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What Happens If A Tiny Black Hole Shoots Through Your Body? Study Answers That Very Question

February 19, 2025 by Deborah Bloomfield

A new preprint paper has explored what would happen if a tiny black hole were to pass through a human body. Rather than a disappointing “not much”, the physicist behind the paper specifically tried to determine the minimum size of such a black hole that would cause “significant injury or death” to the human unlucky enough to collide with it.

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In the current age of the universe, black holes form when gigantic stars run out of fuel and collapse under their own gravity. This places a limit on how small a stellar black hole can be in the current universe; they have to form from large amounts of mass condensed into one small region, and only occur in stars around 20 times the mass of the Sun. 



Primordial black holes, on the other hand, are hypothetical black holes that are proposed to have formed in the first few seconds of the universe, when all the stuff that would go on to create the stars and galaxies was more tightly packed together.

“In that moment, pockets of hot material may have been dense enough to form black holes, potentially with masses ranging from 100,000 times less than a paperclip to 100,000 times more than the Sun’s,” NASA explains. “Then as the universe quickly expanded and cooled, the conditions for forming black holes this way ended.”

If they did form, it is possible that they could still be out there. There have even been suggestions primordial black holes smaller than an atom could pass through Earth every day without harm to the planet, or maybe a larger one every thousand years or so. But to this day, we have never detected one.

The new paper, which has not yet been peer reviewed, took inspiration from a previous paper on Macroscopic Dark Matter, or MACROS, a dark matter candidates which could range in size from tiny grains to asteroid-sized objects. 

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“In that paper, it was shown that the impact of MACRO dark matter on the human body would be sufficiently destructive that the non-observance of such impacts allows useful limits to be placed on the MACRO mass and cross section,” Robert J. Scherrer, Professor of Physics at Vanderbilt University, explained in the new paper.

Doing the same for primordial black holes, Scherrer reasoned, could place similar constraints on primordial black holes, another contender for what dark matter actually is. The paper looks at two different effects which could feasibly do damage to human bodies.

“First, the PBH would generate a supersonic shock wave along its path, destroying tissue along the way. Second, tidal gravitational forces would tend to tear apart cells in the body.”

Scherrer calculated the minimum amount of energy it would take to produce damage similar to a bullet passing through a human body, estimating that the mass would need to be around 1.4 × 1017 grams, a mass similar to an asteroid.

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Looking at damage produced by tidal forces gets a little more interesting. First up, what do we mean by tidal forces?

“A tidal force is a difference in the strength of gravity between two points. The gravitational field of the moon produces a tidal force across the diameter of Earth, which causes the Earth to deform. It also raises tides of several meters in the solid Earth, and larger tides in the liquid oceans,” NASA explains. “If the tidal force is stronger than a body’s cohesiveness, the body will be disrupted.”

The tidal forces produced by a tiny black hole would have an interesting affect on human bodies.

“As the PBH passes through the human body, it will exert strong tidal forces in its vicinity. These will produce a tensile force on nearby human cells, and a sufficiently strong force would tear the cells apart,” Scherrer wrote. “The cells most sensitive to this dissociation are likely to be those in the human brain.”

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However, calculating the size of black hole which would be needed to rip apart cells in the human brain resulted in a larger black hole than before, at around  7×1018 – 7×1019 grams. The shockwave produced would have a more damaging effect than tidal forces.

While fun to know, this could help us constrain the mass of primordial black holes as a dark matter candidate.

“Intriguingly, the smallest PBH mass that can lead to significant human injury lies near the lower bound on PBH [primordial black hole] dark matter,” Scherrer wrote, “raising the possibility that that the absence of such events could provide an additional constraint on the PBH abundance, as in the case of MACRO dark matter.”

But assuming that all dark matter is primordial black holes, and that they are at least large enough to cause injury, he found that the number of injuries per year would amount to around 10−18 per year, a truly tiny number.

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“Perhaps the more interesting result is just how weak the limit […] turns out to be,” Scherrer concludes. “A black hole with MP BH ∼ 1,016 grams corresponds to the mass of a small asteroid, but such a black hole could pass right through the human body and cause only negligible gravitational effects.”

The study is posted to preprint server arXiv.

Deborah Bloomfield
Deborah Bloomfield

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