In astronomy, what are so dense that not even light can escape their gravity?
- Correct Answer: red holes
- black rods
- dwarf stars
- black holes
Explanation: If the core remaining after a supernova is more than about 5 times the mass of the Sun, the core collapses to become a black hole . Black holes are so dense that not even light can escape their gravity. For that reason, we can't see black holes. How can we know something exists if radiation can't escape it? We know a black hole is there by the effect that it has on objects around it. Also, some radiation leaks out around its edges. A black hole isn't a hole at all. It is the tremendously dense core of a supermassive star.
More Random Questions
Ans: ganglion
Ans: Ellora
Ans: Gametangia
Ans: neutrophils
Ans: skeleton
Ans: uterian
Ans: Maharashtra
Ans: New York
Ans: microlensing
Ans: human beings
Ans: gregor mendel
Ans: Article 25
Ans: Protest British salt tax
Ans: Bengaluru
Ans: digits

