Tiny Shiny Black Holes

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  • čas přidán 6. 06. 2024
  • Black holes are one of the most bizarre and terrifying results from general relativity - a singularity of infinite density from which even light cannot escape. Black holes fascinate us and this has led some to wonder if the could even be used as a power source. Micro black holes, that is black holes much lighter than a star, could be one of way of doing this. Today we explore the possibilities of a micro black hole and exactly how it might be possible to turn them into power banks.
    Written and Presented by Prof. David Kipping. All planet images/videos shown are artistic impressions and not real photographs, except for the reconstructed image of Messier 87*
    You can now support our research program and the Cool Worlds Lab at Columbia University: www.coolworldslab.com/support
    References:
    ► Hawking, Stephen (1974), "Black hole explosions?", Nature, 248, 30: www.nature.com/articles/248030a0
    ► Carter, Brandon (1971), "Axisymmetric Black Hole Has Only Two Degrees of Freedom", Physics Review Letters, 26, 331: journals.aps.org/prl/abstract...
    ► Newman, E. T., Couch, E., Chinnapared, K., Exton, A., Prakash, A., Torrence, R. (1965), "Metric of a Rotating, Charged Mass", Journal of Mathematical Physics, 6, 918: aip.scitation.org/doi/10.1063...
    ► Crane, L. & Westmoreland, S. (2009), "Are Black Hole Starships Possible", arXiv e-prints 0908.1803: arxiv.org/abs/0908.1803
    ► Kipping, David (2018), "The Halo Drive: Fuel-free relativistic propulsion of large masses via recycled boomerang photons", Journal of the British Interplanetary Society, 71, 458: arxiv.org/abs/1903.03423
    Video materials and graphics used:
    ► ESO animations credit to ESO and Herbert Zodet: www.eso.org/public/videos/eso...
    ► Sun turning into a black hole credit to ESA/Hubble/M. Kornmesser: • What If The Sun Became...
    ► Black hole animation credit to CGI 3D Animated Short: "INTRA" by Thomas Vanz: • CGI 3D Animated Short:...
    ► Black hole merger animation by LIGO Lab Caltech/MIT/Simulating eXtreme Spacetimes: • Two Black Holes Merge ...
    ► Falling into a black hole animation by Ziri Younsi: • Falling into a black h...
    ► Hawking radiation animation credit to BBC.
    ► Dark matter web simulation by Jinrong Xie: • Cosmic Web: What the u...
    ► Core collapse supernova simulation by Sean Couch: • Petascale Simulation o...
    Music used, in chronological order:
    ► Cylinder Seven (chriszabriskie.com/cylinders/) by Chris Zabriskie (chriszabriskie.com/); licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution license (creativecommons.org/licenses/...)
    ► Cylinder Eight (chriszabriskie.com/cylinders/) by Chris Zabriskie (chriszabriskie.com/); licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution license (creativecommons.org/licenses/...)
    ► Cylinder Four (chriszabriskie.com/cylinders/) by Chris Zabriskie (chriszabriskie.com/); licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution license (creativecommons.org/licenses/...)
    ► Music from Neptune Flux, "Stories About the World That Once Was" by Chris Zabriskie (chriszabriskie.com/neptuneflux/); licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution license (creativecommons.org/licenses/...)
    ► Music from Halo Drive, "Fusion" by Indive (indive.bandcamp.com); licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported (indive.bandcamp.com/album/hal...)
    ► Music from Neptune Flux, "We Were Never Meant To Live Here" by Chris Zabriskie (chriszabriskie.com/neptuneflux/); licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution license (creativecommons.org/licenses/...)
    And also...
    ► Columbia University Department of Astronomy: www.astro.columbia.edu
    ► Cool Worlds Lab website: coolworlds.astro.columbia.edu
    Latest Cool Worlds Videos ► bit.ly/NewCoolWorlds
    Cool Worlds Research ► bit.ly/CoolWorldsResearch
    Cool Worlds Long Form Videos ► bit.ly/CoolWorldsEssays
    Guest Videos ► bit.ly/CoolWorldsGuests
    Q&A Videos ► bit.ly/CoolWorldsQA
    Tabby's Star ► bit.ly/TabbysStar
    Science of TV/Film ► bit.ly/ScienceMovies
    SUBSCRIBE to the channel bit.ly/CoolWorldsSubscribe
    THANKS FOR WATCHING!!
    #TinyShinyBlackHoles #MicroBlackHoles #CoolWorlds
  • Věda a technologie

Komentáře • 493

  • @CoolWorldsLab
    @CoolWorldsLab  Před 4 lety +128

    Happy New Year to everyone! Shot this one whilst out of town so thought we could go for a hike together! And yes I need a gimbal...

    • @mcxzsa
      @mcxzsa Před 4 lety +3

      Happy new year dear friends

    • @leemurray5125
      @leemurray5125 Před 4 lety +2

      Happy New year prof. :)

    • @alflud
      @alflud Před 4 lety +1

      Come at this from a different perspective and I believe black holes will yield all the secrets of gravity - what it is about the warping of space-time that causes mass to have gravity in the first place - just .... ... try to imagine a process by which these things could be produced _without_ the need for gravity in the first place, without stars and without any mass around whatsoever. I think we're stuck looking down the wrong path and that collapsing stars is not what gives rise to black holes at all, that something else does, that black holes in fact do not have any mass whatsoever and never did, that there's something else about them which creates their awesome ability to warp space-time. It just looks to us like they have mass because that's the only thing we know of that affects space-time in such a way. I don't think many of us even consider the possibility any more that we're wrong about black holes, we've become convinced we know what's going on but in reality we still barely know anything about them - really only that they warp space-tie like nothing else we know.

    • @3Slippers
      @3Slippers Před 4 lety

      ..and a drone? :] Thanks for sharing such a satisfyingly intriguing and sensical 20 minutes.

    • @darthjarjar5309
      @darthjarjar5309 Před 4 lety

      Really wish we get to see more videos uploaded in 2020. Happy NY.

  • @matthewgrotke1442
    @matthewgrotke1442 Před 4 lety +7

    David, good video. _Another_ problem with creating a kugelblitz with even a solar collecting dyson swarm is: once the BH is formed at the Planck mass, you cannot feed it and make it more massive. It's radius (event horizon) is 3.233×10^-35 meters. That is orders of magnitude smaller than the size of a proton, which is 1.5346983×10^-18 meters in radius. It could never grow. It could fall to the center of the earth and would statistically never encounter another atom. And that's only if Hawking was wrong and the thing _doesn't_ evaporate instantly.
    If it _does_ evaporate, you can't add any more mass or energy to get it above the Planck mass. You can't add energy by dropping matter into it either for because the radiation pressure would be like trying to push a golf ball into a firehose. You can't add mass from a Dyson swarm of lasers because it would likely radiate energy away faster than you can add more.
    And by the way, the LHC can only produce energies up to 14 TeV, which is 2.5×10^-23 kg (well below the Planck mass of 2.1764×10^-8 kg). Such a black hole, if even possible would be 3.707×10^-50 meters in radius. The size of that black hole compared to a proton, is analogous to a proton compared to the orbit of Pluto.

  • @nluvwapril
    @nluvwapril Před 4 lety +99

    i love your voice and your tone and your story telling it calms me

  • @GMahlerVerehrer
    @GMahlerVerehrer Před 4 lety +39

    These videos are the perfect synthesis of bold imagination and solid theoretical physics! Thanks so much, I wish all of you a happy new year!

  • @vipin4623
    @vipin4623 Před 4 lety +53

    This channel has provided me the best stuff in 2019....and what a way to end the year....thanks Professor Kipping.....

    • @qzbnyv
      @qzbnyv Před 2 lety

      2020 will surely be a great year for everyone. Happy new year!

  • @balwantpadaki6183
    @balwantpadaki6183 Před 2 lety +18

    I am shocked that this channel doesnt have a million+ subs! Such great story telling, and visualization. Hope that your influence spreads far.

    • @josephhausser3096
      @josephhausser3096 Před rokem

      Seriously, when I looked up this topic, I had to see if Coolworlds had done anything on it yet. I just don't trust all the other channels. This guy is a real scientist, and not just a sensationalist CZcamsr

    • @daMillenialTrucker
      @daMillenialTrucker Před rokem

      ​@@josephhausser3096 who else are you talking about? The other guys I watch that are big like him are all astrophysists and cosmologist lol

  • @fsmoura
    @fsmoura Před 4 lety +37

    17:13 A thousand megawatts!? That's almost 1.21 jigawatts! Great Scott!

    • @medexamtoolsdotcom
      @medexamtoolsdotcom Před 4 lety +4

      The planck energy is actually about 2 gigajoules, so that's enough to power 2 flux capacitors for a second each, and how long do you even need to power it for anyway, a split second, right?

    • @leehauser2809
      @leehauser2809 Před 4 lety +3

      Winfield ScottEdit
      John William De Forest, in Miss Ravenel's Conversion from Secession to Loyalty(1867) reports the exclamation as referring to Winfield Scott, general‑in‑chief of the U.S. Army from 1841 to 1861:
      I follow General Scott. No Virginian need be ashamed to follow old Fuss and Feathers. We used to swear by him in the army. Great Scott! the fellows said.[4]

    • @philipmelton7182
      @philipmelton7182 Před 4 lety +1

      Fire comment

    • @timg8380
      @timg8380 Před 3 lety

      At 88 miles per hour!!!

  • @jariziel
    @jariziel Před 4 lety +12

    Your are one of the coolest scientists I have seen! And somehow I have the feeling that you have amazing personality as well! :) Keep exploring, never stop this is journey worth lining. Happy new, year!!!

  • @glennrestvedt7143
    @glennrestvedt7143 Před 4 lety +7

    MIND BLOWN once again. Great way to end the year kind Sir thank you!!!!!

  • @jeffreyneedle2191
    @jeffreyneedle2191 Před 4 lety +4

    Outstanding video. Most coherent explanation of Hawking radiation that I have heard. Keep posting

  • @CodeLeeCarter
    @CodeLeeCarter Před 4 lety +15

    The Long awaited Cool Worlds, return with another awesome instalment into the Universe.

  • @TheExoplanetsChannel
    @TheExoplanetsChannel Před 4 lety +61

    Great video to finish 2019. I hope 2020 will be a good year for habitable exoplanet discoveries. Happy new year!

    • @nicosmind3
      @nicosmind3 Před 4 lety +3

      Feliz año nuevo

    • @CoolWorldsLab
      @CoolWorldsLab  Před 4 lety +8

      Thanks so much! Yes lots to look forward to

    • @NoJusticeNoPeace
      @NoJusticeNoPeace Před 4 lety +11

      Soooo... how's 2020 been treating you? Not a comment which aged well...

    • @southpakrules
      @southpakrules Před 3 lety

      @@NoJusticeNoPeace Best year of my life.

    • @jjt1881
      @jjt1881 Před 3 lety +2

      Well, it wasn't. 2020 has been a nightmare.

  • @nathanielgirma8265
    @nathanielgirma8265 Před rokem

    Easily my new favourite channel. Love you m8!

  • @GINNERMAN
    @GINNERMAN Před 3 lety +1

    Wow. Absolutely incredible video! Thought provoking and very insightful, great job.

  • @Lukionest
    @Lukionest Před 4 lety +3

    I had a small black hole that I put on my mantle, just like you mentioned at the end of your video. It was a nice conversation piece for a short while. Unfortunately it and the mantle seem to have fallen into the center of the Earth. I'm trying to get my money back from the manufacturer, but they seem to have disappeared from the surface of the Earth as well. This seems to be a constant problem with companies like this, according to the reviews I've read online.

  • @leokirilenko951
    @leokirilenko951 Před 4 lety

    Thank you David. Your work is beautiful

  • @MrKlootzakje
    @MrKlootzakje Před 4 lety

    Great to watch. Thanks Cool Worlds. Iam a big fan of your story's. I wish you and everyone a good newyear.

  • @Tearstank
    @Tearstank Před 3 lety

    Please keep these videos comming, this is just great. I always learn something new and already regret that I didnt continue in research after finishing my physics degree.

  • @a.citizen7668
    @a.citizen7668 Před 4 lety

    Happy New Year Professor. I look forward to your 2020 Cool Worlds Lab videos and hearing more about your Halo Drive propulsion system. We really need innovative minds like yours that think outside the box. That's the only way we can reach those exoplanets with those Techno & Bio Signatures!

  • @millermcswain
    @millermcswain Před 4 lety

    Awesome production quality! I hope 2020 looks like this 👍.

  • @maxbasem6482
    @maxbasem6482 Před 4 lety

    I am addicted to your channel
    Cannot wait for your new ones

  • @n1k32h
    @n1k32h Před 4 lety +2

    Loved your video of going beyond the no return to your galaxy and beyond into the blackness without no stars or galaxies! It put me right to sleep like a baby!

  • @saeedeev2042
    @saeedeev2042 Před 4 lety

    Awesome as always

  • @TheGunmanChannel
    @TheGunmanChannel Před 4 lety +9

    Happy new year, looking forward to the next year of content from your channel.

  • @Fam2014Ch
    @Fam2014Ch Před 4 lety

    Again... fascinating !!! Thanks and happy new year !!! Salute YOU !!!

  • @Electronic424
    @Electronic424 Před 4 lety +8

    My favorite astrophysics CZcamsr

  • @scusethegoose4077
    @scusethegoose4077 Před 4 lety +1

    Happy New Year David and the squad
    from Australia

  • @daltonhall2816
    @daltonhall2816 Před 4 lety +4

    The mantle piece idea mentioned at the end, now that’s a conversation starter

  • @arvindkumar6027
    @arvindkumar6027 Před 4 lety +1

    Great video !!!
    Happy new year !

  • @bikashthapa7316
    @bikashthapa7316 Před 4 lety +2

    love the way you explain

  • @FEBRIZIOtv
    @FEBRIZIOtv Před 4 lety +9

    I’ve been breeding all day, and I CANNOT hatch a shiny black hole...

  • @whoo3470
    @whoo3470 Před 4 lety +5

    Hi David, I love your videos, research and explanations. I’m a huge fan. Thank you!
    Regarding tiny black holes... with the mass of a mountain... 600,000,000 tons... let’s call it Yakob - given that Freddy had an event horizon of about a micron and was massive enough to produce gravitational tidal forces that would rip us apart at a few hundred meters - I imagine that Yakob would have an event horizon with radius much smaller than an angstrom and produce those tidal gravity effects at tiny distances too... so wouldn’t Yakob have a very hard time growing even if it fell into the center of the earth? It could only trap atoms that came super close to it. Right?
    So I imagine Yakob falling to the center of the earth virtually unimpeded, accelerating as it reached the center, then decelerating as it came close to the surface of the opposite side and back again... forming an orbit inside of the earth! We would only be able to detect it as a periodic perturbation of the local gravitational field every time it came back to our part of the planet’s surface... well that and the gamma rays that it would emit. Did I understand that correctly?
    Thank you.

  • @xxheathenxx6402
    @xxheathenxx6402 Před 4 lety

    Thank you, that was really great!!

  • @TheLoneStreamer
    @TheLoneStreamer Před 4 lety +11

    Love the outdoor talk format!

  • @GeorgeStar
    @GeorgeStar Před 4 lety +7

    Thank you for doing one of the few intelligent, non-patronizing science channels.

  • @lofej
    @lofej Před 4 lety

    Love your videos. Thanks.

  • @stephenmneedham
    @stephenmneedham Před 3 lety

    I don't know who's crazier, Prof David for making these videos or us for watching them.

  • @thesotovs
    @thesotovs Před 3 lety

    Hi! Every video from the author is interesting and informative!! Thanks a lot)

  • @khenricx
    @khenricx Před 4 lety +2

    Hey, it's very nice to see you cover that topic, and I had more or less the same ideas a while back, and I always had some questions, remarks relative to how to manage a micro blackhole, so why not share them with you all ? English is not my native language so sorry for silly mistakes.
    Okay so let's assume we manage to create such a blackhole with the power-output of a classical powerplant.
    First, a remark... If we use energy to create a blackhole to extract energy from its hawking radiation, we don't have an energy source, just a very, very long term battery. Unless we find a way to feed matter to the blackhole, to compensate the mass lost to evaporation. In that case the blackhole become a very useful powersource that can extract 100% of the energy equivalent of the mass we put in. (assuming that hawking radiations are only made of photons, which I know is wrong below a certain mass)
    The problem is... How to feed such a blackhole ? after all, a blackhole like that would have a diameter of 14 femtometers, which is, if i'm not wrong, of the same order of magnitude of a proton, or even an electron. So first, you'll need to be very precise when feeding the blackhole, and second, how would it even react ? Let's push it to the limit and imagine I have a blackhole smaller than an electron... If I try to feed it an electron, wouldn't the electron just... Pass right through it or something ? It's hard to figure out how a particule would interact (if it even can) with an object that small, and I suppose you need to use quantum physics to answer that question... A blackhole like that would be very hard to feed, and also to charge electrically.
    Also a cool idea for exploiting a non charged blackhole would be to have it in orbit around the Earth, enclosed in a space station used as a powerplant that would beam the energy back to Earth. The station would ajust it's orbit around the blackhole to compensate the outside forces acting on the station, to keep the station and the blackhole still relative to one another.
    Again sorry for my broken english. hope that message fit nice with the video !

  • @LEDewey_MD
    @LEDewey_MD Před 4 lety +7

    A new Cool Worlds video! Thank goodness, I was going through serious Cool Worlds withdrawal symptoms....!!

    • @CoolWorldsLab
      @CoolWorldsLab  Před 4 lety +3

      Haha don’t worry we’re not going anywhere! It’s hard balancing my time between research and making videos!

    • @glendownton
      @glendownton Před 4 lety

      In the meantime there's always Isaac Arthur!

  • @lifestylewagon5307
    @lifestylewagon5307 Před 4 lety +4

    You are awesome and finally , someone who speaks slowly =|)

  • @genelowe7209
    @genelowe7209 Před 4 lety

    Another beautifully delivered presentation. Though it may not be exactly your field of speciality, I'd love to hear you talk about fusion power one of these days!!

  • @asii_k
    @asii_k Před 4 lety +5

    Always look forward to your videos! There’s something about the style and tone I love

  • @paddygora8413
    @paddygora8413 Před rokem

    Thoroughly enjoy your thinking. It's challenging but I can literally fwel my horizons expanding. Good things to you.

  • @deleterium
    @deleterium Před 4 lety +19

    The only safe place to create a black hole is in earth's orbit. Imagine a problem in cooling system and the whole planet is destroyed!

    • @CoolWorldsLab
      @CoolWorldsLab  Před 4 lety +16

      Ye it seems outrageously risky to have near to anything you care about

    • @NoHandleToSpeakOf
      @NoHandleToSpeakOf Před 4 lety +1

      Yeah but cooling things in a vacuum space is a whole another can of worms.

    • @Tore_Lund
      @Tore_Lund Před 4 lety +4

      @@NoHandleToSpeakOf You don't need to cool it in space, as you won't need any structure around to levitate it. However to harvest power from it, you need to be close, because of the inverse square law. depending of material strength, you might be able to get as close as 4 times closer than 50km mentioned in this video. However that will still be quite far away to get any serious power, so you need a dyson sphere structure, that can absorb hard Gamma rays, and some avionics to keep the sphere around the black hole centered. let me try this with numbers: 12.5km radius sphere has an area of 1963.5 sq km. 1Gw spread out over such an area is 509000 Watt per sqkM! around 1/5'th the intensity of solar radiation on the surface of Earth! So really not worth the hassle. I can't really think of a structure that can withstand the spaghettification to be close enough to get any meaningful power densities out of a small black hole??? Tungsten has a very high melting point but the same density as Gold, so really not something to build anything strong of in a sharp gravitational gradient. You could place a spinning ring shaped reflector around it, that would counter the pull, but a rotating reflector will have a small surface, and to be much closer, would still experience radial spaghettification between the inside and the outside of the ring, so break apart, even if the rotational speed was matched to the gravitational pull

    • @NoHandleToSpeakOf
      @NoHandleToSpeakOf Před 4 lety +2

      @@Tore_Lund That is a great insight into practical energy gathering of a black hole. Thanks!

    • @Tore_Lund
      @Tore_Lund Před 4 lety +2

      @@NoHandleToSpeakOf I think it will be considered the stupidest idea ever, even for an alien highly advanced civilization to try this, compared to the small amount of practical energy , it is possible to get out of this!

  • @Bitchslapper316
    @Bitchslapper316 Před 4 lety

    Great video as always. Out of curiosity is there any theoretical way to harness the power of the black holes gravity?
    Happy new year Dr. kipping!

  • @taddybear4244
    @taddybear4244 Před 2 lety +1

    This man strikes a peculiar balance between relaxing communication of science and the existential horror in science. I can fall asleep listening to his simultaneously relaxing communication and deeply distressing explanations.

  • @TheMighty_T
    @TheMighty_T Před 4 lety +1

    "Or put it on your mantle-piece?" lolz :)
    I really was happy you added the 'reality' at the end, in terms of just how much energy we are talking about to make a tiny black hole, just so it is clear just how far from being 'ready' we currently are.
    I would hope we are using your Halo Drive to get us around our local part of the galaxy long before we try to create our own personal sized black holes to put in our back pockets! I think we are far from being smart enough (collectively) to have such a potential source of destruction at our finger tips ;)

  • @fahim113
    @fahim113 Před 4 lety +3

    Wonderfully presented as always, although after watching it 3 times I'm still trying to get my head round the scales and numbers! Maybe am isn't the best time to try!

  • @derekkluck5651
    @derekkluck5651 Před 3 lety

    Cool worlds is by far the best space channel out there. 🚀🚀🚀

  • @LuisTheGentleman
    @LuisTheGentleman Před 4 lety +1

    I love this CZcams channel bro have good 2020 wish ur dreams about space drive comes true

  • @jamesrussell7760
    @jamesrussell7760 Před 4 lety

    Black holes have the same sort of fascination as Tyrannosaurus rex, the biggest badass imaginable.
    Happy New Year to all, and especially to you, Prof. Kipping.

  • @MrEnjoivolcom1
    @MrEnjoivolcom1 Před 4 lety

    Thank you! My favorite are black holes!

  • @francepiffa
    @francepiffa Před 4 lety +1

    Finally limitless smartphone batteries 🙃
    Amazing video as usual!

  • @fredrequadt6448
    @fredrequadt6448 Před 4 lety +1

    First off i just came across your channel and its fantastic, second the like to dislike ratio of your videos gives me hope for humanity, third my main point, i didn't read all 383 comments so im not sure if someone suggested it but could you use two micro black holes that have been some how been polarized much like how magnets are, to create wormholes even though they have been disproven more or less. I guess im asking could you use these micro black holes like a wormhole train that can on forwards or backwards in set points

  • @hylianknight3
    @hylianknight3 Před 3 lety

    Not only do i enjoy the content of your videos, i also spent over an hour trying to fall to sleep last night. Turned on this video and tried to focus on listening to it and fell to sleep in just a few mins 🤣

  • @kinguq4510791
    @kinguq4510791 Před 4 lety

    Brilliant and captivating as usual. Any ideas about how we might detect another civilization using this as a technology for space travel or power generation or something else?

  • @tonyhunt768
    @tonyhunt768 Před 4 lety

    Excellent thoughts! I was thinking of harnessing the power of holes in spaghetti hoops, but the tomato sauce keeps gumming up the works. Anyway, Happy New Year, and thanks for the food for thought (better than Xmas dinner)!

  • @cliffdexter38
    @cliffdexter38 Před 4 lety

    Dude.... Yours are the very best physics videos. Thanks a 1x10^5

  • @ciapul12
    @ciapul12 Před 3 lety

    Amazing episode and I'm a fan of your Channel. Well presented ideas 💡 although I must say, sometimes you blow my mind and I have to take a break to contemplate 😉

  • @coaking
    @coaking Před 4 lety

    ❤️❤️❤️ Happy new year to you too. Hope we will get more awesome videos in 2020.

  • @geemanbmw
    @geemanbmw Před 4 lety

    I'm sure whenever the day comes that humanity starts building Planck sized blackholes hazard pay will be in the union contract lol. Great video as always and Happy New Year!

  • @steverosenberg5096
    @steverosenberg5096 Před 4 lety

    Impressive. The manner of which you present makes everything feel intuitive. As an almost 50-year-old, I would have loved to have been taught by you as a teacher in Science. Might have actually learned a lot, instead of "that's what the book says" type teacher.
    As long as you are capable, please keep posting these videos - maybe it's not too late for me to learn something! ;-)
    Thank you Professor - you and all the folks at Cool Worlds are just what this world needs!

  • @pascalpianoSan
    @pascalpianoSan Před 4 lety

    thank you from France for all your videos which give me a lot of thoughts, and keep calm in front of the corona virus... has one ever thought of a corona black hole ?

  • @RufusJacson
    @RufusJacson Před 3 lety

    Just one of the best!
    Prof. David Kipping: "...an interstellar propulsion system that I devised -The Halo Drive...I'm also working on a way to use the Halo Drive as a way to use it as an in-situ power station without propulsion..."
    Whereas I've spent 3 weeks working on what the best hinges are to replace the ones on my wardrobe and thought I had life goals...😳

  • @gyromurphy
    @gyromurphy Před 3 lety

    This channel is disgustingly underrated.

  • @ozdergekko
    @ozdergekko Před 4 lety

    Thank you, have a happy and successful 2020, and never stop dreaming!
    gx from Vienna

  • @stevec7923
    @stevec7923 Před 4 lety +9

    Great video. I think there's a problem with the electrically charged tungsten sphere trapping the electrically charged black hole. I believe such a sphere has zero electrical field within the sphere. Thus, in van de Graff generators, electrons within the spherical ball on top actually migrate out to the surface of the sphere, they don't collect in the center.
    Still, it should be possible, in theory, to suspend the black hole in an electric field between two charged plates. The intensity of the field would need to be adjusted constantly to ensure the black hole stays midway between the plates. The darned thing, though, would preferentially attract charged particles to become electrically neutral.
    Really, the only good/safe way to keep the black hole from falling to the center of the earth is to form it in orbit. Preferably a distant solar orbit.

    • @CoolWorldsLab
      @CoolWorldsLab  Před 4 lety +7

      Yes great point! I tried to illustrate this with the white break in the sphere diagram, it’s actually two hemispherical plates that surround the BH, because of it was one sphere then it would be a unipotential ball.

    • @nursemark447
      @nursemark447 Před 4 lety +3

      @@CoolWorldsLabyeah, that's what I was thinking.

    • @scifirealism5943
      @scifirealism5943 Před 4 lety +1

      @@CoolWorldsLab If you could manipulate negative energy, could you surround the black hole with a ring of negative energy that would create a bubble of negatively curved space?(like a negative energy cosmic string)
      This would shield the black hole from the Earth's gravity.

    • @ObjectsInMotion
      @ObjectsInMotion Před 2 lety

      @@scifirealism5943 Negative energy leads to paradoxes, it cannot exist.

  • @prototropo
    @prototropo Před 3 lety

    So compelling-in an alarming way. I just today learned about Reva Williams, who first worked out the Penrose Process-if I understand it-the loss of angular momentum by Black Holes, not so different from the mechanism that permits Hawking radiation? I wonder if that energy could somehow be mechanically “geared” into use.

  • @nathanwashor89
    @nathanwashor89 Před 4 lety

    If I had a small black hole... I'd stick it where the sun don't shine. Lol. A little physics humor there! Nice video.

  • @antaresscorpio6478
    @antaresscorpio6478 Před 3 lety +1

    Hello and congrats!
    I am a huge fan of "how universe works" stuff, and your videos, are by far the best explained I ever saw.
    But I have a question.
    The black holes have a limited mass. So why there should be an infinite density? I understand that we cannot see the black hole itself, and we cannot calculate the density...but in my opinion... there has no reason why it must have infinite density or to be all concentrated in one point. It may be an even more exotic mater than quarks, something that didn't respect our math or physics.

  • @Yesica1993
    @Yesica1993 Před 4 lety +1

    The idea of creating a black hole had never entered my mind. (And then the end was depressing, as it seems it's not possible.)
    But now I'm intrigued. Does anyone know of any good sci fi movies or books that deal with this idea? Honestly, I'd never thought or heard of this idea before, not even in fiction!

  • @imranashique4353
    @imranashique4353 Před 4 lety +1

    Love you Professor Kipping, listening to you always makes me feel immortal. Keep up your good work. Merry Christmas.

  • @leophoenixmusic
    @leophoenixmusic Před 4 lety

    Just wanna thank Becky for pointing me to your channel, wish I found it earlier!

  • @jerryrollf5997
    @jerryrollf5997 Před 4 lety

    Do you have any opinions on the Schwarzschild Proton model?

  • @mharrisona
    @mharrisona Před 4 lety

    Totally putting that micro black hole on my desk

  • @tonyspagnoli8875
    @tonyspagnoli8875 Před 4 lety

    Very interesting

  • @hectorbacchus
    @hectorbacchus Před 4 lety

    Great video! You discussed power and size scenarios that I always wondered about for black holes! 😊

  • @stahl402
    @stahl402 Před 3 lety

    I like very much this channel. Intended for superior intellects.

  • @ryd0rd1e
    @ryd0rd1e Před 4 lety

    Is it possible to buy a poster with these pictures of black holes. Specifically, the ones in this video

  • @AdamBrackney
    @AdamBrackney Před 4 lety +3

    Your videos are great! Quick suggestion, get a stabilized gimbal for this type of video, while you're walking around the video is shaking like crazy and it's extremely distracting.

    • @CoolWorldsLab
      @CoolWorldsLab  Před 4 lety +5

      Yup I agree! This was a video shot without much gear with me so just had use what I had!

    • @AdamBrackney
      @AdamBrackney Před 4 lety +4

      @@CoolWorldsLab It was still fantastic, thanks for making this kind of content!

    • @mehridin
      @mehridin Před 4 lety

      To you maybe, but it wasn't "extremely" distracting to me. I thought it was creative and comfortable to watch. It plays on the brain's tendency to think creatively when walking, even if on the screen.

    • @mehridin
      @mehridin Před 4 lety

      But I must say, of course, attempting to balance this little black hole "somehow" seems rather insane.

  • @johnforensicman6179
    @johnforensicman6179 Před 3 lety +1

    Fanny Craddock! I just saw Fanny Craddock! Fanny Craddock baking a black hole, wow. (1960's BBC)

  • @TheLoneStreamer
    @TheLoneStreamer Před 4 lety +2

    You guys are growing so fast, can’t wait for what 2020 is gonna look like!

  • @fasteddie31003
    @fasteddie31003 Před 4 lety

    Hey where do you get your amazing outro music?

  • @r-pupz7032
    @r-pupz7032 Před 3 lety +1

    The scariest story I read as a child was about an enterprising kid who manufactured a black hole that proceeded consume everything in the vicinity, slowly then faster & faster. I can't remember what happened in the end but it gave me nightmares for years!

  • @kingcrabbrc
    @kingcrabbrc Před 4 lety +4

    Black holes are the rock stars of the universe.

  • @jjt1881
    @jjt1881 Před 3 lety

    I don't think anyone would try creating a micro black hole, after what you said. Freddie looks terrifying enough.

  • @LaurenMiddleton28
    @LaurenMiddleton28 Před 4 lety +2

    This Scientist is not only unbelievably Smart he is Also unbelievably good looking.. Extremely rare in the world of Astronomers.. I love smart cute men! There SO rare..

  • @John.0z
    @John.0z Před 4 lety +1

    Thank you for the explanation.
    I had wondered what would happen if a small black hole was generated on the surface of the earth. I imagined it progressing quite differently, and now I understand all the ways in which I was wrong. That's what happens when you are not a physicist and foolishly attempt to understand the strange world of singularities. :-)

  • @3er24t4g1
    @3er24t4g1 Před 4 lety

    I wonder if in the future, micro black holes will be used as hools for etching planets, the same way we use drill bits today

  • @bitegoatie
    @bitegoatie Před 4 lety

    Hawking radiation is one idea of how to square the existence of black holes with quantum mechanics. As you say in another context, this is an entirely theoretical phenomenon. No one has observed Hawking radiation, and it is unlikely to be observed by humans anytime soon, even if it turns out to exist. Until such evidence appears, I'll remain skeptical about Hawking radiation being more than mathematical duct tape covering a hole in the leaky hull of an incomplete physics.
    Of course, you discuss more immediate problems for anyone looking to manufacture small black holes for fun and profit. A dose of reality on that topic was overdue on CZcams, so thanks for providing it. You could have gone further elaborating uncomfortable truths about living near black holes - even tiny ones - but you have at least given overexcited futurists a taste of the formidable obstacles to using black holes as engineering shortcuts.
    Thanks for sharing your walk. This video reminds me I could use a walk myself.

  • @palfers1
    @palfers1 Před 4 lety

    I took Crane & Westmoreland's idea for a black hole space drive and extended it by staggering the masses of several BHs. This works well as an enhanced space drive. I needed a nonlinear optimiser to get the best set of masses, since an analytic solution seemed impossible.

  • @jozjonlin3170
    @jozjonlin3170 Před 4 lety

    When Batygen and Brown announced their observations indicating a possible 9th planet, it struck me then that it would be interesting if this mass turned out to be a small black hole. There's no indication it is, but it would most definitely be interesting.

  • @LEDewey_MD
    @LEDewey_MD Před 4 lety +2

    Love this elaborate "thought experiment" concerning small black holes!

    • @SolarShado
      @SolarShado Před 4 lety

      I highly recommend the black hole episodes on Isaac Arthur's channel then (and the channel in general TBH).

  • @krumito3d
    @krumito3d Před 4 lety

    It is one of those ideas that are amazing in theory, but very hard to pull off in practice. All that I'm regretting is not being alive when it happens given the time this might take to fully realize and optimize

  • @el7021
    @el7021 Před 4 lety

    I vaguely remember Cixin Lui writing about this in Deaths End

  • @pled8395
    @pled8395 Před 4 lety

    Quality content once again.I'd put these tiny tungsten balls in orbit though, before we overlook something and get a runaway Freddie

  • @Dark78Sabre
    @Dark78Sabre Před 4 lety

    You can also shine light not directly at a black hole but at an angle to the black hole. Because black holes have spin, you can steal some of the gravitational spin to accelerate your light photon to add energy to it. You can send another light photon to harvest more and siphon off the excess for your own use.

  • @ellenachavez6492
    @ellenachavez6492 Před 4 lety

    happy New year

  • @medexamtoolsdotcom
    @medexamtoolsdotcom Před 4 lety

    It's easy to calculate how long black holes last and figure out their temperatures, because a black hole with the Planck Mass decays in the Planck Time and has a temperature of the Planck Temperature, and the decay time increases with the cube of its mass and their temperature decreases inversely in proportion to their mass. So you can calculate pretty easily the thermodynamic temperature of a black hole with the mass of the moon and how long it lasts for instance.