File:NASA Black Hole Visualization Takes Viewers Beyond the Brink (SVS14576 BH Plunge Mollweide 8192x4096 60).webm

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Original file(WebM audio/video file, VP9, length 59 s, 8,192 × 4,096 pixels, 58.22 Mbps overall, file size: 406.95 MB)

Captions

Captions

Camera plunge, Mollweide equal-area projection. This all-sky movie follows the plunge of a simulated camera into a non-rotating supermassive black hole. The object's mass is 4.

Summary

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Description
English: Camera plunge, Mollweide equal-area projection. This all-sky movie follows the plunge of a simulated camera into a non-rotating supermassive black hole. The object's mass is 4.3 million Suns, equivalent to the black hole lying at the center of our Milky Way galaxy. The orange structure surrounding the black hole represents the hot, glowing gas of its accretion disk, where infalling matter collects and slowly spirals inward. Interior to the disk is a thin set of photon rings, which are images of the disk produced by light that has orbited the black hole one or more times before reaching the camera. The camera completes almost two orbits before hitting the event horizon. During the journey, a variety of effects caused by the gravitationally warped space-time around the black hole and the camera's speed become increasingly apparent. Images of the disk and the background sky morph, duplicate, and even form mirror images. Structures in the direction of travel, at the center of the simulation, brighten greatly as speed increases. At 42 seconds, the camera crosses the event horizon, traveling ever closer to the speed of light. Due to the camera’s speed, the entire sky appears to shift progressively forward, shrinking before our eyes. After entering the event horizon, the camera would be destroyed by tidal forces 12.8 seconds later, then in microseconds rush to the singularity, a point in the black hole's center where the laws of physics as we know them no longer apply.Credit: NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center/J. Schnittman and B. Powell
Date 6 May 2024 (upload date)
Source NASA Black Hole Visualization Takes Viewers Beyond the Brink
Author NASA's Scientific Visualization Studio - KBR Wyle Services, LLC/Scott Wiessinger, University of Maryland College Park/Francis Reddy, NASA/GSFC/Jeremy Schnittman, NASA/GSFC/Brian Powell, USRA/Ernie Wright
Other versions
Keywords
InfoField
Space; Supercomputer; Visualization; Ast; Astrophysics; Simulation; Black Hole; Supermassive Black Hole

Licensing

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Public domain This file is in the public domain in the United States because it was solely created by NASA. NASA copyright policy states that "NASA material is not protected by copyright unless noted". (See Template:PD-USGov, NASA copyright policy page or JPL Image Use Policy.)
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File history

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Date/TimeThumbnailDimensionsUserComment
current23:36, 2 August 202459 s, 8,192 × 4,096 (406.95 MB)OptimusPrimeBot (talk | contribs)Imported media from https://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/vis/a010000/a014500/a014576/14576_BH_Plunge_Mollweide_8192x4096_60.mp4

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Format Bitrate Download Status Encode time
VP9 1080P 4.52 Mbps Completed 01:37, 3 August 2024 1 h 43 min 55 s
Streaming 1080p (VP9) 4.51 Mbps Completed 00:16, 3 August 2024 22 min 28 s
VP9 720P 2.21 Mbps Completed 00:04, 3 August 2024 11 min 42 s
Streaming 720p (VP9) 2.21 Mbps Completed 01:06, 3 August 2024 1 h 13 min 23 s
VP9 480P 1.04 Mbps Completed 23:56, 2 August 2024 4 min 11 s
Streaming 480p (VP9) 1.04 Mbps Completed 00:47, 3 August 2024 55 min 51 s
VP9 360P 453 kbps Completed 23:54, 2 August 2024 5 min 40 s
Streaming 360p (VP9) 452 kbps Completed 00:37, 3 August 2024 49 min 52 s
VP9 240P 226 kbps Completed 23:49, 2 August 2024 3 min 3 s
Streaming 240p (VP9) 225 kbps Completed 00:29, 3 August 2024 43 min 21 s
WebM 360P 370 kbps Completed 23:52, 2 August 2024 2 min 42 s
Streaming 144p (MJPEG) 987 kbps Completed 23:46, 2 August 2024 58 s

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