NASA simulates black holes devouring stars of many sizes
NASA has simulated several tidal disruption events that occur when star venture too close to a black hole. The simulated stars are "one tenth to 10 times the Sun’s mass," according to NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center.
Credit: NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center
Видео NASA simulates black holes devouring stars of many sizes канала VideoFromSpace
Credit: NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center
Видео NASA simulates black holes devouring stars of many sizes канала VideoFromSpace
Показать
Комментарии отсутствуют
Информация о видео
Другие видео канала
Hubble's 'cosmic cobweb' image for Halloween features gravitational lensing in 4KCategory 4 Hurricane Helene makes landfall and barrels north in satellite time-lapse'Lonely' galaxy that 'pulled in' all its neighbors observed by Chandra X-ray ObservatoryPartial solar eclipse only seen in space - NASA spacecraft's viewNASA testing 'space lasers' for high-bandwidth communicationsNASA's SpaceX Crew-9 arrives in Florida ahead of launchSpaceX launches CRS-29 Cargo Dragon mission to space station, nails landing in FloridaNASA's SpaceX Crew-9 pre-launch: Crew walk out for Tesla ride to rocketRecord-breaking quaser's growth is equivalent to 'one Sun per day'Watch a massive sunspot grow in spacecraft time-lapseSpaceX launches 20 Starlink satellites from foggy Vandenberg, nails landingSpaceX test fires flight 6 Starship! See in real-time and super slow-moTake an Atlas V 'rocket cam' ride to space with Amazon's Project Kuiper satellitesSee the James Webb Space Telescope's view of a galaxy merger in stunning 4KDeparting sunspot delivers several strong flares in amazing time-lapseSpaceX rocket tracking camera captures glorious moon close-upWow! Sun unleashes massive plasma plume with strong flareWhy Reboot COSMOS? Neil deGrasse Tyson and Ann Druyan Have Good Reason | Exclusive VideoArtemis 1 Orion spacecraft from ground and space in amazing time-lapsesAtlas V Rocket Cam! Ride to space with GOES-T satelliteFalcon Heavy fairing's fiery re-entry is 'hottest' yet for SpaceX - Spectacular view!