properties of black holes:
The black-hole concept was developed by the
German astronomer Karl Schwarzschild in 1916 on the basis of
physicist Albert Einstein’s general theory of relativity. The
radius of the horizon of a Schwarzschild black hole depends only on the mass of
the body, being 2.95 km (1.83 mi) times the mass of the body in solar units (the
mass of the body divided by the mass of the Sun). If a body is electrically
charged or rotating, Schwarzschild’s results are modified. An “ergosphere” forms
outside the horizon, within which matter is forced to rotate with the black
hole; in principle, energy can be emitted from the ergosphere.
According to general relativity,
gravitation severely modifies space and time near a black hole. As
the horizon is approached from outside, time slows down relative to that of
distant observers, stopping completely on the horizon. Once a body has
contracted within its Schwarzschild radius, it would theoretically collapse to a
singularity—that is, a dimensionless object of infinite density.
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