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Teen-Friendly Black Hole Physics Infographic preview image
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Teen-Friendly Black Hole Physics Infographic

This prompt generates a dense, single-page editorial science infographic that explains a complex black hole and dark matter paper in a playful, accessible style for social posts or educational articles.

This is a gpt-image-2 prompt case for 平面海报. Use the copy-ready prompt below to generate similar visuals, and review YouMind OpenLab awesome-gpt-image-2 attribution plus commercial-use rights before reuse.

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{
  "type": "Editable Science Infographic Posters",
  "style": "A teenager-friendly magazine-style science infographic, combining hand-drawn physics diagrams, cartoon characters, and simple editorial layout.",
  "topic": "Primordial black holes, Hawking radiation, and the memory burden of dark matter",
  "canvas": {
    "orientation": "Vertical",
    "background": "Warm-toned cream paper texture with a subtle grainy feel",
    "border": "The page is bordered by a thin, soft gray rectangular border."
  },
  "headline": {
    "title": "Black holes that refuse to die",
    "subtitle": "A tiny black hole born in the very first second of the universe, and the strange new physics that may allow it to disguise itself as dark matter.",
    "credit": "Thoss, Lopez-Honorez, Kühnel & Hufnagel"
  },
  "layout": {
    "sections": [
      {
        "title": "A lightning-fast birth",
        "position": "Top left",
        "count": 4,
        "labels": [
          "Diagram of the birth of the early universe through rotation",
          "A primordial black hole smaller than a grain of salt but heavier than a mountain",
          "Clock icon 10^-30 seconds after the Big Bang",
          "thermometer icon"
        ]
      },
      {
        "title": "Evaporation of ordinary black holes",
        "position": "Top right",
        "count": 4,
        "labels": [
          "Three stages of black hole shrinkage from left to right",
          "Particle spillover wavy lines around each stage",
          "Stephen Hawking's explanation paragraph",
          "Sticker quote: \"Black holes aren't as black as they seem\" — S. Hawking, 1974"
        ]
      },
      {
        "title": "Plot Twist: Memory Burden",
        "position": "Zhong Zhong",
        "count": 4,
        "labels": [
          "A sad overloaded cartoon black hole carrying a backpack labeled MEMORY",
          "Regarding the chat bubbles that cannot evaporate due to information overload.",
          "Formula: Normal speed ÷ (a large amount of information)^k = Crawling speed",
          "Parenthetical note regarding Gia Dvali's 2018 proposal"
        ]
      },
      {
        "title": "Two types of ghost particles",
        "position": "Middle to lower",
        "count": 5,
        "labels": [
          "Particles moving rapidly on the left",
          "The slow, warm particle character on the right",
          "Evolutionary Timeline from the Big Bang to Today",
          "Fast and cold cloud tags",
          "Slow and warm cloud tags"
        ]
      },
      {
        "title": "How we capture them: Lyman-α Forest",
        "position": "Bottom left",
        "count": 4,
        "labels": [
          "The passage about ancient galaxies passing through hydrogen clouds",
          "Spiral-shaped absorption forest landscape image",
          "Handwritten note: The forest tells us: We will find it.",
          "The concept of an axis from us to distant quasars"
        ]
      },
      {
        "title": "What does this paper demonstrate?",
        "position": "Bottom right",
        "count": 1,
        "labels": [
          "Rounded Rectangle Summary Box"
        ]
      }
    ],
    "count": 6
  },
  "visuals": {
    "color_palette": [
      "warm beige",
      "Deep Navy Blue",
      "Rust Orange",
      "grayish blue",
      "Soft brown",
      "Soft gray"
    ],
    "illustration_notes": "The flat, vector shapes, with slightly rough outlines, soft shadows, and rounded forms, are both playful and scientifically rigorous.",
    "typography": "Titles use large serif all-caps letters, chapter titles use bold sans-serif fonts, the body text is compact and easy to read, and occasionally interspersed with handwritten text."
  },
  "objects": {
    "count": 15,
    "items": [
      "1 full-page border",
      "1 title block",
      "A rotation diagram of the early universe",
      "A tiny, labeled primordial black hole.",
      "1 clock icon",
      "1 thermometer icon",
      "Diagram of 3 black hole evaporations",
      "1 Hawking quote sticker badge",
      "A cartoon black hole character carrying a backpack",
      "1 speech bubble",
      "1 formula block",
      "2 cloud tags",
      "A spectral forest illustration in the lower left corner"
    ]
  },
  "text_blocks": {
    "count": 9,
    "items": [
      "title",
      "subtitle",
      "Author's signature",
      "A Lightning-Fast Birth (Main Text)",
      "Ordinary black hole evaporation (main text)",
      "Explanation of memory burden",
      "Ghost Particle Description",
      "Lyman-α Forest Interpretation",
      "Final conclusions"
    ]
  },
  "composition": "The compact yet easy-to-read single-page illustrations, featuring multiple captions and a clear left-to-right, top-to-bottom reading flow, are designed to be shareable social media science posters, making complex physics papers easily understandable even for teenagers."
}

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