
Heavy Black Hole Jets in 4U1630-47
What are black hole jets made of? Many black holes in stellar systems are surely surrounded by disks of gas and plasma gravitationally pulled from a close binary star companion. Some of this material, after approaching the black hole, ends up being expelled from the star system in powerful jets emanating from the poles of the spinning black hole.
These jets are composed not only electrons and protons, but also the nuclei of heavy elements such as iron and nickel. The discovery was made in system 4U1630-47 using CSIRO’s Compact Array of radio telescopes in eastern Australia, and the European Space Agency's Earth orbiting XMM-Newton satellite.
The 4U1630- 47 star system is depicted bellow in an artist's illustration, with a large blue star on the right and jets emanating from a black hole in the center of the accretion disc on the left. Although the 4U1630 - 47 star system is thought to contain only a small black hole -- a few times the mass of our Sun -- the implications of the results may be larger: that black holes of larger sizes might also be emitting jets of massive nuclei into the cosmos.
Info & image via APOD
Illustration Credit: NASA, CXC, M. Weiss
#nasa #blackholejets #space
Poles of a black hole? I guess I'm missing something cause I thought blackholes are a sphere.
ReplyDeleteAs the particles spiral into the black hole they drag the magnetic fields causing them to twist. Eventually the magnetic fields will become so strong that instead of the particles dragging the magnetic field accelerates the particles toward the poles. They then go flying out in the form of jets.
ReplyDeleteI like your idea Ludovic Stricanne ;)
ReplyDeleteLudovic Stricanne hmm maybe that's it. I listen to Neil Tyson's podcast and he's talked about it before. I'll have to go back and find an episode.
ReplyDeleteSehr interessantes system,cool,
ReplyDeleteLeider kann ich nicht gut Englisch werde mehr lernen gr.peter
Ludovic Stricanne ,guten morgen und danke.grüsse peter😊
ReplyDeleteSo far so good then, eh, with this experiment, Corina?
ReplyDeleteWhat happens with these nuclei? Do they decay via alpha radiation, or do they settle down and stabilise with electrons from the soup that's emitted?
What experiment you're referring to, Ben?
ReplyDeleteJets serve an important function of getting rid of angular momentum in a system... otherwise the accretion disk or protostar would fly apart because conservation of angular momentum would require it to spin very rapidly.
Where you allow everyone to post comments on your posts. Seemed to me the comments were fine so far on all of your posts, pretty much.
ReplyDeleteI agree...but I want to see if there are interesting people on here...besides the ones I already know. ;)
ReplyDeleteNice gobbling a star
ReplyDeleteThe powerful beauty of the universe.
ReplyDeleteBeautiful photo
ReplyDeleteWhat is a black hole capable of how much is really known about these light drinkers and could they be just holes that form in the interdementions of the universe close to stars due to a output of energy that happens when the star dies and collapses in on itself creating this phenomenon someone tell me because I have not really gotten a clear definition in detail
ReplyDeleteVery interesting natural phenomenon. One question. What is the geometry of a black hole?
ReplyDeleteTell me I don't knoe
ReplyDeleteAnd I never said it was natural. I used the word to mean there is still lots of unknown variabels that we may not have the tech to understand fully
ReplyDeleteSo I am asking not as an expert just as someone curious with thirst for knowledge
ReplyDeleteIntresting,alot of room for exploring
ReplyDeleteWe're so small in the universe
ReplyDeleteNice photo
ReplyDeleteAwesome are u a space scientist
ReplyDeleteNice
ReplyDeletekartik k.n that's an understatement
ReplyDeleteMusta aukko on ihmeellinen, päivällä sen erottaa selkeästi ja yöllä se katoaa pimeyteen, mutta aina se on olemassa kuin kutsuen seireenien äänellä luokseen houkuttelee, hempeyteen kiehtovaan syleilyyn kietoen ! :)))
ReplyDeleteThat is awesome
ReplyDeletecomputer generation
ReplyDeletebut it's awesome still
ReplyDeleteSo cool
ReplyDeleteGod this is what man hand did.
ReplyDeleteSO PRETTY
ReplyDeleteHola
ReplyDeleteqwerty 64 ndldnf
ReplyDelete