San Diego Union-Tribune

BLACK HOLE RESEARCH RESULTS IN NOBEL FOR 3 SCIENTISTS

-

STOCKHOLM

Three scientists won the Nobel Prize in physics Tuesday for establishi­ng the alltoo-weird reality of black holes — the straight-out-of-science-fiction cosmic monsters that suck up light and time and will eventually swallow us, too.

Roger Penrose of Britain, Reinhard Genzel of Germany and Andrea Ghez of the United States explained to the world these dead ends of the cosmos that are still not completely understood but are deeply connected, somehow, to the creation of galaxies.

Penrose, an 89-year-old at the University of Oxford, received half of the prize for proving with mathematic­s in 1964 that Einstein’s general theory of relativity predicted the formation of black holes, even though Einstein himself didn’t think they existed.

Genzel, 68, who is at both the Max Planck Institute in Germany and the University of California Berkeley, and Ghez, 55, of the University of California Los Angeles, received the other half of the prize for discoverin­g in the 1990s a supermassi­ve black hole at the center of our galaxy.

Black holes fascinate people because “the idea of some monster out there sucking everything up is a pretty weird thing,” Penrose said an interview with The Associated Press. He said our galaxy and the galaxies near us “will ultimately get swallowed by one utterly huge black hole. This is the fate but not for an awful long time, so it’s not something to worry too much about.”

Black holes are at the center of every galaxy, and smaller ones dot the universe. Just their existence is mind-bending. They are so massive that nothing, not even light, can escape their gravitatio­nal pull. They warp and twist light in a way that seems unreal and cause time to slow and stop.

“Black holes, because they are so hard to understand, is what makes them so appealing,” Ghez said after becoming the fourth woman ever to win a Nobel in physics. “I really think of science as a big, giant puzzle.”

While the three scientists showed the existence of black holes, it wasn’t until last year that people could see one for themselves when another science team captured the first and only optical image of one. It looks like a flaming doughnut from hell but is in a galaxy 53 million light-years from Earth.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States