![]() Hawking said in 2016: “If you feel you are in a black hole, don’t give up. The physicist reckoned there’s a chance you could make your way out of one, though you may end up in a different dimension. The late Professor Stephen Hawking had his own ideas about life inside a black hole. Travel to another universe and erase your past Stephen Hawking Getty Images So the upshot is, you’ll get to see the entire history of that spot in the universe simultaneously – from the Big Bang all the way into the distant future.” “And then if you look backward, you’ll be able to see everything that will ever fall into the black hole behind you. ![]() So if you’re able to look forward toward the black hole, you see every object that has fallen into it in the past. “Furthermore, as you fall, there are things that have been falling in front of you that have experienced an even greater ‘time dilation’ than you have. So the faster you move through space, the slower you move through time,” Charles Liu, an astrophysicist at the American Museum of Natural History, told Live Science. “First of all, you approach the speed of light as you fall into the black hole. The bending of spacetime could have other weird effects.Īs you’re sucked into a black hole, time would bend in front of and behind you, allowing you to “see” into the past and future. You will experience a few decades, like any human being.” “Sure, billions of years would pass on the Earth in the meantime, but you will not experience billions of years. “You can still expect a normal human lifespan as measured by your own watch and calendar. It is about what others see,” explained physicist Viktor Toth. “Whenever you think about time dilation in relativity theory, keep in mind that the theory is not about you. Your lengthy life would only seem stretched to someone on Earth, while to you it would still feel like a normal lifespan. If you reach this spot without being torn apart, you could become immortal – well, almost. Time is said to freeze at the edge of a black hole, due to its extreme forces bending the very fabric of space and time. Instead, getting caught in one of these beauties could help you cheat death altogether. That’s led some experts to ponder whether larger black holes would spaghettify you at all, as the forces aren’t strong enough to pull you apart. ![]() The bigger a black hole is, the smaller its gravitational pull. ![]() “Not only have you been ripped in half – you’ve been extruded through the fabric of space and time like toothpaste through a tube.” Everything of you that ever was gets funneled to the black hole’s center. “At that moment, your body would snap into two segments. ![]() You stay whole until the stretching force exceeds the molecular bonds of your body’s flesh,” according to Neil deGrasse Tyson. “As you get closer and closer, the force of gravity grows astronomically. You eventually become a stream of subatomic particles that swirl into the black hole like water down a plug. Scientists affectionately call this process “spaghettification.” If you got too close, these gargantuan forces would pull your body apart.Īs you got closer, the difference in gravity between your head and your feet would stretch you out like a piece of chewing gum. Scientists have dozens of theories and we’ve put together some of the wackiest below.īlack holes are blobs of unbelievably dense matter with a gravitational pull millions of times greater than the force we feel on Earth. Life inside a black hole would be far from pretty, bestowing a fate more strange and gruesome than almost anything experts can imagine.įollowing this week’s release of the first photo of a black hole, people the world over have been pondering exactly what would happen if you fell into the ominous ring. NASA calms fears after 'strange blue lights' frighten Scandinaviansįirst, your insides are strung out like hot mozzarella, before you’re yanked into an all-encompassing darkness that swallows you whole. Scientists discover type of matter that could rewrite the textbooks Storm chaser captures rarely-seen upside down lightningĬlimate change could melt most of the ice in the Alps by 2100 ![]()
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