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Because it is so compact that within some distance of the singularity, the escape

velocity from it is equal to or greater than the speed of light. That means that light

which passes close enough to it is captured, can't escape, and the central region,

close enough to the singularity, can never be seen, since no light can leave it. All

of that is just a complicated way of saying that from a distance, it has to appear

totally black, not only visually but at all wavelengths.

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12y ago
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14y ago

Cygnus X-1, so-called because it is the brightest X-ray source in the constellation Cygnus, was the first object identified as a probable black hole.

Just to be very precise here; We have "discovered" ZERO "black holes". We cannot be entirely certain that our interpretation of the physical anomalies is correct, or that the math that describes a black hole is actually describing something real. But the math that describes super-massive objects suggests that certain phenomena will behave in a certain way, and our scientists and astronomers have detected, to the limits of our observational ability, the behavior that the theory suggests.

So we're "fairly sure" that black holes exist, and that we have located some - but until we go there and orbit a supermassive invisible gravity source, we cannot be completely sure.

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11y ago

Yes it is possible. I usually see it every dark night I look at the stars but as we are in the galaxy it stretches all the way around us.

The galaxy appears as a broad band of light from the billions of stars in the Milkyway. The band stretches across the entire sky. The center of the galaxy is towards the constellation Sagittarius and there are dark patches there because dust obscures the stars near the galactic center.

(But not all of it), but for the best results the Southern Hemisphere is best. Chili seems to be the preferred location, probably because of the height of the mountains.

See related links for pictures of "part of" the Milky Way Galaxy.

As for all viewings, you will need to find a spot without any light pollution. [See related question]

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11y ago

Black holes can't be seen directly, but there is strong evidence that certain

X-ray emissions are caused by black holes.

The first really good candidate to be considered a black hole was Cygnus X-1.

This was discovered in 1964, but only about ten years later did scientists think

it could be a black hole.

It was about 1990 that most scientists decided it really must be a black hole.

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11y ago

It's not possible, and it never will be, to "see" a black hole, for the same reason that

such an object is called a "black hole" ... light that hits it stays there and never leaves.

So there's no light coming from it by which to see it. Its presence can only be inferred by

observing the behavior or appearance of other objects in its neighborhood.

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15y ago

Most definitely YES.

Visit this website:

http://spaceflight.NASA.gov/realdata/tracking/

Click on "Sighting Opportunities", Select Country, State (or Province), City

It will say when and where to look.

It is always just after sunset or just before sunrise, when it is dark enough to see it, but the Space Station is being lit by the Sun.

It is very bright - brighter than any star, and silent. It appears in the West, takes about 3 minutes to cross the sky, passing 240 miles overhead.

I've seen it many times. It's really amazing.

___________________________

Another link for the same sort of data;

http://www.spaceweather.com/flybys/index.php

The path is generally either from southwest to northeast or northwest to southeast, but always sort of west-ish to east-ish.

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9y ago

The "no-hair" theorem states that black holes have only three properties for an outside observer: charge, mass, and spin. In other words, given two black holes with these three properties being identical, no other information could be obtained to tell them apart - for example, whether one had been made of matter or antimatter. To tell apart two separate black holes, and say one is different from another, a distinction would need to be made based on one of these properties.

Sometimes for convenience, notional differences are emphasized based on mass (which directly determines their size), like, a microscopic black hole, a stellar mass black hole, an intermediate mass, or supermassive black hole such as is found in active galactic nuclei. Sometimes the term primordial black hole is used to indicate the origin of a black hole believed to have been created during the big bang. A distinction based on spin or charge could lead to an apparent difference which, again, really only reflects nomenclature - non-spinning, uncharged "classical" black holes are sometimes referred to as "Schwarzschild black holes" since a non-spinning solution to Einstein's field equations was first found by the mathematician of that name, or another example being a "Kerr black hole" which also has reference to its discoverer, or the Reissner, Nordstrom or Newman metrics describing charged (spinning, or non-spinning) black holes.

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13y ago

The real idea came from the fact that nothing can escape a black hole once its gravity has begun to take you in. The very dense place has such a tremendous category that it can even preven photons (particles of light) from escaping its gravitational pull.

And i suppose without light, things would be black. Thus the term is coined black hole.

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9y ago

No. First of all, a black dwarf is not a planet; it is the cooled remnant of a long dead star. Second, no black dwarfs exist, as the universe is not old enough for one to have cooled. Third, a black dwarf could not be seen as it gives off no light.

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10y ago

Depends on which one, and when, but in general, yes. The International Space Station is EASILY visible when it goes overhead at night; with all the new modules and solar arrays, it is visible now during the DAYTIME if you know where to look. Visit SpaceWeather.com to find the schedule of overflights for your location.

Because of the way that the Iridium cell phone satellites were designed, you can sometimes see an "Iridium flare" when sunlight reflects off of the mirror-bright solar panels. Again, you have to know where to look and when, or be REALLY lucky.

But if you lay on the ground looking up - and if the sky is dark enough - you can see the satellites going over.
Yes WE can see the artificial satellite by naked eyes only at Space research Center otherwise it is not possible to see the satellite as it Thousand's of kilometer away from the ground

Where I live we can see satellites at night with the naked eye, I don't live anywhere near the Space Research Centre.

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