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Archive for the ‘cosmology’ category: Page 121

May 17, 2022

How could we find a wormhole hiding in the Milky Way?

Posted by in categories: cosmology, physics

If there was a wormhole in the center of our galaxy, how could we tell? Two physicists propose that carefully watching the motions of a star orbiting the Milky Way’s supermassive black hole might help scientists start to check. The researchers published the idea in a recent paper in the journal Physical Review D.

A wormhole is a hypothetical concept that connects two separate areas of space-time. Wormholes often appear in science fiction narratives like the 2014 film Interstellar as a convenient way to get from point A to point B in the vast universe. Physicists have many theories that describe how wormholes might behave, if they exist, but haven’t yet found any.

May 17, 2022

NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center

Posted by in category: cosmology

Hello darkness, my old friend 🎵

Want to listen to a black hole? The black hole at the center of the Perseus galaxy cluster sends out pressure waves that ripple the cluster’s gas, which we can translate into a note. #BlackHoleWeek https://go.nasa.gov/3MQae1I

May 17, 2022

Physicists Found a Way to Trigger The Strange Glow of Warp Speed Acceleration

Posted by in categories: cosmology, physics

Every time you take a step, space itself glows with a soft warmth.

Called the Fulling–Davies–Unruh effect (or sometimes just Unruh effect if you’re pushed for time), this eerie glow of radiation emerging from the vacuum is akin to the mysterious Hawking radiation that’s thought to surround black holes.

Only in this case, it’s the product of acceleration rather than gravity.

May 16, 2022

Black hole science enters its golden age

Posted by in categories: cosmology, science

The idea of black holes have been around for over 200 years. Today, we’re seeing them in previously unimaginable ways.

May 16, 2022

Distant quasars reveal a surprising fact about the first black holes

Posted by in category: cosmology

A new analysis of the early universe shows quasars with growth capped by surrounding matter.

May 16, 2022

Black hole scientist: ‘Wherever we look, we should see donuts’

Posted by in categories: cosmology, physics

May 15, 2022

The supermassive black hole at the heart of our galaxy proves Einstein right

Posted by in categories: cosmology, innovation

Here’s how over 300 astronomers captured the dazzling first image of Sagittarius A*, and why it matters.


Our team was part of the global Event Horizon Telescope (EHT) Collaboration, which has used observations from a worldwide network of eight radio telescopes on our planet — collectively forming a single, Earth-sized virtual telescope — to take the stunning image. The breakthrough follows the collaboration’s 2019 release of the first-ever image of a black hole, called M87*, at the center of the more distant Messier 87 galaxy.

Black holes: Looking into darkness

Continue reading “The supermassive black hole at the heart of our galaxy proves Einstein right” »

May 15, 2022

Thousands of Mysterious Strands Cross Through the Center of Our Galaxy

Posted by in category: cosmology

“Some of them are beautiful — they show up like harp-shaped strings next to each other,” says Farhad Yusef-Zadeh, an astrophysicist at Northwestern University who led a recent study published in The Astrophysical Journal Letters on the strands.

But researchers are still unsure about the cause of these features in the cosmos. “The big question is: What is the origin of these filaments?” Yusef-Zadeh says. “The puzzle is still there and the mystery continues.”

One hypotheses suggests they might be related to the black hole at the center of the Milky Way, which was captured in an image for the first time ever this week.

May 14, 2022

Hubble captures beautiful aftermath of supernova explosion

Posted by in categories: cosmology, materials

Supernovas might spell the end for the star they happen to, but they aren’t only destructive phenomena. When a star approaches the end of its life and runs out of fuel, it explodes in an enormous outpouring of energy, leaving behind a small, dense core that becomes a black hole or a neutron star. This explosion, though destructive on an epic scale, can also leave behind a beautiful remnant created by the explosion’s shock wave.

A image recently released by the Hubble Space Telescope team shows one such supernova remnant, called DEM L249. Captured by Hubble’s Wide Field Camera 3 instrument and located in the constellation of Mensa, this delicate structure is formed from dust and gas ejected outward from the star’s location by the force of the blast.

“This object — known as DEM L249 — is thought to have been created by a Type 1a supernova during the death throes of a white dwarf,” the Hubble scientists write. “While white dwarfs are usually stable, they can slowly accrue matter if they are part of a binary star system. This accretion of matter continues until the white dwarf reaches a critical mass and undergoes a catastrophic supernova explosion, ejecting a vast amount of material into space in the process.”

May 14, 2022

What would it take to make a black hole? And what’s a black hole laser?

Posted by in category: cosmology

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Wouldn’t it be cool to have a little black hole in your office? You know, maybe as a trash bin. Or to move around the furniture. Or just as a kind of nerdy gimmick. Why can we not make black holes? Or can we? If we could, what could we do with them? And what’s a black hole laser? That’s what we’ll talk about today.

Continue reading “What would it take to make a black hole? And what’s a black hole laser?” »