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Vol XXXVI (No. 12), 03 Dec 2008
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Black Holes: Giant Supernova created the Solar System- Indian Cosmo theorist


MIL, Nov 23, 2004

In continuation of my previous article, I approched Dr. Raj Baldev who said "the subject of Black Hole is incomplete without mentioning Chandrasekhar Limit."  According to Chandrasekhar law, only those dying stars can become black holes whose mass is within the range of 2-8 times than the mass of the Sun. These stars make only tiny black holes, less than the category of small black holes, the minimum mass of  small ones is of 40 times mass of the Sun.

According to Dr. Raj Baldev, it is not necessary that Chandrasekhar Limit can always apply under his law. In his opinion, it is just when the stars fall to hold equal powers of particles and antiparticles they cannot turn into Black Holes; however, they alter their shapes and generally convert into a base of solid or a condensed matter of sub-sub-atoms, or neutron stars.

The dying stars only lose their mass when they come to an equal volume of anti-power and when that anti-power comes to a meeting point, the total mass is annihilated and merges with the mass less energy. So, this is the reason that the dying star loses its mass altogether and turns into a center of strong gravitation for some time and starts sucking other stars within its core as and when some object enters its event horizon.

Dr. Raj Baldev, Indian Cosmo Theorist, further says that the strong gravitation of the black hole keeps moving and after swallowing other stars within its range as per its capacity, it turns back within its own hole and starts producing the musical sound and then recycles the material of mass-less energy captured within by its own strong gravitation. In other words, it helps re-create the new stars or planets in course of time. Originally it was the black hole or the Supernova that created the Solar System.

According to Dr. John O’Byrne, Consl Ed.-Space, "In one corner of that cloud on the Orion arm of the Milky Way, about 4.6 million years ago, one of those Supernovae sent a shock wave surging out at over 32 million km per hour. Almost immediately a pocket of gas next to it began to contract and rotated soon flattering out into a swirling disc of debris. Deep in the twinkling parent cloud another light flickered on - it was our Sun.” 

In fact, the Supernovae are responsible for formation of all stars and planets and many dead stars help it jointly, because Supernova itself is a dead star when giant in size is capable to alter its own shape and creates re-cycling through its Supernova remnants. The large Supernova can hold the masses between 3-10 million of the Sun and it is the one that orbits around or near the Milky Way and other galaxies.

“The giant star dies, it is called supernova and it explodes. When the supernovae explode, they are so violent that they send plumes of white-hot plasma bursting into surrounding clouds, perturbing their uneasy equilibrium and pushing them into a state of collapse,” Dr. Raj said. 

There are also shooting black holes according to Dr. Raj Baldev that drag the stars along with it at a drastic speed.  They do not swallow the stars but by their strong gravitation drags along with them. (To be continued).


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