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by guscost
4282 days ago
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What is an example of this positive evidence? Also is it at all plausible that the center of the galaxy is evaporating slightly outside its event horizon in this way? Anyway I'm not sure that the two of us are going to answer any of these questions without some help. |
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Are you asking what observational evidence exists for black holes? There are very massive, very dense objects at the center of most galaxies, objects that by their mass and density fall well inside the theoretical limits for black holes. At the center of our galaxy, there is a very massive, compact object, around which many stars are orbiting, in orbits that reveal the object's mass and approximate size:
http://astro.uchicago.edu/cosmus/projects/UCLA_GCG/
This is pretty good evidence -- if the object weren't within the mass/density realm that allows for black holes, the orbiting stars couldn't approach it as closely as they do without colliding.
Again, this doesn't prove anything, it only supports the idea that black holes are possible, and that our observations agree with that idea.