Evidence For Rotating Black Holes
Ambush_Bug writes: "Tod Strohmayer of NASA's Goddard Spaceflight Center has announced the first real observational evidence for a rotating black hole. The Washington Post covers the article here. There's a really awesome real video artists rendition of a black hole accreting mass from a nearby blue giant star... check it out!" And how many science writers get to use the words "a specimen about 10,000 light-years from Earth appears to be whipping matter around itself at 27,000 revolutions per minute, flashing X-rays in unsteady spasms and twisting the fabric of space-time"?
"We don't know what's beyond that [event] horizon," Trimble said. "Every grad student we've sent in to study this has never come back."
;P
Might I suggest using the Liberal Arts students? There seems to be an abundance of them.
g
This is really fascinating. The original start that formed the black hole was spinning. It had an easily observable property of rotation. Then it collapsed into a singularity which inherited that angular momentum. But once it's a singularity, the angular momentum (if I understand correctly) is only expressible as a quantum state of spin, which (from my one semester of quantum physics) doesn't really have any macroscopic meaning. (How can a point be rotating?) That's curious enough in itself to me. It's even more fascinating that now we've observed that indeed that spin does then cause a macroscopic effect, such that the matter falling into it tends to spin around it faster. The Rossi instrument also observed frame dragging a few years ago.
Steven N. Severinghaus
Hmmm....
Breathily, the blue giant star leaned over the black hole, his eyes locked upon her event horizon. She stared lovingly into his corona as he began to caress her singularity with strong, hot tendrils of superheated gas and waves of intense gravity. With a grin of pleasure, he reached back and whipped her with his accreting mass.
"Please," the black hole whispered, letting the supergiant know she was ready for his super-dense mass and fusion-powered passion.
They began slowly, but quickly worked up to almost 27,000 revolutions per minute. After just a short while, she began to flash her x-rays in unsteady spasms of delight and joy. She twisted the fabric of space-time beneath her in ecstacy...
Suddenly, she realized that the blue supergiant had gone.
"Hello?" she cried out. "Where did you go? Damn it! I lose more stars that way..."
The next Slashdot story will be ready soon, but subscribers can beat the rush and slashdot the links early!
Wouldn't the intense gravity of the black hole cause a change in the progression of time within the black hole? Could it be possible that the black hole is actually spinning at a much different rate than we are able to observe considering that our rate of time may be different?
Dancin Santa
"Now you know you should rotate your black holes every 5 billion years. I'm afraid it's all out of balance now and I'll have to do an entropy balance to get your event horizons right again..."
Xix.
"Everything is adjustable, provided you have the right tools"
XTE J1748-288 is another system with a rotating black hole. Also GRS1915+105 and SS433 could be, but I am not sure of this. (All the four sources are microquasars, and rotating black holes should be in all of them) These sources are all in our galaxy.
I am not that interested in extragalactic stuff, but I think there are also several active galaxies with known spinning central black holes.
A good resource for checking 'First ever' astronomy discoveries: ADS abstract service
How much is that going to cost?
Dancin Santa
How much ya got?