Steven Spielmann
Steven Spielmann
originally posted by Oswaldo Costa:
When is anything off-topic?
I'm 93 points on this.
originally posted by Oswaldo Costa:
When is anything off-topic?
originally posted by Ian Fitzsimmons:
I hadn't heard that. Are they thought to be old, disk-less galaxies that are slowly orbiting into the hole, and therefore concentrating in space; or are they distinguished from other galaxies somehow by their manner of birth? Or something else?
If the holes radiate EM across the spectrum, why are they 'black?' Or is their visible spectrum radiation just extremely low.
originally posted by MLipton:
originally posted by Ian Fitzsimmons:
originally posted by Ian Fitzsimmons:
Yes, Mark; they emit hugely powerful x-ray beams, don't they - is that the same? A little knowledge is a dangerous thing. I guess in string theory, any unaccounted for energy can jump down the rabbit hole of one of the microscopic dimensions.
Anyway, thanks.
But, on second thought, to maintain balance, the radiated energy would have to be equivalent to all the energy and matter approaching the event horizon; so that, in effect, nothing is captured in the hole's gravitational field, it's just converted to energy (if it was initially mass) and propelled away. That doesn't sound right.
Why would it have to be equivalent? The radiated energy is equivalent to the work performed by gravitational attraction. Any mass not radiated away as electromagnetic energy is added to the mass of the black hole. I see nothing in that that mandates a strict equivalence in mass/energy.
Mark Lipton
originally posted by MLipton:
originally posted by Ian Fitzsimmons:
I hadn't heard that. Are they thought to be old, disk-less galaxies that are slowly orbiting into the hole, and therefore concentrating in space; or are they distinguished from other galaxies somehow by their manner of birth? Or something else?
The origins of quasars is still a matter of debate AFAIK. One theory is that they arise from the density of stars at the center of galaxies, which then collapse into a black hole through gravitational attraction; another is that the black holes form from the dense center of a gas cloud that precedes galaxy formation; yet a third theory suggests that the initial supermassive black holes were artifacts of the big bang that then attracted matter around them that later coalesced into galaxies.
If the holes radiate EM across the spectrum, why are they 'black?' Or is their visible spectrum radiation just extremely low.
originally posted by MLipton:
The black holes are black because no radiation emerges from within the event horizon (aka the Schwarzschild radius). The radiation that I'm talking about emerges from outside the event horizon, so you can imagine a large "accretion disk" of matter surrounding the black hole that is glowing white-hot as it emits all that radiation. Here's an artist's depiction of that:
Mark Lipton![]()
originally posted by SFJoe:
No one knows what's inside, but you can calculate the diameter for the event horizon--it's just the radius where the escape velocity is c. So light black holes are small (and much more radiant), and heavy ones are big. The radiation is mostly from things falling in, not from the holes themselves. Big ones are quite stable.