black holes: facts, theory, and definition an artist's drawing a black hole named cygnus x-1....

13
Black Holes: Facts, Theory, and Definition An artist's drawing a black hole named Cygnus X-1. It formed when a large star caved in. This black hole pulls matter from blue star beside it. Image Credit: NASA/CXC/M.Weiss

Upload: melvin-mccormick

Post on 29-Dec-2015

217 views

Category:

Documents


2 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Black Holes: Facts, Theory, and Definition An artist's drawing a black hole named Cygnus X-1. It formed when a large star caved in. This black hole pulls

Black Holes: Facts, Theory, and Definition

An artist's drawing a black hole named Cygnus X-1. It formed when a large star caved in. This black hole pulls matter from blue star beside it.

Image Credit: NASA/CXC/M.Weiss

Page 3: Black Holes: Facts, Theory, and Definition An artist's drawing a black hole named Cygnus X-1. It formed when a large star caved in. This black hole pulls

What is a Black Hole?

• VERY dense place in space where gravity has become so extreme that it overwhelms all other forces.– Gravity is so strong because matter has been squeezed

into a tiny space.– Because no light can escape, we can't see black holes.– But…we can see how stars and gas that are very close

act differently than other stars.• When a star and black hole are close together, high energy light is

made and can be measured by satellites/telescopes.• May pull gas off the star and create an “accretion disk” around

itself.

Page 5: Black Holes: Facts, Theory, and Definition An artist's drawing a black hole named Cygnus X-1. It formed when a large star caved in. This black hole pulls
Page 6: Black Holes: Facts, Theory, and Definition An artist's drawing a black hole named Cygnus X-1. It formed when a large star caved in. This black hole pulls

Discovery

• First predicted by Einstein in 1916 with the general theory of relativity.

• Term “black hole” was coined in 1967 by John Wheeler, American astronomer.

• First discovered by Wheeler in 1971

Page 7: Black Holes: Facts, Theory, and Definition An artist's drawing a black hole named Cygnus X-1. It formed when a large star caved in. This black hole pulls

Type: Primordial

• Smallest

• Scientists think they may be the size of a single atom but have the mass of a mountain

• Thought to have formed early (right after the Big Bang)

Page 8: Black Holes: Facts, Theory, and Definition An artist's drawing a black hole named Cygnus X-1. It formed when a large star caved in. This black hole pulls

Type: Stellar

• Formed when a massive star collapses

• Relatively small, but VERY dense

• Mass may be up to 20x more than the mass of our Sun

• Consume dust and gas around them to grown in size.

Page 9: Black Holes: Facts, Theory, and Definition An artist's drawing a black hole named Cygnus X-1. It formed when a large star caved in. This black hole pulls

Type: Supermassive

• May be millions or billions of times the mass of the Sun but have the same radius

• Thought to be at the center of every galaxy – Sagittarius A is the center of Milky Way.

• Scientists aren’t sure how they form, may be the result of: many smaller black holes merging large gas clouds collapsing and accreting masscollapse of a group of stars

• Once formed, they gather gas and dust from around them and grow.

Page 10: Black Holes: Facts, Theory, and Definition An artist's drawing a black hole named Cygnus X-1. It formed when a large star caved in. This black hole pulls

Black Hole Theory

• Incredibly massive but only cover a small area.

• Extremely strong gravitational force – not even light can escape

• Holes have 3 “layers”– Outer event horizon– Inner event horizon– Singularity

Page 11: Black Holes: Facts, Theory, and Definition An artist's drawing a black hole named Cygnus X-1. It formed when a large star caved in. This black hole pulls

The layers…• Event horizon - boundary

around the mouth of the black hole where light loses its ability to escape– Once a particle crosses the

event horizon, it cannot leave.

• Singularity– Single point in space-time

where the mass of the black hole is concentrated.

Page 12: Black Holes: Facts, Theory, and Definition An artist's drawing a black hole named Cygnus X-1. It formed when a large star caved in. This black hole pulls

Interesting facts!• If you fell into a black hole, gravity would stretch you out like spaghetti. Don't worry;

your death would come before you reached singularity.• Black holes do not "suck." Suction is caused by pulling something into a vacuum,

which the massive black hole definitely is not. Instead, objects fall into them.• The first object considered to be a black hole is Cygnus X-1. Rockets carrying

Geiger counters discovered eight new x-ray sources. In 1971, scientists detected radio emission coming from Cygnus X-1, and a massive hidden companion was found and identified as a black hole.

• Cygnus X-1 was the subject of a 1974 friendly wager between Stephen Hawking and a fellow physicist Kip Thorne, with Hawking betting that the source was not a black hole. In 1990, he conceded defeat. [VIDEO: Final Nail in Stephen Hawking's Cygnus X-1 Bet?]

• Miniature black holes may have formed immediately after the Big Bang. Rapidly expanding space may have squeezed some regions into tiny, dense black holes less massive than the sun.

• If a star passes too close to a black hole, it can be torn apart.• Astronomers estimate there are anywhere from 10 million to a billion stellar black

holes, with masses roughly thrice that of the sun, in the Milky Way.• The interesting relationship between string theory and black holes gives rise to

more types of massive giants than found under conventional classical mechanics.

Page 13: Black Holes: Facts, Theory, and Definition An artist's drawing a black hole named Cygnus X-1. It formed when a large star caved in. This black hole pulls

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eI9CvipHl_c&feature=related

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p2zhaoyMYGA