At a certain threshold, Schwarzschild found that the hypothetical singularity would literally punch through space-time. In mathematics, singularities are interesting numerical solutions, but astrophysical singularities were, at the time, thought to be an abomination— there was no known mechanism that could produce them.
Schwarzschild, however, persisted until his death in 1916, realizing that an astrophysical singularity would warp space-time so severely that even light would not be fast enough to get out of the space-time hole that the singularity would create. The point of no return, a spherical region surrounding the singularity, would become known as the “event horizon.”
Known physics breaks down beyond the event horizon and, as no information can escape, we can have no experience as to what lies inside. Though this was an interesting concept, there was no known mechanism that could create a singularity in nature, so the idea was largely overlooked.
Concept of Black Holes Are Born
That was until 1935, when Indian astrophysicist Subrahmanyan Chandrasekhar realized that, should a massive star run out of fuel, the sheer gravitational pressure of that mass would be concentrated to a point, causing space-time to collapse in on itself. Chandrasekhar had bridged the gap between mathematical curiosity and a scientific possibility, seeding the theory behind the formation of a real singularity with extreme consequences for the fabric of space-time.
Even with Chandrasekhar’s contributions toward the modern understanding of the nature of black holes, astrophysical singularities were assumed to be, at best, extremely rare. It stayed that way until the 1960s when British theoretical physicists Stephen Hawking and Roger Penrose proved that, far from being rare, singularities were a part of the cosmic ecosystem, and are a part of the natural evolution of massive stars after they run out of fuel and die.