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Black Hole's Evil Twin - Gravastars Explained | by Kurzgesagt – In a Nutshell
Peace, JW
Gravastars could change how we think about the universe. These cosmic objects solve black holes’ biggest problems without breaking physics. From their ultra-thin shell to their energy-filled core, gravastars are both elegant and terrifying. But what exactly are they?
Black Hole's Evil Twin - Gravastars Explained
Seeing gravitational waves erode the Black Hole counterparts
Seeing gravitational waves erode the Black Hole counterparts
The Black Hole: Seeing gravitational waves erode the black hole’s counterparts. The universe contains not only black hole, but also many external objects, such as Gravastars and Boson stars.
Black Hole:
In September 2015, LIGO detectors in the United States for the first time made history by directly identifying two black holes and merging them. Since then, LIGOs, joined by other detectors around…
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New research reveals a possible mechanism allowing “black stars” and “gravastars” to exist
When giant stars die, they don’t just fade away. Instead they collapse in on themselves, leaving behind a compressed stellar remnant, usually a city-sized, superdense ball of neutrons appropriately called a neutron star. In extreme cases, however, most theorists believe an expiring giant star will form a black hole—a pointlike “singularity” with effectively infinite density and a gravitational field so powerful that not even light, the fastest thing in the universe, can escape once falling in. Now a new study is reinvigorating an alternative idea that objects with names such as “black stars” or “gravastars” might exist midway between neutron stars and black holes. If real, these exotic stellar corpses should appear nearly identical to black holes save in one key way—they could not irretrievably swallow light.