As for “nothing escapes from a black hole,” that depends on a lot of things, mostly on how close you let yourself get to it. Get too close, and there will always be a point where it’s pull will become stronger than the thrust you can provide to escape it. But you’d have to get seriously close to its event horizon for that to start becoming a serious danger, unless you’re just adrift and have no means of thrusting away at all.
Otherwise, safely entering an orbit around a black hole and then leaving again would be a relatively simple affair with the right engines and sufficient fuel. In the movies they always portray black holes sucking up whole solar systems the second it appears in one, but more often than not, the black hole could theoretically fly right through a star system and not suck anything of note in at all unless something’s directly in its path. Might perturb a few orbits of course, depending on how close anything veers to it, but in the galactic scale, that’s a relatively minor thing.
Ida No almost 5 years ago
Dead stars are made of cheese! It’s not just being mooned!
fuzzbucket Premium Member almost 5 years ago
It wasn’t dead when she ate it.
blunebottle almost 5 years ago
So now there’s a black hole in the living room?
Doctor Toon almost 5 years ago
Looks like a black hole sucked all of the color out of the strip today
mjb515 almost 5 years ago
So she is a bit gassy then?
TurbosDad almost 5 years ago
See! That’s why we can’t have nice things…
keltii almost 5 years ago
the colourist must have been eaten.
JK1 almost 5 years ago
Do they mean a death star? Love panel 2.
vaughnrl2003 Premium Member almost 5 years ago
Uh oh. Break out the doo doo pan and the freebreeze. I’m afraid there is probably a galactic mess in there.
I AM CARTOON LADY! almost 5 years ago
I think she got a hold of a, Milky Way Bar!
tcar-1 almost 5 years ago
Color version:
https://www.creators.com/read/dog-eat-doug
scyphi26 almost 5 years ago
Please don’t elaborate.
scyphi26 almost 5 years ago
As for “nothing escapes from a black hole,” that depends on a lot of things, mostly on how close you let yourself get to it. Get too close, and there will always be a point where it’s pull will become stronger than the thrust you can provide to escape it. But you’d have to get seriously close to its event horizon for that to start becoming a serious danger, unless you’re just adrift and have no means of thrusting away at all.
Otherwise, safely entering an orbit around a black hole and then leaving again would be a relatively simple affair with the right engines and sufficient fuel. In the movies they always portray black holes sucking up whole solar systems the second it appears in one, but more often than not, the black hole could theoretically fly right through a star system and not suck anything of note in at all unless something’s directly in its path. Might perturb a few orbits of course, depending on how close anything veers to it, but in the galactic scale, that’s a relatively minor thing.
ocarol7 Premium Member almost 5 years ago
Dogs laughing…. :-)))
WCraft Premium Member almost 5 years ago
Call Stanley Steamer…
Dry and Dusty Premium Member almost 5 years ago
What happened in the living room this morning, my sweet little Annie?
cuzinron47 almost 5 years ago
Did the colorists go on strike, Daddy’s Home and now D eat D.
Night-Gaunt49[Bozo is Boffo] almost 5 years ago
Probably the Evil Cats experimenting.
lamongelo Premium Member almost 5 years ago
I’ll bet the cats had something to do with it.