Take an Epic Journey to Ultra Massive Black Hole TON 618

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  • Опубликовано: 21 сен 2023
  • Come with me on an epic journey through time and space, from Earth to one of the largest objects in the universe, an ultra-massive black hole! In this experience, you will fly faster than the speed of light out of the Milky Way galaxy, through intergalactic space to TON 618, an enormous black hole. Here you will observe the utter chaos surrounding it before falling into the unknown!
    If you enjoyed this epic flythrough, remember to tap the like button and subscribe!
    This incredible animation was created using Space Engine Pro.
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Комментарии • 476

  • @V101SPACE
    @V101SPACE  8 месяцев назад +147

    Hi everyone, Rolo the space dog & I are away on a family holiday. So I haven’t been able make a full length video this week, but in the mean time I have taken us on a trip to one of the largest objects in the universe. I hope you enjoy the journey and I’ll be back with more epic space content soon. V

    • @Gaian-Commander
      @Gaian-Commander 8 месяцев назад +4

      Hope you are doing well and stay safe!
      I absolutely loved this video because I'm astonished by how mysterious Ton 618 is and the fact that the light we are seeing is over 18 billion years old, essentially, we are looking back in time.
      Not even our own solar system was formed when the light left in the form of the quasar from the black hole!

    • @altamashkhateeb6824
      @altamashkhateeb6824 8 месяцев назад +3

      Enjoy your family holiday 😊

    • @TheFatalErrorUniverse
      @TheFatalErrorUniverse 8 месяцев назад +1

      Enjoy man!

    • @TheFatalErrorUniverse
      @TheFatalErrorUniverse 8 месяцев назад +2

      Idk how you barely have any comments here but good luck on your trip if your ever seeing this!

    • @TheFatalErrorUniverse
      @TheFatalErrorUniverse 8 месяцев назад +1

      @@One-of-a-kind1_ADRE because not everyone can be a scientist

  • @B_DEADYY
    @B_DEADYY 8 месяцев назад +662

    Its funny cz were looking at what ton 618 looked like 18.2 billion years ago,who knows how big it is now

    • @VisitMelb
      @VisitMelb 6 месяцев назад +32

      It does not exist anymore for sure and it is the biggest found so far within 18.2 B light yrs. Not the biggest ever found.

    • @alphacentauri9377
      @alphacentauri9377 6 месяцев назад +183

      @@VisitMelb18.2 billion years is barely enough time for a black hole to die though. It takes a stupid amount of time for black holes to die.

    • @leehenry5764
      @leehenry5764 5 месяцев назад +95

      The Universe isn't even that old

    • @VisitMelb
      @VisitMelb 5 месяцев назад +28

      @@leehenry5764 so u were born before the universe ?

    • @tomihuoviala
      @tomihuoviala 5 месяцев назад +78

      @@VisitMelb you obviously don’t know much about black holes. Biggest ones will remain till eternity when everything else is gone.

  • @deanboardman2342
    @deanboardman2342 2 месяца назад +54

    18 billion light years, one light year is 5.6 trillion miles, yes one. These numbers are incomprehensible to imagine that distance. Its mind blowing.

    • @Sals-Clips
      @Sals-Clips Месяц назад +5

      Yeah, it makes me wonder how astronomers even know where these holes are. How is it possible and we can’t even see it?

    • @arunbhattacharya5510
      @arunbhattacharya5510 Месяц назад

      True the same question haunts me. I mean I know light travels from there and it is captured here but how is light wave traveling so distant and not dismissing​@@Sals-Clips

    • @Ace-ns9co
      @Ace-ns9co 18 дней назад +1

      You mean dissipating?​@arunbhattacharya5510

    • @josephpacchetti5997
      @josephpacchetti5997 6 дней назад

      With all due respect a light year Is 5.87 x 10 to the 1-2-th power, I'ts often rounded off to 6- Trillion Miles.

  • @poeticsilence047
    @poeticsilence047 8 месяцев назад +381

    As big as that black hole is, is exactly how hard it is to wrap your head around the absurdity of those numbers of how massive it is.

    • @QuackQuackQuack
      @QuackQuackQuack 8 месяцев назад +37

      Look at an apple ~10cm in your hand and compare it to the Earth you're standing on. That is Earths size compared to Ton618.

    • @QuackQuackQuack
      @QuackQuackQuack 7 месяцев назад

      @@Punisher_92 Maybe I'm wrong, don't know, I just did a basic ratio math.
      Wiki says ~390 billion km
      (ton618) 389,800,000,000km / (earth) 6,371km
      = 61,183,487.6785434 ratio
      (earth) 6,371km / (ratio) 61,183,487.6785434
      = 1.04129402257568e-4 km
      = 0.000104129402257568 km
      = 10.4129402257568 cm

    • @euphoriaggaminghd
      @euphoriaggaminghd 6 месяцев назад +11

      ​@@Punisher_92I think you're confused, ton 618 is extremely large, however it has the diameter of 200 billion miles, it is not even a light year large but it is a light week long. Again, 330,000 light year black hole is unimaginably huge. There is no way we wouldn't be affected by it

    • @Punisher_92
      @Punisher_92 6 месяцев назад +5

      @@euphoriaggaminghd "You are right, I made a mistake. My apologies :)

    • @ilovemybharat12
      @ilovemybharat12 5 месяцев назад

      Human is still confused with Lil blackholes. There s a lot to see my kid move on from B.H.

  • @mattzegarelli2753
    @mattzegarelli2753 7 месяцев назад +69

    Just the put into perspective how vast space truly is, TON 618 is brighter than 140 trillion sun's, yet it isn't even a glimmer of light deep off into space. Truly fascinating. 😳

  • @Gaian-Commander
    @Gaian-Commander 8 месяцев назад +126

    Not much can scare me, but this thing can.
    It amazes me that a black hole can be this large! You have to wonder how it formed let alone how it got to its size.

    • @genevieve396
      @genevieve396 8 месяцев назад +1

      This is why we have to cherish and preserve and defend this world of ours.Because,if we loose it,you know what kind of horrendous evils we ll be facing!

    • @GabrielleTollerson
      @GabrielleTollerson 8 месяцев назад +3

      nothing ever gave me serious existential crisis more than that thing has! It's scary!

    • @Isaac-gh5ku
      @Isaac-gh5ku 6 месяцев назад +3

      Maybe it was born during the time of the first-generation stars, Population III. Pop III stars were so massive that some of them become neutron stars and some of them become black holes. Over time as the universe ages, black holes fused with one another, increasing their size.
      Ton 618 might be the oldest black hole in the universe, and quite possibly absorb many, many black holes during our universe's lifetime.

    • @rebelusa6585
      @rebelusa6585 4 месяца назад +1

      You are correct, ton 618 are so big and scary, the devil will tremble with fear when see ton 618.

    • @NikhilMathew122333
      @NikhilMathew122333 4 месяца назад

      Kim kardashians ass

  • @elleni-41
    @elleni-41 8 месяцев назад +101

    Ur brain can't even comprehend how big this black hole is... imagine how big the universe is, infinite..u know ur my favorite space channel Rob..💙💙

    • @Gaian-Commander
      @Gaian-Commander 8 месяцев назад +2

      If it can engulf all of the plantets up to the Kuiper belt, that tells you how big it is

    • @Sai_Nuggetx
      @Sai_Nuggetx 8 месяцев назад +2

      I agree Elleni!

    • @elleni-41
      @elleni-41 8 месяцев назад +2

      @@Gaian-Commander .. exactly..the kuiper belt is out to Pluto..

    • @starfighter1043
      @starfighter1043 9 дней назад +1

      I dont think its infinite tho. Space is expanding. Theres always a start and an end to everything. I feel like its so massive tho we cant describe how far away it is or even how to calculate it so we say "infinite". If its expanding always then there has to be like a starting point and an ending point right. Like you cant go past where space hasnt expanded yet so there is a spot in space or time where you couldnt go. If space has traveled only 500km you couldnt go 600. I dont think its infinite but i dont know if theres an end or how to tell where it is 🤷‍♂️

  • @josephpacchetti5997
    @josephpacchetti5997 8 месяцев назад +27

    About 4 years ago, I discovered this beast and was humbled, It's truly amazing, Thank you Rob. V Rocks! 📡👊😎

  • @louise_rose
    @louise_rose 8 месяцев назад +109

    One of the strangest (or most counterintuitive) things about black holes is that the more mass they contain, the lower the density and the larger the size/radius of the object. If earth were compressed to a black hole it would have a radius of around 8.77 mm. The sun has a mass around 1/3 million times bigger than earth, so one would imagine that the radius of the corresponding black hole would be around 150 times bigger, about 1.30 m (per the formula for the volume of a sphere), In reality, a black hole with he mass of the sun would have a radius of 3 km! And this discrepancy keeps on expanding the bigger and more mass-ive the black hole is.

    • @Paul-jb1yw
      @Paul-jb1yw 8 месяцев назад +3

      Well put

    • @louise_rose
      @louise_rose 8 месяцев назад +6

      @@Paul-jb1yw At a certain point, the interior of a huge, supermassive black hole would have less density per m3 than the sun.

    • @Paul-jb1yw
      @Paul-jb1yw 8 месяцев назад +1

      @@louise_rose I agree

    • @antoochibbo1355
      @antoochibbo1355 8 месяцев назад +8

      I think its because the sun is already so much denser compared to the earth. I mean if you can compress the earth to a similar density with the sun that descrepancy would go away, or puff up the sun to a similar density with Earth.... what I am saying is that space objects don't really reflect their mass through their volume, i mean Saturn could technically float on water yet it's so big.

    • @louise_rose
      @louise_rose 8 месяцев назад +5

      @@antoochibbo1355 No, that's not what it's about. The sun is generally *less* dense than Earth - hard rock and metals are far more dense than ignited gas and hydrogen plasma - and the size (diameter) of a black hole also depends on the radius of the body before it was compressed, not just on its mass.

  • @berjaboy
    @berjaboy 8 месяцев назад +77

    From what I understand, once crossing it's event horizon, and traveling at the speed of light, it would take about a week to reach its singularity. That's how massive it is.

    • @GabrielleTollerson
      @GabrielleTollerson 8 месяцев назад +3

      woah!!

    • @jasonlandry420
      @jasonlandry420 8 месяцев назад +15

      Once crossing its event horizon -space and time itself is broken.
      A wk is the same as an infinity lol

    • @berjaboy
      @berjaboy 8 месяцев назад +23

      @@jasonlandry420 From what I understand, space and time switch places, and the singularity becomes the future. At the singularity, all physics break down and becomes illogical, like dividing by zero. We know the singularity issue is wrong, we just don't have the proper math or physics to explain it yet.

    • @RichWeigel
      @RichWeigel 8 месяцев назад +12

      @@jasonlandry420 well my question would be if we somehow survived the event horizon would we stop aging.

    • @ashokkumar-zw8vi
      @ashokkumar-zw8vi 7 месяцев назад

      ​@@RichWeigel​1st of all,you wont even make it to the event horizon. The accretion disk will destroy you to smethereens way before that. And you will be blinded by the insane brightness of the quasar way,way,way before the accretion disk. Imagine how bright the damn thing is,if we can see it so brightly still even from billions of light years away.
      But okay,lets say you survived all that and you managed to somehow cross the event horizon. Okay,now it doesnt matter if you stop aging or not,the tidal force of the blackhole will spagettify you on the way to the singularity. You will be in atomic form,a stream of particles when you reach the singularity. Time does stop at the singularity. Heck space and time switch places there. Everything becomes weird. It wont make sense. Currently we dont have any knowledge of what will actually happen at the singularity or what is there exactly. A singularity is a concept. Not a real thing. At least is not proven yet because we can not see inside a black hole.

  • @peachybee220
    @peachybee220 8 месяцев назад +11

    It is scary that we are seeing the black hole 10 billion years ago, imagine how big is it now...

  • @MorganSeveret
    @MorganSeveret 8 месяцев назад +27

    Fascinating.
    If I could choose how end my life, I would choose to be dropped in the black hole to know what's inside...

    • @Gaian-Commander
      @Gaian-Commander 8 месяцев назад +8

      Same, but unfortunately, we would be stretched like taffy long before we reached the heart of the black hole.
      And that's only if we could survive the journey there.

    • @MorganSeveret
      @MorganSeveret 8 месяцев назад +6

      @@Gaian-Commander Yeah, shame...
      That's why I have imagination... and Interstellar movie.😉

    • @brunolima7402
      @brunolima7402 8 месяцев назад +7

      you would be dead way before you cross the event horizon, even in a space suit.

    • @urbanpunk5042
      @urbanpunk5042 5 месяцев назад +1

      Hell in there...That's what you'll see there. This is the place about which any religions and teachings that existed earlier and today were spoken, written and warned. To avoid this TERRIBLE fate as much as possible, once the consciousness is there (what is called the soul). It's as simple and scary as ever, dude.

    • @oniakuma5429
      @oniakuma5429 Месяц назад +1

      But u will die way b4 u try to get close from a long distance❗

  • @richowen6380
    @richowen6380 8 месяцев назад +22

    i think the honey badger could travel inside the black hole with a GoPro and give us some real time footage cuz he don’t care lol

  • @KalyanPuvvada
    @KalyanPuvvada 8 месяцев назад +11

    The way you described about this, literally I was near that black hole. Too good man. Space is just unbelievable and mind blowing

  • @garyfilmer382
    @garyfilmer382 8 месяцев назад +14

    Fantastic video! Thank you. That quasar in Ton 618 is equivalent in brightness to 140 trillion suns! It’s simply beyond human comprehension!

  • @AhmedYT7
    @AhmedYT7 8 месяцев назад +19

    Amazing work from V101 never disappoints keep up the good work

  • @ellisonhamilton3322
    @ellisonhamilton3322 8 месяцев назад +7

    Hope you and Rolo have a great holiday. Thanks. 🇺🇸❤🇬🇧

  • @1SeanBond
    @1SeanBond 8 месяцев назад +8

    Sure do appreciate you & the quality content you create as I know you put alot of work into every post! Ty Cheers to continued success friend. ✌🏼💫

  • @ramachandra776
    @ramachandra776 8 месяцев назад +7

    Great journey into TON 618 (or Tonantzintla 618 ) thanks .

  • @altamashkhateeb6824
    @altamashkhateeb6824 8 месяцев назад +4

    Enjoy your holidays with the family😊 and thank you for still posting ❤

  • @darkfox2076
    @darkfox2076 8 месяцев назад +12

    Amazing visuals and great presentation? Got to be a V101 video. Great stuff really enjoyed this one ❤

  • @Collector3476
    @Collector3476 8 месяцев назад +33

    Even though it's animation, TON 618 must be very terrifying for anyone who dares to travel that distance from Earth. I wonder what TON 618 will look like if we travelled to the galaxy where it resides.

    • @antoochibbo1355
      @antoochibbo1355 8 месяцев назад +7

      It would be too bright to see anything

    • @NitroRonin23
      @NitroRonin23 6 месяцев назад +2

      No one would be alive to see it. Any living person or creature would die long before even making it a quarter of the way there.

    • @obscurity3027
      @obscurity3027 6 месяцев назад

      @@NitroRonin23 True...that is, unless wormhole/portal (Einstein/Rosen bridges) are discovered so we could arrive there instantly.

    • @Collector3476
      @Collector3476 5 месяцев назад

      ​@@antoochibbo1355true, TON 618 is a real monster and it's magnetic field must be very powerful

    • @Rafco92
      @Rafco92 2 месяца назад

      he's using a 'game' called space engine which is pretty much the most accurate and realistic space simulator rn

  • @colonelkurtz2269
    @colonelkurtz2269 8 месяцев назад +8

    Albert Einstein made contributions to physics. His brother Frank made a monster. 😅
    V101❤

  • @siamakalaei1148
    @siamakalaei1148 8 месяцев назад +5

    Your videos are far beyond documentaries. They are unique as we stay tuned for new videos. Best wishes ❤❤❤

  • @yosef_ii
    @yosef_ii 7 месяцев назад +5

    I'M IN LOVE with this freaking cool channel

    • @V101SPACE
      @V101SPACE  7 месяцев назад +1

      Glad you're enjoying my videos! :) Rob

    • @yosef_ii
      @yosef_ii 6 месяцев назад

      @@V101SPACE ^⁠_⁠^

  • @makavelirizla
    @makavelirizla 8 месяцев назад +3

    Love your videos. Loved your outer planets series. they was some amazing journeys! 10/10

  • @strangebones2000
    @strangebones2000 3 месяца назад +1

    Space engine is such a versatile program for content like this

  • @iamsuccessfulkid
    @iamsuccessfulkid 8 месяцев назад +4

    Thank you, 👏excellent presentation as always👍

  • @roaringmoon88
    @roaringmoon88 8 месяцев назад +5

    Great video! Black holes fascinate me a lot. Now I hope you will talk us about the Phoenix A cluster

  • @freddyjosereginomontalvo4667
    @freddyjosereginomontalvo4667 8 месяцев назад +4

    Excellent video as always man.
    🌍

  • @npcmaster3304
    @npcmaster3304 8 месяцев назад +7

    awesome stuff as usual

  • @dazardron55
    @dazardron55 Месяц назад

    Realising how vast things are out there can send you mad 😮

  • @samanthabusch750
    @samanthabusch750 8 месяцев назад +2

    this video is freaking AWESOME!!!!

  • @392_Tish
    @392_Tish 15 дней назад

    Crazy how this is one of the biggest black holes ever discovered yet phoenix a is billions of masses bigger than Ton is terrifying yet fascinating at the same time

  • @LeydenAigg
    @LeydenAigg 2 месяца назад +1

    I like the crackling sound effect as the camera (I know it's just animation) sweeps past the radiation plume of the quasar. "This is your body frying."

  • @kristenmgr
    @kristenmgr 8 месяцев назад +3

    Best cameraman

  • @ahmedibrahimhassanhajiali
    @ahmedibrahimhassanhajiali 8 месяцев назад +4

    Amazing. Very very interesting.

  • @swishersweet3756
    @swishersweet3756 8 месяцев назад +1

    This is just one thing that we can see, imagine what's still out there we can't see (or haven't seen yet).

  • @larryc835
    @larryc835 8 месяцев назад +3

    Magnificent exposition.💯

  • @rudevalve
    @rudevalve 8 месяцев назад +3

    Certified Platinum!!!!!

  • @SpaceWithSam
    @SpaceWithSam 8 месяцев назад +4

    Awesome video as usual.

  • @randommovies2382
    @randommovies2382 4 месяца назад +5

    real hero is cameraman who went there and got this amazing footage

  • @paulcateiii
    @paulcateiii 8 месяцев назад +3

    hope you have a great holiday Rob

  • @joemomma3695
    @joemomma3695 8 месяцев назад +5

    I wonder if it is making another universe with all that material.

  • @rogeriooliveira3980
    @rogeriooliveira3980 4 месяца назад

    That's so amazing and terrifying at the same time...😮

  • @zidan40o0
    @zidan40o0 8 месяцев назад +5

    can you make a video on how such a blackhole was discovered and how the numbers were measured? it is fascinating how we can theorize about objects that are super far away in space. while we barely discovered our own ocean.

    • @protodg6567
      @protodg6567 5 месяцев назад +1

      It’s easier to study space than it is an ocean. Ocean is dark and cold, Space is quite the opposite.

  • @raul1899
    @raul1899 4 дня назад

    You should know that what we see of Ton-618 happened more than 18-20 billion years ago. It's either extremely huge right now, or it no longer exists as we see it right now.
    Whatever images we see of Ton-618 right now, are more than 4-5 times older than the solar system itself. The solar system was not even close to existence when what we see now of Ton-618 happened where Ton-618 was.

  • @PoorMansChemist
    @PoorMansChemist 7 месяцев назад

    Great channel man. Subscribed.

  • @ganeskmr
    @ganeskmr 5 месяцев назад

    Best channel thank u very much.

  • @kingkongkungkwang
    @kingkongkungkwang Месяц назад

    At some point, numbers just become nothing more than a formality, and everything could be described as "fkng huge" because we just can't grasp something of such a magnitude. Just fkng huge, brothers. Fkng huge.

  • @KwikSkope
    @KwikSkope 3 месяца назад +1

    Shoutout to the camera man for filming this

  • @Hidden.715
    @Hidden.715 Месяц назад

    BRO LEARNED EPIC

  • @Yashjod-jw3yx
    @Yashjod-jw3yx 3 месяца назад +1

    However, if we were to imagine a hypothetical scenario where a person somehow found themselves falling into Ton 618, the outcome would be catastrophic. The gravitational forces near such a massive and energetic object would be incomprehensibly strong. As the person approached the quasar, they would be subjected to extreme tidal forces, stretching and tearing them apart in a process known as spaghettification. This fact is so i cant speak
    Additionally, the intense radiation emitted by Ton 618 would be lethal, instantly incinerating anything within its vicinity. Essentially, falling into Ton 618 would result in the person being torn apart and vaporized long before they could even get close to the quasar itself.

  • @crapendejs839
    @crapendejs839 5 месяцев назад +1

    so 18.2 bilion years from Earth is the distance, because of the expansion of the universe!

  • @DustinPlatt
    @DustinPlatt 5 месяцев назад +2

    So most of all black holes are created by super massive stars, right? How massive did that star have to be to become that massive? Or is it just because TON also starting eating up every black hole near by?
    Also, Phoenix-A is the largest black hole we've discovered thus far.
    Pheonix-A is 100 billion solar masses, whereas, Ton-618 is 66 billion solar masses. It's just unimaginable.
    Space freaks me out.

  • @jamesabbott5242
    @jamesabbott5242 8 месяцев назад +3

    Awesome Video 😄😄

  • @Roadkiller85
    @Roadkiller85 3 месяца назад

    Ah, thank you, that is the daily dose of feeling maximally insignificant I just needed. Keeps me humble.

  • @valiantone77
    @valiantone77 4 месяца назад +1

    i cant imagine what 140 trillion times the suns brightness would look like, i guess we would all be instantly blind if it was in our galaxy

  • @naveenraj2008eee
    @naveenraj2008eee 8 месяцев назад

    Hi
    This is new information.
    Thanks.

  • @anthonydolio8118
    @anthonydolio8118 5 месяцев назад

    Cool!

  • @catalin-constantin4197
    @catalin-constantin4197 8 месяцев назад +1

    Awesome video 👍

  • @huskytzu7709
    @huskytzu7709 3 месяца назад

    Black holes are the sigmas of the universe

  • @sheku_thakur2005
    @sheku_thakur2005 Месяц назад

    Ton 618 is the largest black hole (size) , but phoenix A is super massive black hole ,.. and Sagittarius A is the black hole which is located in center of our galaxy milky way ❤❤❤❤

  • @amgpower213
    @amgpower213 3 месяца назад

    It's amazing to think that even if you were being pulled into it at the speed of light it's so big it would take 6 - 7 hours to reach the singularity

  • @denismuthoga
    @denismuthoga 8 месяцев назад +1

    Great video

  • @DakotaBeh90
    @DakotaBeh90 3 месяца назад

    This black hole is mind blowing… Consider God who made the vast universe that this spec of a black hole inhabits. Talk about mind blowing!

  • @haroldfloyd5518
    @haroldfloyd5518 3 месяца назад

    I think most of these megastars got their start in the very early universe, when there was lots of “fuel” within easy reach, and that such stars could not form today, as gravity’s effective power only extends so far, fortunately for most galaxies, which would otherwise be consumed. TON618 has to have consumed several large galaxies over billions of years, but now “food” is hard to come by, as spacetime itself is being stretched ever thinner and sparser.

  • @soumyadeepsaha7510
    @soumyadeepsaha7510 5 месяцев назад +1

    Next video on Phoenix A plz

  • @justgarry5485
    @justgarry5485 Месяц назад

    And to think this behemoth along with the rest of the universe was packed into a singularity smaller in size than the Planck length

  • @gogharderbro2597
    @gogharderbro2597 5 месяцев назад +1

    Who doesnt know -
    Game he used: Space Engine
    Memmory: 50-90 GB i dont remember.

  • @army2rich441
    @army2rich441 6 месяцев назад +1

    O good I’m not the only one looking this shit up 😂

  • @Foodi7218
    @Foodi7218 5 месяцев назад

    Great👍

  • @larrylambert1220
    @larrylambert1220 5 месяцев назад

    Blake hole at the center of the Milky Wat, "Am I a joke to you?"

  • @Altus-Excelsior
    @Altus-Excelsior 13 дней назад

    Imagine one day when we’re able to reach the outermost limits of our own galaxy.

  • @FaadDMustapah
    @FaadDMustapah 29 дней назад

    TON 618= THE MOST POWERFUL THING IN THE ENTIRE A UNIVERSE

  • @OpticProPredator21
    @OpticProPredator21 Месяц назад

    It’s wild due to our universe is either in a black hole or we are at the event horizon of one.

  • @igorsurz
    @igorsurz 3 месяца назад

    A small correction: it is not that big because it is eating everything surrouding it but because it is for sure, a huge primordial black hole.

  • @franciscooctavius5957
    @franciscooctavius5957 7 месяцев назад +2

    I hope someday in the distant future someone figures out how and why these scary as hell things exist.

    • @bjornragnarsson8692
      @bjornragnarsson8692 5 месяцев назад +3

      Accidentally erased my first reply about supermassive ones. We’re not positive how they form with great confidence, but recently several proposals that resolve this phenomenon appear self-consistent, logical, and favorable based on current evidence.
      As for how 3 < ~ 50 solar mass ones, how and why they exist is better established. There is too much matter-energy-density + momentum convection in a region of spacetime that the gravitational binding energy, or an easier way to think about it - the gravitational binding mass equivalent - which would be the extra mass equivalent you would have by separating all of the material out in space and expanding the potential gravitational pull on another body in that case (Earth would be roughly on the order of ~ 1,000,000,000,000 tons heavier for example) - this additional “negative” mass-energy equivalent equals and quite possibly “exceeds” (in a sense) the actual positive mass-energy equivalent.
      Because there is nothing to counter the energy converted to gravitational potential energy at this point (since gravity is uniquely an “attractive” phenomena), you end up with an essentially “runaway drain” of spacetime itself - whirling and around faster than light itself. Because after all, the one thing that can exceed the speed of any massless particle is spacetime itself. In a way, through in-falling coordinate transformations, it (spacetime) can be viewed as a superfluid (a fluid with no viscosity that whirls faster than the local speed of sound (light in this case) and holds captive any in-falling fluid excitations (matter/energy) that fall beyond a Cauchy horizon).
      If you look at every black hole to date, they all carry angular momentum. The so called “singularity problem” is actually resolved when transforming to the proper Kerr Spacetime metric for a rotating black hole. It just so happens a singularity never forms almost as if the vacuum energy-density, or vacuum fluctuations (zero-point energy) prevent the total collapse of spacetime itself (by combination of the Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle and the Pauli Exclusion Principle for interacting vacuum fermion fluctuations), forming a central vortex of “hollow” zero-point vacuum energy density.

  • @LordVittaminn
    @LordVittaminn 3 месяца назад

    "I fear no man. But that...thing. It scares me."

  • @tron1007r
    @tron1007r 2 месяца назад

    I realized something the other day watching Superman Returns:
    Be patient with me and follow my thought.
    Any object that has an escape velocity of greater than light speed (c) is a black hole.
    That means every stellar mass black hole would be another universe.
    That also means since our universe would have an escape velocity of >c then we must live inside a black hole.
    From our perspective since we are in one, we can see other ones that are smaller than the one we live in.
    I thought of this thinking and calculating how much energy Superman would to have had to use to get the island larger than rhode island full of krytonite to an escape velocity of earth, which is approximately 25,000 mph.
    Your thoughts?

  • @NurseRekka
    @NurseRekka 3 месяца назад

    I feel that if they find even bigger ones that the biggest should be named 'Kirby'.

  • @larrylong9059
    @larrylong9059 4 месяца назад

    141 trillion times the size of the sun ? Just not able to wrap my head around that.

  • @Eazy-ERyder
    @Eazy-ERyder 8 месяцев назад

    Would like to visit it one day

  • @Beckwourth
    @Beckwourth 5 месяцев назад

    You forgot to mention that it's so massive that it can hold our entire universe/galaxy 15x over and still have space to fill the empty void. So really it's not a weird thing to hear when someone says what if we live inside a gigantic black hole and that the center is Sagittarius A's singularity?

  • @user-dy6qt8ug1i
    @user-dy6qt8ug1i Месяц назад

    ผมกลับมา อีกครั้งกับ แหล่งกำเนิดอุบัติกาล ที่ต้อง จัดระเบียบ โลกมนุษย์ ต้องมั่นคง ธำรงค์รักษาไว้ซึ่ง คุณธรรม สัจธรรม ความยุติธรรม

  • @markruhl1
    @markruhl1 Месяц назад

    Currently travelling this fast was only possible 1400 years ago with a Buraq 🙂

  • @Rhekluse
    @Rhekluse 3 месяца назад

    Imagine if its gravity was so great it was pulling us towards it like the journey in the video.

  • @anthonydefex777
    @anthonydefex777 8 месяцев назад

    OMG!

  • @leemday5731
    @leemday5731 5 месяцев назад

    Every advanced civilization out they must have this tagged as off limits.

  • @soumyadiptamajumder8795
    @soumyadiptamajumder8795 14 дней назад

    perfect horror movie!!!

  • @sandydennylives1392
    @sandydennylives1392 7 месяцев назад

    16 billion light years? That's the way uh huh I like it. Here's to another 16 billion, in our lovely expanding universe.

  • @darren7125
    @darren7125 8 месяцев назад +5

    Damn I love this channel, so much horror and wonder.

  • @reezevlog
    @reezevlog Месяц назад

    what if the whole universe are inside a black hole..? that blackness of space we see out there, is actually a whole Black Hole.

  • @garylawrence7547
    @garylawrence7547 28 дней назад

    Thank God it’s 18 billion LY away.

  • @asliddinroziyev2438
    @asliddinroziyev2438 4 месяца назад

    Big bang: 13.8 billion
    Ton 618: 18.2 billion

  • @mattmcgovern6591
    @mattmcgovern6591 6 месяцев назад +1

    TON 618 is still a toddler size compared to Phoenix A

  • @Malbeefance
    @Malbeefance 5 месяцев назад

    "A journey that begins where everything ends."

  • @thomas_the_cat
    @thomas_the_cat 5 месяцев назад +1

    a moment of silence for the cameraman who got caught on the event horizon 🙏

  • @abubakarshehu5335
    @abubakarshehu5335 7 месяцев назад

    am really want to see this oneday

  • @fubaralakbar6800
    @fubaralakbar6800 8 месяцев назад

    "No words! No words!" --Ellie Arroway, "Contact"