It’s only tangentally related to black holes, but this reminded me of a demo/small game I once played. For people interested in messing with relativistic speeds and the weird stuff that happens with light, I suggest giving http://gamelab.mit.edu/games/a-slower-speed-of-light/ a go. It’s a game developed by MIT that simulates a downscaled speed of light, so you can play around with relativistic effects, like red/blue shifting and perspective warping.
“photos”
Ah yes, businessinsider. My go-to site for information about astrophysics.
Here’s a 360 video of what you’d see from Scott Manley.
what a brave cameraman
Here is an excellent video from ScienceClick https://youtu.be/eWjLSlrcIDE?si=-z3H_gx0uXbgvqQi
Here’s a link without site tracking: https://youtu.be/eWjLSlrcIDE
I am not a bot, and this action was performed manually.
I thought the tracking part of a URL started after an ampersand, can a question mark also indicate the same as well?
Yes, ‘url parameters’ start with a question mark and then any after the first are separated with ampersands. Often some of them may be for tracking, but not always.