13.3 Black Holes: Gravity’s Ultimate Victory Our Goals for Learning What is a black hole? What would it be like to visit a black hole? Do black holes really.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Black Holes Devouring Monsters of the Universe. How are they made? Only the very largest stars, beginning with at least 50 solar masses, are able to form.
Advertisements

ASTR100 (Spring 2008) Introduction to Astronomy White Dwarfs Prof. D.C. Richardson Sections
© 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Chapter 18 The Bizarre Stellar Graveyard.
1 Stellar Remnants White Dwarfs, Neutron Stars & Black Holes These objects normally emit light only due to their very high temperatures. Normally nuclear.
Supernovae and nucleosynthesis of elements > Fe Death of low-mass star: White Dwarf White dwarfs are the remaining cores once fusion stops Electron degeneracy.
Chapter 18 Lecture The Cosmic Perspective Seventh Edition © 2014 Pearson Education, Inc. The Bizarre Stellar Graveyard.
Chapter 13 The Bizarre Stellar Graveyard
Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. Chapter 13 The Bizarre Stellar Graveyard.
Black Holes. Dark stars a star that has an escape velocity greater than the speed of light.
Chapter 18: Relativity and Black Holes
Stellar Deaths II Neutron Stars and Black Holes 17.
Neutron Stars and Black Holes Please press “1” to test your transmitter.
Pulsars A pulsar is a neutron star that beams radiation along a magnetic axis that is not aligned with the rotation axis.
Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Chapter 13 Black Holes.
1. black hole - region of space where the pull of gravity is so great that even light cannot escape. Possible end of a very massive star.
Black Holes. Outline Escape velocity Definition of a black hole Sizes of black holes Effects on space and time Tidal forces Making black holes Evaporation.
Neutron Stars and Black Holes
The mass of a neutron star cannot exceed about 3 solar masses. If a core remnant is more massive than that, nothing will stop its collapse, and it will.
Class 18 : Stellar evolution, Part II Evolution of a 50 M  star… Black holes. Hypernovae. Gamma-Ray Bursts (GRBs)… Observational characteristics of GRBs.
The last days of massive stars Outer layers expand as helium core contracts Helium fuses to form carbon, carbon fuses with helium to make oxygen, and.
13 Black Holes and Neutron Stars Dead Stars Copyright – A. Hobart.
1. White Dwarf If initial star mass < 8 M Sun or so. (and remember: Maximum WD mass is 1.4 M Sun, radius is about that of the Earth) 2. Neutron Star If.
Black Holes Astronomy 315 Professor Lee Carkner Lecture 16.
The Stellar Graveyard.
Question The pressure that prevents the gravitational collapse of white dwarfs is a result of ______.  A) Conservation of energy  B) Conservation of.
Black Holes Dennis O’Malley. How is a Black Hole Created? A giant star (more than 25x the size of the sun) runs out of fuel –The outward pressure of the.
Chapter 13 The Bizarre Stellar Graveyard White Dwarfs Our Goals for Learning What is a white dwarf? What can happen to a white dwarf in a close.
Black Holes.
Important Stuff (Section 1) The Second Midterm is Tuesday, April 7 The Second Midterm will be given in two rooms A – I Physics 166 (here) J – Z Anderson.
Unit 06 “Circular Motion, Gravitation and Black Holes” “Gravitation and Black Holes”
SESSION: Black hole SUBMITTED BY: SUBMITTED TO: Dr.A.K.SRIVASTAVA UNDER SUPERVISION OF: SHRI SUSHEEL SINGH M.Sc FINAL Amaresh Singh.
Black Holes & Relativity
Chapter 13 Black Holes. What do you think? Are black holes just holes in space? What is at the surface of a black hole? What power or force enables black.
Binary star motion demonstration What does the first demo represent? What will happen if I replace one ball with a smaller ball? What does the second model.
Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Neutron Stars and Black Holes Unit 9.
Black Holes. Gravity is not a force – it is the curvature of space-time - Objects try and move in a straight line. When space is curved, they appear to.
Remnant of a Type II supernova explosion Iron core collapses until neutrons are squeezed tightly together During the explosion core remains intact, outer.
BLACK HOLES. WHAT IS A BLACK HOLE? A few definitions from the dictionary: Region of space resulting from the collapse of a star Region of space with strong.
Black Holes This one’s green. I like green.. What happens after a SN? Material remaining after a supernova is 3 times more massive than the sun or more.
Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Important Stuff (section 003) The Second Midterm is Thursday, November 14 The Second Midterm will be given in.
Lecture 27: Black Holes. Stellar Corpses: white dwarfs white dwarfs  collapsed cores of low-mass stars  supported by electron degeneracy  white dwarf.
Death of Stars III Physics 113 Goderya Chapter(s): 14 Learning Outcomes:
The Bizarre Stellar Graveyard. The Mass of Stellar Corpses White Dwarf Solar Masses, Degeneracy pressure overwhelmed, Plasma becomes neutrons.
Black Holes
By Katy O’Donohue. Black Holes Black Holes are a region of space from which nothing can escape, including light. Light is made up of massless particles.
Lecture Outline Chapter 14: The Bizarre Stellar Graveyard © 2015 Pearson Education, Inc.
Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Chapter 13 Neutron Stars and Black Holes Lecture Outline.
I.Death of Stars White Dwarfs Neutron Stars Black Holes II.Cycle of Birth and Death of Stars (borrowed in part from Ch. 14) Outline of Chapter 13 Death.
It was discovered in the early 1990’s that the pulse period of a millisecond pulsar 500 parsecs from earth varies in a regular way.
Lecture 20: Black Holes Astronomy Spring 2014.
Chapter 13 The Bizarre Stellar Graveyard White Dwarfs Our goals for learning: What is a white dwarf? What can happen to a white dwarf in a close.
Universe Tenth Edition
The Stellar Graveyard. Broken Thermostat As the core contracts, H begins fusing to He in a shell around the core. Luminosity increases because the core.
Black Holes. Escape Velocity The minimum velocity needed to leave the vicinity of a body without ever being pulled back by the body’s gravity is the escape.
Chapter 10 The Bizarre Stellar Graveyard. The Products of Star Death White Dwarfs Neutron Stars Black Holes.
© 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. The Bizarre Stellar Graveyard.
Black Holes A stellar mass black hole accreting material from a companion star 1.
© 2004 Pearson Education Inc., publishing as Addison- Wesley Important Stuff (Section 3) The Second Midterm is Tuesday, November 15 The Second Midterm.
Chapter 11 The Death of High Mass Stars
Important Stuff (Section 001: 9:45 am)
Chapter 18 The Bizarre Stellar Graveyard
What is a black hole?.
It was discovered in the early 1990’s that the pulse period of a millisecond pulsar 500 parsecs from earth varies in a regular way.
What is a black hole? Insert TCP 6e Figure 18.12c.
Chapter 14: The Bizarre Stellar Graveyard
What is a black hole? Insert TCP 6e Figure 18.12c.
“For thousands more years, the mighty ships tore across the empty wastes of space and finally dived screaming onto the first planet they came across which.
Homework #7: Exam #2: Monday, April 2. Chapters 14 – 18
Presentation transcript:

13.3 Black Holes: Gravity’s Ultimate Victory Our Goals for Learning What is a black hole? What would it be like to visit a black hole? Do black holes really exist?

What is a black hole?

A black hole is an object whose gravity is so powerful that not even light can escape it.

Question: Escape Velocity The surface gravity force of a planet of mass M and radius R on a rocket of mass m is F = G × M × m ÷ R 2 To escape an object’s gravity, a rocket must overcome that force, which the rocket does by reaching escape velocity. If you increase the force, you increase the rocket’s required escape velocity. So… what happens to the escape velocity from an object if you shrink the object?

What happens to the escape velocity from an object if you shrink the object? 1.Escape velocity decreases, because radius decreases 2.Escape velocity doesn’t change, since the mass is the same 3.Escape velocity increases, because radius decreases

What happens to the escape velocity from an object if you shrink the object? 1.Escape velocity decreases, because radius decreases 2.Escape velocity doesn’t change, since the mass is the same 3.Escape velocity increases, because radius decreases

Escape Velocity Final Kinetic Energy Initial Gravitational Potential Energy = = (escape velocity) 2 G × (planet mass) 2 (planet radius)

Light would not be able to escape Earth’s surface if you could shrink the Earth to a radius < 1 cm

The “surface” of a black hole is the radius at which the escape velocity equals the speed of light.

This spherical surface is known as the event horizon.

The “surface” of a black hole is the radius at which the escape velocity equals the speed of light. This spherical surface is known as the event horizon. The radius of the event horizon is known as the Schwarzschild radius.

A black hole’s mass strongly warps space and time in vicinity of event horizon. Any mass (not just the mass in a black hole) does to three- dimensional space what a weight does to a two-dimensional rubber surface.

No Escape Nothing can escape from within the event horizon because nothing can go faster than light. No escape means there is no more contact with something that falls in. Whatever fell in increases the black hole mass, and can change the spin or charge of the black hole, but otherwise loses its identity (according to General Relativity, but maybe not according to Quantum Mechanics … Hawking’s theory of black hole evaporation).

Neutron Star Limit Quantum mechanics says that neutrons in the same place cannot be in the same state Neutron degeneracy pressure can no longer support a neutron star against gravity if its mass exceeds about 3 M sun (neutrons with the same state would have to move faster than light to avoid being in the same place at the same time) Some massive star supernovae can make a black hole if enough mass falls onto core

Beyond the neutron star limit, no known force can resist the crush of gravity. As far as we know, gravity crushes all the matter into a single point known as a singularity. Even if we are right, the singularity is inside the event horizon, so it will never be seen by the universe outside.

3 M Sun Black Hole The event horizon of a 3 M Sun black hole is also about as big as a small city Neutron star

Question Is it easy or difficult to fall into a black hole? A. Easy B. Difficult Hint: A black hole with the same mass as the Sun wouldn’t be much bigger than a university campus

How does the radius of the event horizon change when you add mass to a black hole? Hint: the escape velocity from any black hole is the speed of light = (escape velocity) 2 G × (object’s mass) 2 (object’s radius)

How does the radius of the event horizon change when you add mass to a black hole? 1.Decreases 2.Stays the same 3.Increases

How does the radius of the event horizon change when you add mass to a black hole? 1.Decreases 2.Stays the same 3.Increases

What would it be like to visit a black hole?

If the Sun shrank into a black hole, its gravity would be different only near the event horizon.

The Earth's orbit would not change if the Sun suddenly became a black hole.

If the Sun shrank into a black hole, its gravity would be different only near the event horizon. The Earth's orbit would not change if the Sun suddenly became a black hole. Black holes don’t suck!

Light waves take extra energy to climb out of the deep dip in spacetime near a black hole, leading to a gravitational redshift

Time passes more slowly near the event horizon

Tidal forces near the event horizon of a 3 M Sun black hole would be lethal to humans Tidal forces would be gentler near a supermassive black hole because its radius is much bigger

Do black holes really exist?

Black Hole Verification Need to measure mass  Use orbital properties of companion  Measure velocity and distance of orbiting gas It’s a black hole if it’s not a star and its mass exceeds the neutron star limit (~3 M Sun )

Some X-ray binaries contain compact objects of mass exceeding 5 M Sun which must be black holes

One famous X-ray binary with a likely black hole is in the constellation Cygnus

13.4 The Mystery of Gamma-Ray Bursts Our Goals for Learning What causes gamma ray bursts?

Gamma ray bursts may signal the births of new black holes

Some gamma ray bursts come from extreme supernovae (hypernovae?) in very distant galaxies; others from collisions of 2 neutron stars or a neutron star and a black hole in moderately distant galaxies.

What have we learned? What is a black hole? A black hole is a place where gravity has crushed matter into oblivion, creating a true hole in the universe from which nothing can ever escape, not even light.

What have we learned? What would it be like to visit a black hole? You could orbit a black hole just like any other object of the same mass. However, you’d see strange effects for an object falling toward the black hole: –Time would seem to run slowly for the object –Its light would be increasingly redshifted as it approached the black hole. –The object would never quite reach the event horizon, but it would soon disappear from view as its light became so redshifted that no instrument could detect it.

What have we learned? Do black holes really exist? No known force can stop the collapse of a stellar corpse with a mass above the neutron star limit of about 3 solar masses, and theoretical studies of supernovae suggest that such objects should sometimes form. Observational evidence supports this idea.

What have we learned? What causes gamma ray bursts? Gamma-ray bursts occur in distant galaxies and are the most powerful bursts of energy we observe anywhere in the universe. No one knows their precise cause, although at least some appear to come from unusually powerful supernovae.

Activity 25, Special Relativity Part I, page 83 Part IV, page 85-86

MOVING CLOCKS RUN SLOW

If a clock is moving relative to you, it runs slower than your watch, which is not moving relative to you.

MOVING CLOCKS RUN SLOW If a clock is moving relative to you, it runs slower than your watch, which is not moving relative to you. From the point of view of someone not moving relative to the clock, you and your watch are moving. So what that person sees is that your watch is running slow relative to their clock.

A CLOCK MOVING RELATIVE TO YOU RUNS SLOWER THAN A CLOCK NOT MOVING RELATIVE TO YOU If a clock is moving relative to you, it runs slower than your watch, which is not moving relative to you. TIME IS RELATIVE From the point of view of someone not moving relative to the clock, you and your watch are moving. So what that person sees is that your watch is running slow relative to their clock.