a black hole: ch. 5.4 the ultimate space-time...

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A black hole: The ultimate space-time warp Ch. 5.4 A black hole is an accumulation of mass so dense that nothing can escape its gravitational force, not even light. Two types of black holes exist : Small: Heavy stars collapse under their own gravitation after burning out, forming a supernova . If they have enough mass (>30 solar masses), they collapse into a black hole (after shedding 90% of their mass). Large: A black hole with millions of solar masses lurks at the center of many galaxies including ours.

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Page 1: A black hole: Ch. 5.4 The ultimate space-time warpuw.physics.wisc.edu/~himpsel/107/Lectures/Phy107Lect19.pdf · The ultimate space-time warp Ch. 5.4 A black hole is an accumulation

A black hole: The ultimate space-time warp

Ch. 5.4

A black hole is an accumulation of mass so dense that nothing can escape its gravitational force,

not even light.

Two types of black holes exist :

Small: Heavy stars collapse under their own gravitation after burning out, forming a supernova. If they have enough mass (>30 solar masses), they collapse into a black hole (after shedding 90% of their mass).

Large: A black hole with millions of solar masses lurks at the center of many galaxies including ours.

Page 2: A black hole: Ch. 5.4 The ultimate space-time warpuw.physics.wisc.edu/~himpsel/107/Lectures/Phy107Lect19.pdf · The ultimate space-time warp Ch. 5.4 A black hole is an accumulation

The horizon of a black hole

When light particles (photons) are emitted from a black hole, they perform work against gravity. This work reduces the energy of the photons. The lower energy implies a red-shift.

There is a sphere around a black hole called the horizon, where the photons lose all of their energy trying to escape.

This is similar to the horizon at the edge of the observable universe, where photons from distant galaxies are red-shifted so far that their energy goes to zero (Lect. 3, Slides 3,4).

For a simulation of a clock falling into a black hole see: http://hubblesite.org/explore_astronomy/black_holes/encyc_mod3_q15.html

Page 3: A black hole: Ch. 5.4 The ultimate space-time warpuw.physics.wisc.edu/~himpsel/107/Lectures/Phy107Lect19.pdf · The ultimate space-time warp Ch. 5.4 A black hole is an accumulation

Simulated view of a black hole of 10 solar masses viewed from 600 km, just before falling in (acceleration of 400 million g). The black hole acts

as strong gravitational lens (Lect. 16, Slides 8,9).

Page 4: A black hole: Ch. 5.4 The ultimate space-time warpuw.physics.wisc.edu/~himpsel/107/Lectures/Phy107Lect19.pdf · The ultimate space-time warp Ch. 5.4 A black hole is an accumulation

Supernova in a distant galaxy

The supernova is about as bright as 400 billion other stars in the galaxy.

Birth of a black hole from the death of a

big star

Page 5: A black hole: Ch. 5.4 The ultimate space-time warpuw.physics.wisc.edu/~himpsel/107/Lectures/Phy107Lect19.pdf · The ultimate space-time warp Ch. 5.4 A black hole is an accumulation

The Crab Nebula

Leftover from a supernova in 1054

This star was not heavy enough to become a black hole. It is now a neutron star at the center of the exploding gases.

Page 6: A black hole: Ch. 5.4 The ultimate space-time warpuw.physics.wisc.edu/~himpsel/107/Lectures/Phy107Lect19.pdf · The ultimate space-time warp Ch. 5.4 A black hole is an accumulation

Eta Carinae

A nearby star ready to become a supernova

This star belches gases like a volcano that is

about to explode.

Page 7: A black hole: Ch. 5.4 The ultimate space-time warpuw.physics.wisc.edu/~himpsel/107/Lectures/Phy107Lect19.pdf · The ultimate space-time warp Ch. 5.4 A black hole is an accumulation

How do we know about black holes ?

• We can’t see a black hole directly, because light cannot escape from it. However, if a nearby star orbits around the black hole we can detect the black hole by its gravity.

• The mass of a black hole is obtained from the orbit and the velocity of the visible star (obtained from the wavelength shift). If the mass exceeds 3 solar masses and the orbit is too small to fit a regular star of that mass, a black hole is the only explanation.

Examples:Small: Cygnus X-1 (an X-ray source)Large: Cygnus A (a galaxy with jets)

Center of our galaxy

Page 8: A black hole: Ch. 5.4 The ultimate space-time warpuw.physics.wisc.edu/~himpsel/107/Lectures/Phy107Lect19.pdf · The ultimate space-time warp Ch. 5.4 A black hole is an accumulation

The black hole at the center of our galaxy

The center of our own galaxy contains a black hole of about 4 million solar masses . The mass is determined from the speed and distance of nearby stars that orbit the black hole like the planets orbiting Earth. A large central mass requires high speed for a planet or a star to stay in orbit. The star below orbits 4 million suns in only 15 years!

Page 9: A black hole: Ch. 5.4 The ultimate space-time warpuw.physics.wisc.edu/~himpsel/107/Lectures/Phy107Lect19.pdf · The ultimate space-time warp Ch. 5.4 A black hole is an accumulation

Observing “dark” objects ?

• One can ask the more general question how one can observe dark objects (black holes, dark matter, dark energy).

• Although we cannot “see” them directly, we can detect them by their gravitation, which affects nearby stars and galaxies.

Page 10: A black hole: Ch. 5.4 The ultimate space-time warpuw.physics.wisc.edu/~himpsel/107/Lectures/Phy107Lect19.pdf · The ultimate space-time warp Ch. 5.4 A black hole is an accumulation

Indirect way to detect black holes:

Artist’s view of a black hole drawing matter from a nearby normal star. Hot gas forms an “accretion disk” around the black hole. ”Jets” are emitted along the rotation axis.

Such features are observed for both small and large black holes, as well as for neutron stars.

Page 11: A black hole: Ch. 5.4 The ultimate space-time warpuw.physics.wisc.edu/~himpsel/107/Lectures/Phy107Lect19.pdf · The ultimate space-time warp Ch. 5.4 A black hole is an accumulation

Three images of the Crab Nebula

Need X-ray vision to see accretion disk and jets.

X-rays Visible Infrared

(hot) (cool)

Page 12: A black hole: Ch. 5.4 The ultimate space-time warpuw.physics.wisc.edu/~himpsel/107/Lectures/Phy107Lect19.pdf · The ultimate space-time warp Ch. 5.4 A black hole is an accumulation

A pair of jets emitted from a black hole, but on a much grander scale:

This giant black hole sits at the center of a galaxy. The jets are imaged by a radio telescope array at =6 cm. This is the brightest radio source in the sky (Cygnus A), despite its huge distance of 0.6 billion light years.

Page 13: A black hole: Ch. 5.4 The ultimate space-time warpuw.physics.wisc.edu/~himpsel/107/Lectures/Phy107Lect19.pdf · The ultimate space-time warp Ch. 5.4 A black hole is an accumulation

Use many types of radiation

• A lot of the new information about the early universe and about the most violent events in the universe has come from satellite-based telescopes. The atmosphere absorbs or distorts a large part of the electromagnetic spectrum.

• The far infrared and microwave spectrum samples the early universe. It contains most of the radiation power.

• X-ray and Gamma-ray telescopes detect the hottest, most energetic events. Gamma-ray bursts represent the brightest explosions in the universe since the Big Bang.

Page 14: A black hole: Ch. 5.4 The ultimate space-time warpuw.physics.wisc.edu/~himpsel/107/Lectures/Phy107Lect19.pdf · The ultimate space-time warp Ch. 5.4 A black hole is an accumulation

Absorption by the Earth’s atmosphere

Page 15: A black hole: Ch. 5.4 The ultimate space-time warpuw.physics.wisc.edu/~himpsel/107/Lectures/Phy107Lect19.pdf · The ultimate space-time warp Ch. 5.4 A black hole is an accumulation

Hubble Space Telescope: Visible, UV

Page 16: A black hole: Ch. 5.4 The ultimate space-time warpuw.physics.wisc.edu/~himpsel/107/Lectures/Phy107Lect19.pdf · The ultimate space-time warp Ch. 5.4 A black hole is an accumulation

GLAST: Gamma Rays Spitzer: Infrared

Page 17: A black hole: Ch. 5.4 The ultimate space-time warpuw.physics.wisc.edu/~himpsel/107/Lectures/Phy107Lect19.pdf · The ultimate space-time warp Ch. 5.4 A black hole is an accumulation

Mauna Kea Observatories (Hawaii) : Visible, Infrared

Page 18: A black hole: Ch. 5.4 The ultimate space-time warpuw.physics.wisc.edu/~himpsel/107/Lectures/Phy107Lect19.pdf · The ultimate space-time warp Ch. 5.4 A black hole is an accumulation

Radio telescope array

Page 19: A black hole: Ch. 5.4 The ultimate space-time warpuw.physics.wisc.edu/~himpsel/107/Lectures/Phy107Lect19.pdf · The ultimate space-time warp Ch. 5.4 A black hole is an accumulation

WMAP: Cosmic microwaves

Need to detect temperature differences of 20 K at 3 K

Page 20: A black hole: Ch. 5.4 The ultimate space-time warpuw.physics.wisc.edu/~himpsel/107/Lectures/Phy107Lect19.pdf · The ultimate space-time warp Ch. 5.4 A black hole is an accumulation

COBE satellite 1996: Got the first results. Nobel prize 2006

WMAP satellite 2003: Higher resolution. Larger features of the COBE picture reproduced.

Planck satellite 2009: Detects polarization.