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RE: Black Holes and Their Contribution to Science

in Popular STEM2 days ago (edited)

Your publication is very enjoyable, and if black waterholes are the most complex cosmic structures that exist, who knows if humanity will ever be able to fully understand what they are; I stayed in Einstein's physics, that mass distorts space and time is amazing, I don't understand why.

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The large object bends space-time, as, based on Einstein's general theory of relativity, gravity is not a normal push or pull, but rather the deformation of the fabric of space-time due to mass and energy.

Large objects, such as stars or planets, bend space around them, much like a heavy weight would bend a stretched sheet of rubber. This bending determines the path of other objects (such as planetary orbits) and influences the passage of time (time stretching).

What's unique about it all, to put it mildly, is the observed effects, such as the shift in Mercury's closest point to the Sun or the bending of Einstein's star, that merge space, time, and gravity into dynamic geometry, showing that the universe operates on a flexible stage where matter determines the shape of the universe.