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Matter Rides Black Hole's Space-Time Wave

SirUlli

Senior member
SAN DIEGO -- Armed with cosmic speed guns and other high-tech devices, astronomers have witnessed amazing speeds around one black hole and an exotic wave in space-time careening around another.

The findings are among the most convincing ever of the incredible velocities and distortions that occur very close to black holes, and they help provide better estimates of the masses of the black holes. They also showcase a new method for getting an even better handle on these gravitational behemoths.

In one finding, a spinning black hole appears to create an orbiting wave. In a gross oversimplification, the process is similar to the wobble of a spinning top. The other study found evidence of hotspots -- perhaps blobs of hot gas the size of the Sun, or maybe regions lit by magnetic energy -- travelling at 10 percent the speed of light.

The results were presented here Monday at a meeting of the American Astronomical Society.

Black hole basics

Black holes are so dense they can trap light. They can't be seen, but astronomers find them by noting their gravitational effect on surrounding objects or by seeing X-rays and other radiation kicked up in their vicinity when gas is superheated as it swirls in at phenomenal speeds.

The infalling gas forms a thin disk, theory says. From this accretion disk come the X-rays used in the new research.

Any object with mass warps the space and time around it, in much the same way a heavy object deforms a stretched elastic sheet. Light passing by a very massive star or galaxy can be noticeably bent, for example.

Einstein's work predicts all this. But beyond Einstein, even stranger things are predicted. If an object spins, it further distorts space-time; imagine the elastic sheet being twisted by a heavy, spinning heavy.

The effect is called frame dragging. It is a modification to the simpler aspects of gravity set out by Newton. Working from Einstein's relativity theory, Austrian physicists Joseph Lense and Hans Thirring predicted frame dragging in 1918. (It is also known as the Lense-Thirring effect.)
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Full Story can be found here

more Info

Astronomers have discovered evidence for physics beyond Einstein's general relativity. This artist's conception shows a galactic black hole being orbited by a ripple in spacetime--a distortion in the fabric of space itself. Credit: Dana Berry (CfA/NASA).

Going Beyond Einstein: Spacetime Wave Orbits Black Hole

very interesting 🙂

Sir Ulli
 
This is cool stuff SirUlli 😎

I have to ask..............How do you find this stuff? You must be a student and these are homework assignments 😉

I read at a lot of tech and science sites....but, only come up with about half the stuff you find. 😱

In any event, thanks for the link. :wine:

Keep 'em coming 😀
 
Originally posted by: Soggysocks
This is cool stuff SirUlli 😎

I have to ask..............How do you find this stuff? You must be a student and these are homework assignments 😉

I read at a lot of tech and science sites....but, only come up with about half the stuff you find. 😱

In any event, thanks for the link. :wine:

Keep 'em coming 😀


if you have the right Bookmarks, then this is no Prob

some of my favorite Bookmarks

http://www.space.com/

http://www.astrobio.net/

http://www.spaceflightnow.com/index.html

http://www.esa.int/esaCP/index.html

http://www.jpl.nasa.gov/

http://slashdot.org/

http://www.pparc.ac.uk/

and so on...

Sir Ulli
 
Picking on Einstein

By measuring the shape of space with exquisite precision, NASA's Gravity Probe B spacecraft aims to confirm Einstein's theory of relativity ... or provide the first evidence against it.

March 28, 2005: This year marks the 100th anniversary of a revolution in our notions of space and time.

Before 1905, when Albert Einstein published his theory of special relativity, most people believed that space and time were as Sir Isaac Newton described them back in the 17th century: Space was the fixed, unchanging "stage" upon which the great cosmic drama unfolded, and time was the mysterious, universal "clock in the sky."

Even today, people commonly assume that this intuitive sense of space and time is correct. It's not.

Einstein's 1905 paper, along with another one he published in 1915, painted an entirely different and mind-bending picture. Space itself is constantly being warped and curved by the matter and energy moving within it, and time flows at different rates for different observers. Numerous real-world experiments over the last 100 years indicate that, amazingly, Einstein was right.

Full Story

http://science.nasa.gov/headlines/y2005/28mar_gamma.htm

Sir Ulli
 
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