🌌 Astrophysics · General Relativity
📅 March 2026⏱ ~10 min read🟡 Intermediate

Black Holes

A black hole is a region of spacetime where gravity is so strong that nothing — not even light — can escape. They are not holes in space. They are objects: the most gravitationally extreme objects in the observable universe, and the places where general relativity breaks down.

1. How Black Holes Form

In a normal star, radiation pressure from nuclear fusion pushes outward, balancing the inward pull of gravity. Stars exist in this uneasy equilibrium for millions to billions of years.

When fuel runs out, the outward pressure vanishes. For stars roughly 8–20 solar masses, the iron core collapses in under a second. The collapse halts at nuclear density as the neutron star "bounces," launching a shockwave that destroys the outer star: a core-collapse supernova. What remains is a neutron star or, if the remnant core exceeds ~3 M☉ (the Tolman–Oppenheimer–Volkoff limit), a black hole.

Supermassive black holes (millions to billions of M☉) form from early-universe gas clouds and grow by accretion and galaxy mergers over cosmic time. Their formation is still an active research area.

2. The Schwarzschild Radius

Karl Schwarzschild found the first exact solution to Einstein's field equations in 1916 — just weeks after Einstein published general relativity. For any mass M, there is a critical radius below which light cannot escape:

Schwarzschild radius r_s = 2GM/c²

G = 6.674 × 10⁻¹¹ N·m²/kg²
c = 3 × 10⁸ m/s

Some examples:

~3 km
Sun (1 M☉)
~9 mm
Earth
~120 AU
M87* (6.5 × 10⁹ M☉)

The Sun is nowhere near becoming a black hole — it's 10 orders of magnitude too large for its mass, and it will die as a white dwarf.

3. Anatomy of a Black Hole

4. Orbits and the Photon Sphere

General relativity predicts that even light curves in a gravitational field. Near a black hole, the deflection is extreme. At exactly r = 1.5 r_s, a photon can circle the black hole indefinitely — but the orbit is unstable. A tiny perturbation sends it either spiralling in or flying out.

Orbital radii (Schwarzschild, non-rotating) Photon sphere: r_ph = 1.5 · r_s = 3GM/c²
ISCO (stable orbits start here): r_ISCO = 3 · r_s
Shadow diameter observed: ≈ 5.2 · r_s

The gravitational time dilation near a black hole is enormous. An observer far away sees a clock hovering just outside the event horizon tick infinitely slowly. From the infalling observer's perspective, they cross the horizon in finite proper time — they just can't tell anyone what they found inside.

5. Hawking Radiation

Stephen Hawking showed in 1974 that black holes are not entirely black. Quantum field theory in curved spacetime predicts that black holes emit thermal radiation with a temperature:

Hawking temperature T_H = ħc³ / (8πGMk_B)

For a solar-mass black hole: T_H ≈ 6 × 10⁻⁸ K — essentially zero.
Smaller BH → higher T → faster evaporation.

As the black hole radiates, it loses mass. The evaporation time scales as . A solar-mass black hole would take ~10⁶⁷ years to evaporate — far longer than the age of the universe. Only primordial mini-black holes (if they exist) could finish evaporating now.

Information paradox: Hawking radiation is thermal — it carries no information about what fell in. This suggests information is destroyed, violating quantum mechanics. The "black hole information paradox" remains one of the deepest open problems in theoretical physics (Hawking conceded in 2004 that information is preserved, but the mechanism is still debated).

6. The EHT Image

In April 2019, the Event Horizon Telescope collaboration released the first image of a black hole: the supermassive black hole M87*, at the centre of the galaxy Messier 87, 55 million light-years away, with a mass of 6.5 × 10⁹ M☉.

The EHT is not a single telescope — it's a planet-scale interferometer: 8 radio telescopes on 4 continents observing at 1.3 mm wavelength, combined via very long baseline interferometry (VLBI). The angular resolution is 20 microarcseconds — enough to read a newspaper in Los Angeles from New York.

The image shows a bright ring (~42 μas diameter, matching 5.2 r_s) and a darker central shadow. The brighter southern arc is where infalling matter's Doppler boost brightens the approaching side. In 2022, EHT imaged Sgr A* — the black hole at the Milky Way centre, 4 million M☉ and 27,000 light-years away.

7. Types of Black Holes

Gravitational waves from mergers: When two black holes merge, they radiate gravitational waves detectable by LIGO. GW150914 (2015) was the first detection: two black holes of 36 and 29 M☉ merging 1.3 billion light-years away, releasing 3 M☉ of energy as gravitational waves in ~0.2 seconds.