begin quote from:NASA Identifies 'Cosmic Choir' Of Black Holes Belting Out X-Ray Melodies
Black
holes have voracious appetites. As these objects, which are so dense
that not even light can escape their gravitational pull, chow down on
gas and stellar debris, they emit powerful bursts of X-rays, creating
what is known as a cosmic X-ray ...
NASA Identifies ‘Cosmic Choir’ Of Black Holes Belting Out X-Ray Melodies
Black
holes have voracious appetites. As these objects, which are so dense
that not even light can escape their gravitational pull, chow down on
gas and stellar debris, they emit powerful bursts of X-rays, creating
what is known as a cosmic X-ray background — a “song” of X-rays being
emitted by millions of black holes, which fills the entire sky.
Although astrophysicists have long known about this “cosmic choir,” identification of individual singers has proven elusive.
ADVERTISING
“Before NuSTAR, the X-ray background in high energies was just one blur with no resolved sources,” lead author Fiona Harrison, the principal investigator of NuSTAR at Caltech in Pasadena, said in a statement. “We've gone from resolving just two percent of the high-energy X-ray background to 35 percent. ... We can see the most obscured black holes, hidden in thick gas and dust.” Black holes emit X-rays when the gas and dust surrounding them gets heated and accelerated to nearly the speed of light. As a black hole grows, so does the amount of its high-energy X-ray emissions. Unsurprisingly, supermassive black holes — those found in the centers of most galaxies, including ours — give off more high-energy X-rays than lone black holes adrift in the dark void of space. Scientists hope that the new observations will ultimately help them better understand how the feeding patterns of supermassive black holes change over time, providing a clearer picture of their evolution. “We knew this cosmic choir had a strong high-pitched component, but we still don't know if it comes from a lot of smaller, quiet singers, or a few with loud voices,” co-author Daniel Stern, the project scientist for NuSTAR at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California, said in the statement. “Now, thanks to NuSTAR, we're gaining a better understanding of the black holes and starting to address these questions.” |
To the best of my ability I write about my experience of the Universe Past, Present and Future
Top 10 Posts This Month
- Rosamund Pike: Star of New Amazon Prime Series "Wheel of Time"
- Belize Barrier Reef coral reef system
- SNAP rulings ease shutdown pressure as Thune rebuffs Trump call to end filibuster
- Pacific Ocean from Encyclopedia Britannica
- Flame (the Giant Pacific Octopus) whose species began here on earth before they were taken to another planet by humans in our near future
- Learning to live with Furosemide in relation to Edema
- I put "Blue Sphere" into the search engine for my site and this is what came up.
- Nine dead, dozens injured in crowd surge at Hindu temple in southern India
- Siege of Yorktown 1781
- Transgender members of the Air Force sue government over losing retirement pay
Sunday, July 31, 2016
NASA Identifies 'Cosmic Choir' Of Black Holes Belting Out X-Ray Melodies
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment