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TIME AND SPACE
Black holes don't need to spin to spit out jets
by Brooks Hays
Boston (UPI) Nov 18, 2015


disclaimer: image is for illustration purposes only

Jet streams emanating or pulsing outward from stellar objects are often the result of rotational forces. Spinning has long been the explanation for the jets of black holes.

But astronomers at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics have spotted two non-spinning black holes in the galaxy M82 with similarly powerful jets, suggesting rotation is not the prerequisite scientists thought it was.

The discovery highlights a larger truth about black holes. The holes themselves are rather simple -- defined by their mass, spin and electric charge -- while their surrounding architecture and cosmic accouterments are less well understood.

Rotation-powered jets are spawned by a black hole's accretion disk, the ring of condensed material that forms as gas and debris is pulled in from the surrounding space. As the accretion disk spins with the black hole, ionized particles are flung outward -- sometimes at close to the speed of light. In addition to rotational forces, the power of localized magnetic fields are also involved in fueling the jets.

But in a new paper, published in the Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, astronomers suggest jets can also be powered by the intense radiation of hot gas.

As radiation is pulled in by a black hole's gravity and packed into the accretion disk, it can under some circumstances become so pressurized that jet particles are driven outward at nearly half the speed of light. The discovery may explain the phenomenon of narrow ultraluminous X-ray beams scientist have observed near black holes of roughly ten solar-masses in size.


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Previous Report
TIME AND SPACE
Black Hole Has Major Flare
Pasadena CA (JPL) Oct 28, 2015
The baffling and strange behaviors of black holes have become somewhat less mysterious recently, with new observations from NASA's Explorer missions Swift and the Nuclear Spectroscopic Telescope Array, or NuSTAR. The two space telescopes caught a supermassive black hole in the midst of a giant eruption of X-ray light, helping astronomers address an ongoing puzzle: How do supermassive black holes ... read more


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