Biology, asked by anjumsolanki77, 9 months ago

What will happen if the earth gets sucked in a black hole

Answers

Answered by AngieCx
1

Answer:

Bad news for Earth-

The closer you get to the singularity the worse things get for you, but since you are small, and gravity follows an inverse square law, for the first 50 minutes or so, you dont have to worry so much about being spaghettified. Essentially, since youre moving so fast, by the time you felt the effect of gravity affecting one half of your body more than the other, youd be so close to the singularity and covering ground so quickly, that youd probably be dead a matter of seconds afterwards. You'd feel strange for a brief moment, as if one half of you were heavier, then youd feel like you were being ripped apart for a few seconds, and youd be right.

The Earth on the other hand, is much bigger than you, meaning it would suffer the effect of funneling gravity much sooner. Probably right from the time of passing the event horizon, maybe a few minutes before or after, the earth would begin to creak and stretch. Thousand mph winds would sandblast mountains flat, volcanos everywhere would erupt spectacularly, and impossibly epic earthquakes would literally reshape the planet on the continental scale in a matter of minutes. You most definitely wouldnt survive long enough to be spaghettified, as the earth would be a mostly molten egg shaped ball of magma less than 30 minutes after passing through the event horizon.

Summary:

Hypothetically, if a black hole appeared out of nowhere next to Earth the gravitational effects produces spaghettification(infer the meaning down) would start to take effect here. The edge of the Earth closest to the black hole would feel a much stronger force than the far side. As such, the doom of the entire planet would be at hand. We would be pulled apart.

Explanation:

Hope this helped.

Answered by divyakumarc219
1
A black hole is a region of spacetime where gravity is so strong that nothing—no particles or even electromagnetic radiation such as light—can escape from it. The theory of general relativity predicts that a sufficiently compact mass can deform spacetime to form a black hole.
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