Sunday, April 26, 2026

Interstellar and science

 from copilot:

Yes—absolutely. A planet could orbit a black hole closely enough and fast enough for strong relativistic effects to be important. Whether it can do so without being destroyed depends primarily on the black hole’s mass and the orbital radius.

Here’s how it works.


1. Relativistic effects come from speed and gravity

Two main relativistic effects are relevant:

  1. Special relativistic time dilation – from moving at a significant fraction of the speed of light.
  2. Gravitational time dilation – from being deep in a strong gravitational field.

Near a black hole, both can be extreme.


2. How close can something orbit a black hole?

There is a minimum stable orbit called the ISCO (Innermost Stable Circular Orbit).

For a non-rotating (Schwarzschild) black hole:

  • ISCO = 3× the Schwarzschild radius
  • Orbital speed there ≈ 0.5c

For a rapidly rotating (Kerr) black hole:

  • ISCO can be much closer
  • Orbital speeds can exceed 0.9c

At these speeds and gravitational depths, relativistic effects are enormous.


3. Could a planet survive there?

This depends critically on the black hole’s mass.

❌ Stellar-mass black hole (≈ 5–20 solar masses)

  • Tidal forces near the ISCO are catastrophic
  • A planet would be torn apart into a debris disk
  • No survivable orbit

✅ Supermassive black hole (millions–billions of solar masses)

  • Event horizon is huge
  • Tidal forces near the ISCO are much weaker
  • A planet could survive intact

👉 Counterintuitively, bigger black holes are gentler near the horizon.


4. How strong could the relativistic effects be?

For a planet orbiting close to the ISCO of a supermassive black hole:

  • Time dilation:
    • 1 hour on the planet could equal days, years, or more far away
  • Orbital velocity:
    • 30–90% of the speed of light
  • Gravitational redshift:
    • Light leaving the planet would be strongly redshifted
  • Frame dragging (if the black hole spins):
    • Space itself is pulled along with the orbit

This is not science fiction—these are direct predictions of general relativity.


5. Realistic caveats

While physically possible, such a planet would face challenges:

  • Intense radiation from accretion disks
  • Long-term orbital stability issues
  • Difficulty forming naturally (it might be captured)

But nothing in physics forbids it.


6. Famous example

The idea was popularized in Interstellar:

  • Planet Miller’s Planet
  • Orbits a rapidly rotating supermassive black hole
  • Time dilation ratio ≈ 1 hour = 7 years
  • While dramatized, the scenario is theoretically plausible


Bottom line

Yes, a planet can orbit close enough to a black hole to experience strong relativistic effects
✅ This requires a
supermassive, likely rapidly spinning black hole
❌ It is not survivable near
stellar-mass black holes

If you’d like, I can:

  • Show the math behind time dilation
  • Compare rotating vs non-rotating black holes
  • Explore habitability implications
  • Break down what Interstellar got right vs wrong

Just tell me where you want to go next.


Saturday, April 25, 2026

Cycles and spheres and center points.

 Exactly—and that’s an important observation.

Both a circle in 2D and a sphere in 3D are defined in terms of a point that does not belong to the set of points being described (except in a degenerate case).

Why the center is not in the set

  • A circle is the set of all points at distance \(r > 0\) from \((a,b)\).
  • A sphere is the set of all points at distance \(r > 0\) from \((a,b,c)\).

But the distance from the center to itself is 0, not \(r\).
So the center fails the defining condition and is therefore
not included.

Exception: the degenerate case

If \(r = 0\):

  • The “circle” or “sphere” collapses to a single point.
  • The center is the entire set.

Outside of this trivial case, the center is excluded by definition.

Conceptual takeaway

This highlights something subtle but important in mathematics:

  • Objects are often defined relationally, not by membership.
  • The center acts as a reference point, not an element of the set.
  • Circles and spheres are boundaries, not filled regions.

If you instead include all points at distance less than or equal to \(r\), then you get a disk (2D) or a ball (3D)—and those sets do include the center.

If you want, we can go further into how this distinction matters in topology, analysis, or definitions of dimension.


Friday, April 24, 2026

Timeline of Earth, Mars, and Venus oceans

 Here’s a clean, side‑by‑side timeline sketch showing when oceans or surface liquid water are thought to have existed on Earth, Mars, and Venus, with uncertainty shown explicitly.

Time (billion years ago)

4.6 ─┬────────────────────────────────────────── Planet formation

     │

4.5 ─┼─ Earth forms

     │

4.4 ─┼─ 🌍 Earth: liquid water likely present

     │        (zircon evidence)

     │

4.3 ─┤

     │

4.2 ─┤

     │

4.1 ─┼─ ♂️ Mars: rivers, lakes begin (Noachian)

     │

4.0 ─┼─ ♀️ Venus: possible shallow oceans

     │        (model‑dependent)

     │

3.9 ─┼─ 🌍 Earth: stable global oceans

     │    ♂️ Mars: peak surface water

     │    ♀️ Venus: possible overlap window

     │

3.8 ─┼─ ♂️ Mars: surface water declining

     │

3.7 ─┼─ ♂️ Mars: mostly dry surface

     │

3.6 ─┤

     │

3.5 ─┤

     │

3.0 ─┼─ ♀️ Venus: runaway greenhouse complete

     │

2.5 ─┼─ 🌍 Earth: Great Oxidation Event

     │

Present ─┴─ 🌍 Earth: oceans intact

           ♂️ Mars: ice/subsurface water

           ♀️ Venus: dry, extreme greenhouse


Key takeaways from the timeline

✅ Earth

  • Liquid oceans by ~4.4–4.3 Ga
  • Continuous oceans from then to now

✅ Mars

  • Strong evidence for surface lakes and rivers from ~4.1–3.7 Ga
  • Possibly had a northern ocean, though debated
  • Lost most surface water as atmosphere thinned

⚠️ Venus (the uncertainty)

  • Climate models allow temperate Venus with oceans from ~4.2–3.8 Ga
  • Ocean depth uncertain (from shallow seas to hundreds of meters)
  • Timing of runaway greenhouse is not well constrained due to surface resurfacing


The potential overlap window

~4.1 Ga ────────────────────────────── ~3.8 Ga

        🌍 Earth ✅  ♂️ Mars ✅  ♀️ Venus ❓

  • Earth: definite oceans
  • Mars: definite surface water
  • Venus: plausible but unconfirmed

This is why scientists usually say:


“Earth and Mars definitely overlapped; Venus may have joined them briefly.”



If you’d like, I can also:

  • Add temperature and atmospheric pressure estimates
  • Show why Venus crossed the runaway greenhouse threshold
  • Compare this to habitable‑zone evolution around other stars

Just say the word.