Regina G. Barber, NPR’s scientist in residence, loves black holes. The dense space objects perplex even the scientists researching them. Barber spoke to one such scientist, who shared some valuable life lessons black holes can teach us. 🕳️ Push the limits, even if others doubt you. By testing the limits of his equations, physicist Karl Schwarzschild published the first solution describing black holes. 🕳️ Reputation isn't everything. Black holes aren't just terrifying monsters gobbling up stars and galaxies. They help create them, too. 🕳️ Do your thing regardless of who's watching. Black holes have existed for billions of years, but humans couldn't see an image of them until 2019. |
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