Abstract

This article offers a brief critical research of the origins that gave rise to the theory of black holes and the ground on which it is based. The aim is to highlight some contradictions in the interior of the theory itself, which could seriously question their existence.

Highlights

  • The ground in which black holes plant their roots is Einstein’s General Relativity Theory on one hand and, on the other, W

  • In 1939, Robert Oppenheimer, on ground of Chandrasekhar’s calculation, formulated the base of what today is known as the “black holes theory”

  • As we know, according to the General Relativity Theory (GRT) the sum of speed of the speed of two particles which expand in the opposite direction between them, within the matter, cannot surpass that of light

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Summary

Introduction

The ground in which black holes plant their roots is Einstein’s General Relativity Theory on one hand and, on the other, W. Chandrasekhar calculated that an exhausted (cold) star whose mass is equal to some more than one and half times that of the sun, would not be able to compensate internally the force of gravity emanating from its mass. For a decade this calculations remained unexplained and ignored. In 1939, Robert Oppenheimer, on ground of Chandrasekhar’s calculation, formulated the base of what today is known as the “black holes theory”. At the end of the sixties of the last century this theory began to be taken seriously

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