close to a black hole, then you will stretch out,
just like spaghetti.This effect is caused due to a gravitation
gradient across your body. Imagine that you are headed feet first towards a
black hole. Since your feet are physically closer to the black hole, they will
feel a stronger gravitation pull towards it than your head will. Worse than
that, your arms, by virtue of the fact that they’re not at the centre of your
body, will be attracted in a slightly different (vector) direction than your
head is.This will cause parts of the body toward the
edges to be brought inwards. The net result is not only an elongation of the
body overall, but also a thinning out (or compression) in the middle. Hence,
your body or any other object, such as Earth, will start to resemble spaghetti
long before it hits the centre of the black hole.The exact point at which these forces become
too much to bear will depend critically on the mass of a black hole. For an
'ordinary' black hole that has been produced by the collapse of a high mass
star, this could be several hundred kilometres away from the event horizon – the point beyond which no information can escape
a black hole.
Yet for a supermassive
black hole, such as the one thought to
reside at the centre of our galaxy, an object could readily sink below the
event horizon before becoming spaghetti, at a distance of many tens of
thousands of kilometres from its centre. For a distant observer outside the
event horizon of the black hole, it would appear that we progressively slow
down and then fade away over time.
Bad news for Earth
What would happen, hypothetically, if a black
hole appeared out of nowhere next to Earth? The same gravitational effects that
produced spaghettification would start to take effect here. The edge of Earth
closest to the black hole would feel a much stronger force than the far side.
As such, the doom of the entire planet would be at hand. We would be pulled
apart.Equally, we might not even notice if a truly
supermassive black hole swallowed us below its event horizon as everything
would appear as it once was, at least for a small period of time. In this case,
it could be some time before disaster struck. But don’t lose too much sleep,
we’d have to be unfortunate to 'hit' a black hole in the first place – and we
might live on
holographically after the crunch
anyway.
Mind the radiation
Interestingly, black holes are not necessarily
black. Quasars – objects at the hearts of distant galaxies powered by black
holes – are supremely bright. They can readily
outshine the rest of their host galaxy combined. Such radiation is generated when the black hole is
feasting on new material. To be clear: this material is still outside the event
horizon which is why we can still see it.
Below the event horizon is where nothing, not
even light, can escape. As all the matter piles up from the feast, it will
glow. It is this glow that is seen when observers look at quasars.But this is a problem for anything orbiting (or
near) a black hole, as it is very hot indeed. Long before we would be
spaghettified, the sheer power of this radiation would fry us.