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Old July 22nd, 2004, 09:14 AM
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Karibu Karibu is offline
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Default Re: Black Holes ain\'t so black...

Quote:
Originally posted by Renegade 13:
Very interesting stuff. I don't quite understand though; the universe has been around for billions of years, I would think that some of the original black holes would have "deteriorated" and spit the matter back out into the universe in its new "mangled" form by now. How come we haven't detected such a massive ejection of matter into space by now? Maybe we just haven't been looking for it, or are not capable of detecting it just yet?
The life time of black holes is billions of times as long as our universe is old by now. To make it more understandable, our universe is about 10^10 years old (10 billion years. I know it is about 5 billion years, but I speak of cosmological decades, not exact years, so 10^10 years is fitting).

In year 10^40 there are nothing but black holes and neutron stars left in our universe. Most black holes have been evaporated by year 10^67. Most massive black holes live as old as 100^100 years. After that there is nothing but radiation left. If you are interested to know more, I suggest you find a book The Five Ages of the Universe - Inside the Physics of Eternity by Fred Adams & Greg Laughling. Very captivating book.
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