Question:

What Does An Event Horizon Look Like?

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give me all the juicy details.

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7 ANSWERS


  1. sounds like a trap... who are you asking miss cleo?


  2. it looks like a big black t**d. but if you stare at it too long the light from your eyes might get sucked in and then you wont see anything at all.

    Plus, it might suck all the light out of your body, and you will melt.

    Does that help?

  3. It depends how close you are to it.

    If you are at a safe distant it will appear as a slightly distorted area of space that is all black.

    If you are being pulled into the Black Hole that is causing it it will appear as your entire life flashing before your eyes.

    ;)

  4. I think its where you stop seeing light coming out, so it's probably a dark band with objects becoming distorted as they approach. Then there's the movie Event Horizon- I was so scared out of my mind I couldn't finish watching it.

  5. wikipedia:

    "Event horizon, in general relativity, is a general term for a boundary in spacetime, an area surrounding the black hole, beyond which events cannot affect an outside observer. Light emitted from inside the horizon can never reach the observer and anything that passes through the horizon from the observer's side is never seen again.

    More specific types of horizons include the related but distinct absolute and apparent horizons found around a black hole. Still other distinct notions include the Cauchy and Killing horizon; the photon spheres and ergospheres of the Reissner-Nordström solution; particle and cosmological horizons relevant to cosmology; and isolated and dynamical horizons important in current black hole research."

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Event_horiz...

  6. Like a hot womans ****. What jiuicy details were you expecting?

    Its nothing. Literaly

  7. Like absolutely nothing. It is called an "event horizon" for a reason. You can't see any events beyond it. Photons are physical events, so there are none beyond the event horizon, so you can see nothing.

    Wow... what a deep question that was.

    :-)

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