Kugelblitz (astrophysics): Revision history


For any version listed below, click on its date to view it. For more help, see Help:Page history and Help:Edit summary. (cur) = difference from current version, (prev) = difference from preceding version, m = minor edit, → = section edit, ← = automatic edit summary

(newest | oldest) View (newer 100 | ) (20 | 50 | 100 | 250 | 500)

4 September 2024

2 September 2024

30 August 2024

29 August 2024

20 August 2024

6 August 2024

15 June 2024

12 June 2024

4 June 2024

28 May 2024

24 May 2024

23 May 2024

12 May 2024

26 April 2024

2 April 2024

26 February 2024

17 January 2024

26 December 2023

19 December 2023

12 December 2023

11 December 2023

4 November 2023

17 September 2023

29 July 2023

11 May 2023

10 May 2023

14 March 2023

2 March 2023

19 February 2023

14 February 2023

  • curprev 21:5921:59, 14 February 2023Voidicx talk contribs 2,463 bytes +154 added additional, required information: (, however as soon as it forms, it is indistinguishable from an ordinary Black Hole, meaning there is currently no way to trace the origins of a Black Hole.) undo

22 January 2023

9 December 2022

24 September 2022

13 September 2022

5 September 2022

4 September 2022

11 August 2022

7 August 2022

1 August 2022

31 July 2022

27 July 2022

25 July 2022

23 July 2022

15 July 2022

12 July 2022

10 July 2022

4 July 2022

3 July 2022

23 June 2022

16 March 2022

25 December 2021

17 December 2021

15 December 2021

28 August 2021

12 August 2021

11 August 2021

7 July 2021

5 July 2021

4 July 2021

10 June 2021

3 May 2021

16 November 2020

10 November 2020

30 September 2020

15 September 2020

1 July 2020

7 May 2020

16 March 2020

8 January 2020

11 September 2019

23 May 2019

22 May 2019

1 May 2019

  • curprev 22:5822:58, 1 May 2019Donpage talk contribs 2,595 bytes −178 I removed the sentence, "A kugelblitz would be so hot it would surpass the Planck temperature, the temperature of the universe {{val|5.4|e=-44}} seconds (one Planck time) after The Big Bang," since it is wrong. If one has a total energy of radiant energy much greater than the Planck energy but concentrated into a region of radius smaller than the Schwarzschild radius of that energy, one can form a black hole even with arbitrarily small energy density and temperature. undo

8 April 2019

(newest | oldest) View (newer 100 | ) (20 | 50 | 100 | 250 | 500)