this post was submitted on 08 Sep 2024
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Yeah, the Sun is IIRC something like within an order of magnitude what would be required.
kagis
https://public.nrao.edu/ask/what-is-the-critical-mass-at-which-a-star-becomes-a-black-hole/
EDIT:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_most_massive_black_holes
Yeah, based on your estimate and that list, it looks like it'd make the solar system into something like the 90th-largest supermassive black hole that humanity knows about.
The center of our galaxy, the Milky Way, has a black hole that'd be dwarfed by what our solar system would turn into.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Milky_Way
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sagittarius_A*
So the Sol system would instantly become about 100 times more massive than Sagittarius A*.
I don't know if all of that mass would actually wind up in the resulting black hole -- I assume that the collapse of all that nitrogen and oxygen and such coreward would induce nuclear fusion and a supernova would blow some of the mass of what had been the Sol system outwards.
Yeah, sounds like most of the mass may get blown away before some of the remaining can collapse into a supermassive black hole.
Apparently this would have about five times the mass of "Scary Barbie".
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AT_2021lwx
That's maybe a hundred million solar masses, and mindbleach is figuring that we're dealing with about five hundred million solar masses.
So assuming that the gas composition isn't a factor here, I'd guess that we'd probably wind up turning ourselves into the largest explosion that humanity has ever observed in the universe, as the nitrogen undergoes gravity-induced nuclear fusion.
EDIT: Actually. Hmm. There's some portion of hydrogen gas in the atmosphere. According to this, it's mostly in water vapor. It's not much:
https://byjus.com/question-answer/what-percentage-of-the-earths-atmosphere-is-hydrogen/
But I guess that it might be sufficient to start undergoing fusion prior to the nitrogen and blast most of the stuff apart prior to the nitrogen undergoing fusion.
Ditto for the carbon in the carbon dioxide, even if the hydrogen isn't enough.
With front-row seats.
Does this mean if we had a huge empty sphere in space, not around a star, (empty Dyson sphere) it could form a black hole with all the mass at the outside edge of the sphere?
So, something becomes a black hole when there's too much mass in too small a space.
For a given amount of mass, that's the Schwarzschild radius:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Schwarzschild_radius
A Dyson sphere would need to avoid collapsing its matter into something smaller than the Schwarzschild radius; if it did, then it would become a black hole. If they don't collapse, then no.
I don't know how Dyson spheres are supposed to avoid gravitational collapse.
goes looking
Okay. Looks like what they do is to basically consist of a bunch of solid satellites that are in orbit but don't collide. They aren't actually a single solid object; the name is something of a misnomer:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dyson_sphere
https://old.reddit.com/r/AskScienceFiction/comments/zqg6e/is_a_dyson_sphere_actually_possible_or_would_it/
But a solar-system-sized sphere of gas can't do that, because you can't keep the orbits of the gas from smacking into each other.