NASA Releases Video of What It's Like to Fall Into a Black Hole
Briefly

People often ask about this, and simulating these difficult-to-imagine processes helps me connect the mathematics of relativity to actual consequences in the real universe," Jeremy Schnittman, an astrophysicist at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center said.
There's no real way of knowing what happens behind an event horizon - unless your name is Matthew McConaughey, that is - but their weird gravitational effects outside them offer plenty to marvel at, like a phenomenon called spaghettification.
If you have the choice, you want to fall into a supermassive black hole," Schnittman said.
Read at Futurism
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