A video from NASA attempts to show what it looks like when an object crosses the event horizon, or boundary, of a black hole.
A new "immersive visualization" will allow users to experience the plunging into a black hole and falling beyond the "point of no return" within the phenomenon, the NASA said in a news release.
He started with a black hole with a mass equivalent to about 4.3 million Suns, and, together with data scientist Brian Powell, also of Goddard, fed their data into NASA's Discover supercomputer.
In a new video straight out of the movie Interstellar, NASA has revealed what it might look like to fall into a black hole. The simulation was created using a NASA supercomputer, and imagines what ...
Anyone who has watched Matthew McConaughey plunge into a supermassive black hole in "Interstellar" may think they have a rough idea of what it'd be like to encounter one of these terrifying cosmic ...
At the center of the Milky Way galaxy exists a supermassive black hole that's more than four million times the sun's mass. A human traveling to the black hole's surface, known as the event horizon ...
Visual from simulation approaching, then crossing the event horizon the point of no return of a monster black hole much like the one at the center of our galaxy. (NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center/J.