New Family of Black Holes Found
RobertFisher writes "NASA has just released a press release about an important new family of black holes. From the release, "The previously undiscovered black holes provide an important link that sheds light on the way black holes grow. Even more odd, these new black holes were found in the cores of glittering, 'beehive' swarms of stars -- called globular star clusters -- that orbit our Milky Way and other galaxies." Amazingly, these black holes have a mass proportional to their host cluster, a trend also observed in supermassive black holes ten thousand times more massive. Nature is giving us some big clues here."
From the press release:
"Black holes are invisible, but the probing eye of NASA's Hubble Space Telescope found them by measuring the velocities of stars whirling around the crowded cores. Using spectral observations, astronomers discovered that the stars orbiting the cores of M15 and G1 moved at a much faster rate, which suggested the presence of unseen massive bodies."
as far as i understand, this is not really about a "new family" of black holes, it is just about a certain size of black holes (medium size). Its like french fries: order them small, medium or large, that doesnt make any difference as to the kind of object a french fry is, right? So it isnt about a new family of objects at all.
The previously undiscovered black holes provide an important link that sheds light on the way black holes grow.
The light was then promptly swallowed into oblivion, leaving the researchers no bewildered and rather annoyed.
It's not enough to bash in heads, you've got to bash in minds. - Captain Hammer
One simply has to read the article detailing how to escape a black hole.
Unfortunatly RTFM might not be an option when your being rapidly dematerialized.
I live in a giant bucket.
I wonder how big of an explosion it would take to disrupt the globular star cluster enough for the blackhole to eat em all.
Mmm star cluster.
No but really, how delicate do you suppose that balance is between the other stars and the black hole? Can these things stay around for a long time, or would they be pretty temporary things (on an astronomical scale)?
April, 1999: The field of black holes, formerly dominated by heavyweights packing the gravitational punch of a billion Suns and lightweights just a few times heavier than our Sun, now has a new contender -- a just-discovered mysterious class of "middleweight" black holes, weighing in at 100 to 10,000 Suns.
Have all black hole detections been done with this method? If so, could it be possible that gravity doesn't work on the large scale the way we think it works?
I guess that all black hole detections have been made by such an indirect approach i.e. look for there effects because we can't detect them directly. (They don't conveniently glow like stars ;-) )
It is clear that there is some discrepency between observable gravitational effects and theory at long range. (i.e. the voyager spacecraft are deaccellerating faster than we would expect - and the most likely explaination is due to gravitational theory.)
It is very possible that, on the scale of these galaxies, gravity doesn't behave exactly how we think it should. But I doubt the discrepency is huge.
Doh, I meant pioneer spacecraft, not voyager. Whoops.