Readers discuss black holes’ trippy effects on time, banned swimsuits

Time to eat Astronomers watched in real time as the supermassive black hole at the center of a galaxy went from dim and quiet to bright and actively feeding on material, Adam Mann reported in “For the first time, scientists witness a black hole turning on” (SN: 7/13/24 & 7/27/24, p. 7). Reader Chris Sheppard […]

Sep 7, 2024 - 18:30
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Readers discuss black holes’ trippy effects on time, banned swimsuits
July Thirteen, 2024 cover

Time to eat

Astronomers watched in real time as the supermassive black hole at the heart of a galaxy went from dim and quiet to bright and actively feeding on subject material, Adam Mann reported in “For the first time, scientists witness a black hole turning on” (SN: 7/Thirteen/24 & 7/27/24, p. 7).

Reader Chris Sheppard wondered how a black hole can consume subject material, when time seems to stop at the periphery — the event horizon.

“The seeming paradox arises on account of the extra special time dilation near the event horizon,” says theoretical physicist Eduardo Martín-Martínez of the University of Waterloo in Canada. From the point of view of observer, time seems to progress more slowly near the black hole’s edge. So infalling matter appears frozen in time, never crossing the event horizon, Martín-Martínez says. Light emitted by that matter becomes progressively more stretched to longer wavelengths, or redshifted, and in the tip becomes invisible.

“Nonetheless, from the point of view of the infalling subject material itself, time is experienced basically,” Martín-Martínez says. The matter crosses the event horizon after a finite time period and moves toward the black hole’s center, known as the singularity. “If the far away observer were to approach the horizon themselves, once they are close enough, they would see matter cross the horizon at a finite time, and that they themselves would cross the horizon at a finite proper time,” Martín-Martínez says.

Getting as much as hurry

If elite athletes are to ever reach humans’ projected maximum speed in running or swimming, they'll need perfect technique, Erin Garcia de Jesús reported in “What’s the human speed limit?” (SN: 7/Thirteen/24 & 7/27/24, p. 36).

Within the 2000s, a now-banned swimsuit line from Speedo ushered a wave of new records in the 50-meter freestyle, Garcia de Jesús reported. The suits compressed swimmers’ bodies and made them more buoyant.

Given that compression tends to make bigger density, which decreases buoyancy, reader David H. Brands asked how the suits will have had such an effect.

These were two parallel effects, now not one leading to the opposite, says associate news editor Christopher Crockett. The compression made the swimmers’ bodies more streamlined and thus reduced drag. On the identical time, the suits also trapped air around swimmers’ bodies, increasing buoyancy, Crockett says.

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