We believe this to be true, even though we cannot yet prove this.
after a supernova
Adverb Phrase ..
A neutron star, or a black hole. Which it is, depends on the mass that remains after the supernova explosion. Above a certain mass limit, a black hole will form.
A neutron star or a pulsar, or a black hole.
If sufficient mass remains after the supernova explosion, it will become a black hole.
after a supernova
Adverb Phrase ..
No. No planet is massive enough to become a black hole. A black hole is the remains of a dead, supermassive star.
The only word you should capitalize is "A", at the beginning of the sentence. There are no proper nouns that would have to be capitalized.
A neutron star, or a black hole. Which it is, depends on the mass that remains after the supernova explosion. Above a certain mass limit, a black hole will form.
It's the same as a regular black hole, exept the star that went supernova is much bigger! By the way, supermassive black holes are in the center of every galaxy, including ours.
A neutron star or a pulsar, or a black hole.
It seems that most galaxies have a supermassive black hole in their center. These supermassive black holes have a mass that is millions of times the mass of our Sun; in larger galaxies, billions of times the mass of our Sun. Hence the name "supermassive". For comparison, when a star collapses, it is expected to produce a black hole that has less mass than the star originally had (some mass goes into space, in the supernova explosion), in other words, a few solar masses, or a few tens of them, at most.It seems that most galaxies have a supermassive black hole in their center. These supermassive black holes have a mass that is millions of times the mass of our Sun; in larger galaxies, billions of times the mass of our Sun. Hence the name "supermassive". For comparison, when a star collapses, it is expected to produce a black hole that has less mass than the star originally had (some mass goes into space, in the supernova explosion), in other words, a few solar masses, or a few tens of them, at most.It seems that most galaxies have a supermassive black hole in their center. These supermassive black holes have a mass that is millions of times the mass of our Sun; in larger galaxies, billions of times the mass of our Sun. Hence the name "supermassive". For comparison, when a star collapses, it is expected to produce a black hole that has less mass than the star originally had (some mass goes into space, in the supernova explosion), in other words, a few solar masses, or a few tens of them, at most.It seems that most galaxies have a supermassive black hole in their center. These supermassive black holes have a mass that is millions of times the mass of our Sun; in larger galaxies, billions of times the mass of our Sun. Hence the name "supermassive". For comparison, when a star collapses, it is expected to produce a black hole that has less mass than the star originally had (some mass goes into space, in the supernova explosion), in other words, a few solar masses, or a few tens of them, at most.
Supermassive Black Hole-Muse Supermassive Black Hole-Muse
No, a supermassive black hole is what makes a quasar.
A blazar is an elliptical galaxy with a supermassive black hole at the center.
supermassive