Yvon.B wrote:I am not a scientist but but I do love astronomy . I understood ( correct me if I am wrong ) that most if not all galaxies
have a black in their very center. Therefore my question is: Will we ever find where is the black hole that hold our
universe together ? that suggest that there are many universes otherwise we would be already suck in . no ?
I just wonder !
Hi Yvon,
You seem to imply that galaxies
like the Milky Way [of mass ~600,000 million solar masses]
are somehow "held together" by their
central black holes [of mass ~4 million solar masses].
Nothing could be further from the truth.
You also imply that the universe, itself, is somehow "held together"
when in fact the universe is flying apart.
Any lurking super cluster size black holes out there
[of mass ~1,000,000,000 million solar masses]
should be detectable
with current infrared & x-ray space telescopes.
[quote="Yvon.B"]I am not a scientist but but I do love astronomy . I understood ( correct me if I am wrong ) that most if not all galaxies
have a black in their very center. Therefore my question is: [b]Will we ever find where is the black hole that hold our
universe together ?[/b] that suggest that there are many universes otherwise we would be already suck in . no ?
I just wonder ! [/quote]
Hi Yvon,
You seem to imply that galaxies
like the Milky Way [of mass ~600,000 million solar masses]
are somehow "held together" by their
central black holes [of mass ~4 million solar masses].
Nothing could be further from the truth.
You also imply that the universe, itself, is somehow "held together"
when in fact the universe is flying apart.
Any lurking super cluster size black holes out there
[of mass ~1,000,000,000 million solar masses]
[b][url=http://asterisk.apod.com/viewtopic.php?f=31&t=21130&p=132235#p132159]should be detectable[/url][/b]
with current infrared & x-ray space telescopes.