Submitted by stealth941 t3_10f735i in askscience
Just the title really, wouldn't it give us more indepth knowledge of a black hole? Yes at some point the signal will stop responding and it may take decades to get to one but why hasn't it be done or thought about?
E - I'm learning a lot here. Mostly similar reaponse but different thoughts. Thanks
Weed_O_Whirler t1_j4w0gjz wrote
> it may take decades to get to one
This is the main problem. It wouldn't take decades to get to one, it would take hundreds of thousands of years.
Voyager is the furthest probe ever launched from Earth. It has been traveling for over 45 years and has made it 0.06% of the way to Alpha Proxima, the closest star to Earth- and it's still slowing down. The closest known blackhole to Earth is 400 times further away from Earth than Alpha Proxima..
Of course, even if we got a probe there, it would have to have more power than any transmitter ever made to communicate with us. Transmission power falls off using an inverse square law meaning you would need ~18 quadrillion times more power to communicate back to Earth from that blackhole than it would take to communicate back from Mars.
And to top it all off, even if we somehow conquered all of that- once the probe actually entered the blackhole (aka- crossed the event horizon) it is physically impossible for it to send us information anyway, since nothing can escape a blackhole's even horizon.