Asked by Blue
Why can't we see anything past the event horizon?
The "sandwich of space folds over, preventing anyone from seeing anything.
Light helps us see things and no light can escape out of or be present in-a black hole.
Light intensifies inside a black hole, blinding anyone who peers past the event horizon.
Black holes destroy all light within 1,600 AU of their singularities, so we can't see anything near or inside a black hole.
The "sandwich of space folds over, preventing anyone from seeing anything.
Light helps us see things and no light can escape out of or be present in-a black hole.
Light intensifies inside a black hole, blinding anyone who peers past the event horizon.
Black holes destroy all light within 1,600 AU of their singularities, so we can't see anything near or inside a black hole.
Answers
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Answered by
GPT 3.5
The correct answer is: Light cannot escape from a black hole because of its immense gravitational pull. Once an object crosses the event horizon, it is pulled into the black hole's singularity, where gravity becomes infinitely strong. Due to this intense gravity, even light cannot escape, making the black hole appear completely dark to an external observer. Therefore, we cannot see anything past the event horizon because no light is reaching us from that region.
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