This is because the gravitational force of a black hole is so strong that it literally warps the fabric of space and time around it.
The fourth dimension near black holes is spacetime, which is distorted due to the immense gravity they possess. This distortion results in phenomena like gravitational time dilation and space curvature, which play a significant role in the behavior of objects and light near black holes.
The fourth dimension is time. Since black holes have a strong gravitational pull, they are able to warp the fabric of space around them. As such, they also have an effect on time. As you approach a black hole, "frame dragging" occurs (which is the twisting of space and time), and the closer you get to the event horizon of the black hole this effect only intensifies. As such, the fourth dimension does become warped near a black hole.
You would think very fast, since their gravity is so strong. However, the closer to a black hole something gets, the more warped is the spacetime. Time appears very slow near a black hole, so the question is does it take a really long time to suck summat up?
Space and time becomes stretched (and twisted) near a black hole. This is known as "frame dragging".
Near a black hole, time behaves differently due to the strong gravitational pull. According to the theory of general relativity, time does indeed slow down near a black hole, a phenomenon known as time dilation. This means that time passes more slowly for an observer near a black hole compared to someone further away.
Time slows down near a black hole due to the intense gravitational pull it exerts. This gravitational force warps spacetime, causing time to pass more slowly for an observer near the black hole compared to someone farther away.
Near a black hole, time behaves differently due to its strong gravitational pull. According to Einstein's theory of relativity, time moves slower in the vicinity of a black hole compared to areas with weaker gravitational fields. This phenomenon is known as time dilation.
Yes. The gravitational "Pull" of a black hole is so intense that EM radiation is pulled into it, and even time is warped. However, black holes do not "suck in" anything. A black hole is a region of space toward which things are forced. So light is actually pushed, rather than pulled, toward a black hole.
yes. but the intense gravity is so strong it seems to bend time so slowly some people believe that there is no time in a black hole I WOULD JUST LIKE TO POINT OUT that time does exist in a black hole it is just extremely slow on another note if time did not exist in a black hole then a black hole would not suck things into it. so time does exist in a black hole.
Not sure what you mean by swim, as black holes are in space, but if one gets to close to a black hole they would inevitably "sucked" in and all time would basically stop with no hope of escape
Inside a black hole, time behaves differently than outside. Time slows down as you get closer to the center of a black hole, eventually stopping completely at the singularity. This means that time inside a black hole is essentially frozen.
Black holes distort time by creating a strong gravitational pull that slows down time near them. This effect, known as time dilation, occurs because the intense gravity of a black hole warps the fabric of spacetime, causing time to pass more slowly for an observer close to the black hole compared to someone farther away.