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Astronomy Bizarre Wheeler 309N SPRING 2006 April 24, 2006 (48165) Review for Test #4 Black Holes, Gamma-Ray Bursts, and Cosmology Hawking Radiation—according to Stephen Hawking, if one studies the event horizon with the Quantum Theory one finds that the gravitation energy (and hence mass) of a black hole can be converted into matter and anti-matter (mostly photons) with some of this material being ejected, carrying off the mass of the hole as if the black hole had a temperature. Black Hole Evaporation—For a black hole of ordinary stellar mass or larger the amount of mass loss is negligible in the age of the Universe and may be ignored. A black hole of less than asteroid mass could totally evaporate within the age of the Universe. The three fundamental properties of a Black Hole are those that can be measured from a distance - mass, charge, and spin. Other properties such as size and shape are specified once these basic properties are set. Information Loss in Black Holes – Quantum theory insists information is preserved, black holes seem to destroy it. Time-like space—interior to event horizon space drags in one direction, just as time drags you older. Schwarzschild black hole—mass but no spin, no electrical charge. Time-like space leads to the singularity, so it cannot be avoided. Rotating or Kerr black hole—the idealized mathematical solution of Einstein's equations developed by Kerr in which one assumes that all the mass is in the rotating singularity and that there is vacuum everywhere else. Singularity in a rotating black hole—shaped like a ring, surrounded by “normal ” space so that it can be avoided in principle. Time-like space in rotating black hole—the “in-going” time-like space is bounded on both sides by an event horizon so that it does not extend down to the singularity. Inside the inner event horizon is “normal” space surrounding the singularity. At the same place, but in the future, there is a region of “out-going” time-like space again bounded by two event horizons leading out to a normal Universe of flat space. In the future of that Universe is another in-going time-like space. Inner “normal” space. Inside the rotating black hole the “normal” space will be one of huge gravity and tidal forces, but they are not infinite, and one could survive in principle never emerging from the black hole, but also never hitting the singularity. Through the singularity—passing through the ring of the singularity leads to another volume of “normal” space within the black hole surrounding the singularity, but it is not the same one that surrounds the singularity that is first encountered when entering the black hole. Blue shift - in a real Universe matter and energy falling into a black hole will gain energy (blue shift) and that energy will probably alter the “vacuum” Kerr solution, so no extra Universes are accessible. Clues for black holes – look for binary system where X-rays are produced in accretion disk before matter disappears down the black hole and Kepler’s law helps to determine mass greater than maximum mass of neutron star. Cygnus X-1—First candidate black hole in a binary star system. Object of 10 M emits X-rays and orbits unevolved star of 30 M. Small probability that 10 M object is itself a 9 M star transferring mass to a 1 M neutron star. The 9 M star could be lost in glare of 30 M star. Black holes candidates with low mass companion stars—for these systems the “unseen” X-ray emitting star is more massive than the unevolved companion. No third ordinary star could remain unseen.Black hole X-ray novae—all recently discovered black hole candidates sit undiscovered for decades then flare for a few months. Thought to be flushing instability in accretion disk, occurs in systems with low mass unevolved companions. Black holes may also be surrounded by very hot, electron-positron pair-forming region which can produce high-energy X-rays or gamma-rays. Neutron stars could not, so gamma-ray could provide proof of black hole. Superluminal sources – radio sources that appear to expand at greater than the speed of light. An optical illusion where a jet moving at 99% the speed of light, so that it chases its own light, is aimed at the Earth. Seen in some quasars, active galactic nuclei thought to contain supermassive black holes. Some stellar mass binary black holes called micro-quasars or mini-quasars display “superluminal” radio jets; more circumstantial evidence for black holes since neutron stars are not observed to do this. Normal galaxies – orbits of stars near the center indicate most have supermassive black holes. These black holes must not be accreting matter at a high rate or they would be very bright. They may have been quasars in the past. Milky Way Galaxy – contains a 4 million solar mass black hole as determined by orbits of stars near the center. Galaxy/Black Hole connection – The velocity of stars that respond to the bulge mass of a galaxy are correlated with the mass of the central supermassive black hole despite the fact that they are presently much too far from the black hole to sense its gravity. The bulge mass is always about 800 times the black hole mass. This suggests that the processes that cause the development of whole galaxies are nevertheless closely linked to the growth of the black hole when both first formed. Intermediate mass black holes – 1000 to 10,000 solar mass black holes. First suspected from very bright X-ray sources in other galaxies requiring large masses so the Eddington limit would not be violated. More recent evidence is based on the motion of stars near the center of old globular star clusters. The mass of the black hole is deduced to be about one thousandth of the cluster mass, suggesting that globular clusters and their black holes formed by the same combined mechanism as whole galaxies and their supermassive black holes. Gamma-ray bursts – flashes of gamma-ray energy detected by satellites about once per day lasting about 10 to 30 seconds. Distribution in space – the gamma-ray bursts occur randomly all over the sky, so they are not associated with our Galaxy. Optical Counterparts – discovered only in 1997, these allow gamma-ray bursts to be associated with other phenomena. They are in galaxies at cosmological distances. The energy of a gamma-ray burst is focused in a jet


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UT AST 309N - Review for Test 4

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