I'm a retard so sorry if my question is a bit too stupid, but how come we don't see explosions around black holes? When things enter event horizon shouldn't they literally be split in half on their way in? Wouldn't that cause some big nasty explosions?
>>8287860
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quasar
We do see something like an 'explosion', but an object getting pulled in would simple be pulled in. Gas and dust clouds can be mostly pulled in while allowing some material to be ejected.
>>8287860
tfw kurisu is a biofag
>>8288016
but still does GTR and shit
>>8288016
she's cute so it's alright
>>8288016
Woah a qt in biology, I'm so fucking shocked
Fucking /a/ ruins another perfectly good board with their weeb shit baka
>>8290936
>/sci/
>perfectly good
pick one
>>8288006
are u a fucking nim wit? u don't see shit the gravity is so strong around the black hole that time literally freezes to the 'fearless' observer of this phenomenon.
>posts wiki link
>quack quack
http://www.strawpoll.me/11058970
>>8291147
/sci/'s official waifu has and always will be Kurisu!!!
>>8291153
ka tonk ka tonk
times have changed
>>8291155
sorry but no
>>8291948
>>8292485
no you two
>>8292517
STOP IT
>>8292964
never
>>8287860
The force of gravity from a black hole increases by the inverse square of distance like any other object in space. It doesn't go from zero to infinity as you cross the event horizon.
You probably wouldn't even notice crossing the event horizon other than a flash from the photon sphere and from that point on not being able to reply to any radio messages. You've got to get a lot closer than that for specification to occur.
>>8287860
Orbits of the main visible stars around Sag A* (supermassive black hole at center of Milky Way) 1995-2010
>pic A. Ghez, Keck Observatory, et al
>>8293383
Thanks