
2004
Triggered by observations in radio astronomy, scientists discovered extremely high-energy "quasi-stellar radio sources" - or quasars for short. How could this enormous amount of energy be explained, even though quasars are relatively small and far away? Einstein's general theory of relativity was a starting point with the possibility of exploding stars that collapse in a gravitational collapse and take surrounding matter and energy with them. The gravitational forces are so strong that even light can no longer escape. But how can we make the invisible measurable?

No - Dragivoje Sreckovic

Tokyo Black Hole: Year Zero in Post-WWII Japan

A Brief History of Time

The Most Powerful Black Holes in the Universe

Black Hole Hunters

God, the Universe and Everything Else

Black Holes: The Edge of All We Know

Black Hole Apocalypse

Monster Black Holes

End Day

How to See a Black Hole: The Universe's Greatest Mystery

Star Trek

Wristcutters: A Love Story

Bikini Girls vs Dinosaurs

Kenny Begins

Lost in the Sky

Pencil Face

Meet the Spartans

Event Horizon

The Black Hole