High, autistic, I rlly like space, m space sounds
this was originally meant to be a physics blog but i find myself posting more about biology related stuff - excuse my inner plant nerd but i like physics too, so:
*cough cough* SPAGHETTIFICATION! a phenomenon where you can become stretched like spaghetti if you enter a black hole.
it’s also known as the tidal effect, and is generally used to describe the vertical stretching or compression of an object into a noodle-like shape in an extremely strong and non homogenous gravitational field.
by non homogenous i just mean that the gravitational field is not the same everywhere, but consists of irregularities. (it is non-uniform)
anyways, a very common example of this is when we’re talking black holes- if i threw you into a black hole, or you happened to fall into one, the gravitational field on one end of your body would be stronger than the other.
this gravitational gradient would mean as you fell, getting closer and closer to the event horizon, your body would become extremely stretched until it would become very very compressed. like spaghetti. but don’t worry, by that time you’d already be dead.
this only happens because of the sheer strength of a black hole’s gravitational field. it’s not really because of its size - but its density. there are lots of objects close or even larger than some black holes, the mass of a black hole is so concentrated in a small area that it absolutely maximises its gravitational pull, which is why not even light can escape it.
this is just one of the relativistic effects of gravity differences, and there are so many cooler ones! for example, pancake detonation.
so stay away from black holes, or you could become stretched like spaghetti or flattened like a pancake.
Stepping out on the front porch. Astronaut David Scott opens the hatch to check out the view during Apollo 9, March 1969. In this pic taken by fellow astronaut Rusty Schweickart, ‘Gumdrop’, the Command Service Module is docked with ‘Spider’, the Lunar Module. A9 was the 1st flight incorporating all Apollo spacecraft components. The 10 day mission was the 2nd launched by a Saturn V rocket.
Think we’re alone? Were this close of finding life! As a matter of fact, we’re currently studying possible life right now and think we may have finally found it
1200 Megapixel
Geminid Meteors over Chile
Credits: Yuri Beletsky, Carnegie, Las Campanas Observatory, TWAN
Adhesive color plates for Science Services’ Science Program series booklet Man in Space. Nelson Doubleday - 1965.
Aurora behind the starliner
Galaxy NGC 5584
The brilliant, blue glow of young stars traces the graceful spiral arms of galaxy NGC 5584. Thin, dark dust lanes appear to be flowing from the yellowish core, where older stars reside.
Approaching the Agena target vehicle, earth horizon in background, Gemini VIII.