It's Official: Black Holes Have Lots Of Mass
KewlPC writes "Spaceflight Now reports in this article that some scientists have been able to measure the "weight" (yeah, yeah, it's actually mass, not weight) of a black hole that is (or was, 13 billion years ago) eating up the most distant known quasar, some 13 billion light years away."
This is neat, I'd never heard of this before:
The extreme brightness of this quasar also shows that the black hole in its core is swallowing matter at the maximum rate possible. This maximum rate is called the "Eddington Limit". If the black hole were accreting matter any faster, it would shine even brighter, and the intense luminosity would actually exert enough pressure to stop any more material falling in.
So there's a limit / "max throughput" to how much matter a black hole can suck in? Very interesting.
Actually, a quick googling found this:
r0=2GM/c^2 (Eqn 10.1.5)
So it is directly proportional. However, I didn't look closely at the units that they are using here, but thta shouldn't matter to the solution at hand.
I demand a million helicopters and a DOLLAR!