Fuente: RSS for www-mc1.cardiff.ac.uk
Expuesto el: domingo, 16 de septiembre de 2012 23:00
Autor: RSS for www-mc1.cardiff.ac.uk
Asunto: Explaining black holes
| 17 September 2012
Black holes are regions of space where gravity is so strong that not even light can escape and so isolated black holes are truly dark objects and don't emit any form of radiation. However, black holes that get deformed, because of other black holes or stars crashing into them, are known to emit a new sort of radiation, called gravitational waves, which Einstein predicted nearly a hundred years ago. Gravitational waves are ripples in the fabric of spacetime that travel at the speed of light but they are extremely difficult to detect. Kilometer-sized laser interferometers are being built in the US, Europe, Japan and India, to detect these waves from colliding black holes and other cosmic events. They are sensitive to gravitational waves in roughly the same frequency range as audible sound waves, and can be thought of as a microphone to gravitational waves. Two black holes orbiting around each other emit gravitational waves and lose energy; eventually they come together and collide to produce a black hole that is initially highly deformed. Gravitational waves from a deformed black hole come out not in one tone but in a mixture of a number of different tones, very much like the dying tones of a ringing bell. In the case of black holes, the frequency of each tone and rate at which the tones decay depend only on the two parameters that characterize a black hole: its mass and how rapidly it spins. Therefore scientists have long believed that by detecting the spacetime ripples of a black hole and measuring their frequencies one can measure the mass and spin of a black hole without going anywhere near it. Ioannis Kamaretsos, Mark Hannam and B. Sathyaprakash of the School of Physics and Astronomy used Cardiff’s powerful ARCCA cluster to perform a large number of computer simulations of a pair of black holes crashing against each other, and found that the different tones of a ringing black hole can actually tell us much more. The team’s findings will appear in the Physical Review Letters. Watch more videos Related links
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