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Black Holes 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. Slide 1 Introduction What are black holes Evidence of Black Holes Star like black holes Massive black holes Exotic properties of black holes Introduction Escape velocity v = [2GM/R]½ If v(escape) is more than c = 300,000 km/sec then light cannot escape and we have a black hole. Examples of escape velocities: • Earth = 11 km/sec • Sun = 610 km/sec. Slide 2 Introduction • Event horizon [Schwarzschild radius] R at v(escape) = c • c = [2GM/R] ½ • R = 2GM/c². • Example for M = mass of Sun, R = 3 km. • R(km) = 3 × (M / M) • Density = M/V = M/[(4/3)πR³] α M/M³ =1/M² • So density decreases as mass increases. Slide 3 What are Black Holes? • Any object where the mass is inside the event horizon. • Even though the mass can have any value, we only know the existence of black holes with masses greater than the mass of the Sun, all the way up to a several billion solar masses. • Since we cannot “see” inside a black hole, we cannot find out the composition. • In stellar size black holes the density exceeds that of neutron stars. Matter is squeezed beyond neutron star size. • Black holes have mass (has gravitational force outside event horizon), angular momentum and charge. Slide 4 How Black Holes are formed Two sources 1. Original 2. Formed during supernova Slide 5 NGC 6240 Two Black Holes Observed by Chandra X-ray observatory Slide 6 p.280 Slide 7 Fig. 14-2, p.282 Slide 8 Fig. 14-3, p.282 Slide 9 Fig. 14-4, p.282 Slide 10 Fig. 14-8, p.285 Evidence of Stellar Size Black Holes • Produced during supernova of massive stars. • Look for double stars with only one visible star, but non visible star being massive. Kepler’s Third Law (1618) M1 + M2 = a3/p2. where M is in units of M, a distance between stars in AU and p is the period of revolution in years. • Cygnus X1 is the first detected black hole and has a mass of at least 6M. • X-ray produced by in falling matter from outside of event horizon. • So far about 10 stellar size black holes been observed. Slide 11 Cygnus X-1 Slide 12 Fig. 14-10a, p.286 Slide 13 Fig. 14-11, p.288 A few black hole examples • • • • • • • • • Slide 14 Name Distance Period Cygnus X1 8K ly 5.6 d LMC X3 175K 1.7 LMC X1 175K 4.2 V616 3K 0.3 V404 11K 6.5 J0422+32 8K 0.2 J1655-40 10K 2.6 GS2000+25 8K 0.3 Nova Ophiuchi 0.7 Mass Companion 10-15 Type O 4-11 B 4-10 O 3-4 K 8-15 K 4.5 M 4-5 F 5-8 K 4-6 K “Black Hole in Binary Stars Slide 15 Star Like Black Holes • Mass about that of mass of the Sun up to about 20 solar masses. • Formed during supernovae. • Evidence from binary (double) stars, where the mass of the unseen star can be computed. • About ten such objects have been observed. Slide 16 Massive Black Holes • Center of each galaxy, except irregular galaxies. • Center of globular clusters. M = 109 M M = 3×109 M Slide 17 Massive Black Hole examples • • • • • • • Slide 18 Milky Way Andromeda M32 NGC4261 M87 M104 NNGC 3377 2.6 Million Solar mass 30 3 400 3,000 1,000 100 Exotic Properties of Black Holes • Black hole is a singularity. • Black holes with spin collapse into a ring. • If you can pass through the ring of a black hole, information on space and time is discontinuous. I.e. you can end up at a different time and space. Not too likely. • Black holes that connect two different parts of the universe is called worm hole. Slide 19 Black Holes are not very BLACK • Hawkins has shown that black holes can radiate energy, called Hawkins radiation. • The decay time of the black hole is related to the mass. The more massive , the longer the decay time. • Very low mass black holes (micro black holes) decay almost instantly. • Stellar or galactic black hole decay times are longer than the age of the universe. Slide 20