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posted by martyb on Sunday May 19 2019, @07:10AM   Printer-friendly
from the edible-neighbors dept.

Previously Reported Black hole V404 is back in the news, last time it was for stripping and eating material from a companion star in its orbit. This time it is for being a bit tipsy while it was at it.

While munching on its neighbor, V404 shot out bright jets of plasma into space. This isn't unusual for a black hole, however it normally occurs in a particular fashion. Emanating from the poles in a consistent direction.

a closer look at these jets revealed that instead they appeared to be firing in a wobbling pattern known as procession[sic].

On Monday, in the journal Nature, James Miller-Jones, and his team of researchers from the International Center for Radio Astronomy Research in Australia, published their observations on the 2015 event and offered an explanation for V404 Cygni's odd behaviour. The black hole is misaligned.

"We were gobsmacked by what we saw in this system — it was completely unexpected," said the University of Alberta's Gregory Sivakoff in a statement from the National Radio Astronomy Observatory.

V404 is surrounded by an accretion disk approximately six million miles (9.7 million kilometers) wide. Typically this disk spinning about a black hole does so on the same axis as the black hole itself. In V404's case it does not.

That misalignment was likely caused by the force of the supernova that created the created the Black Hole in the first place and combined with a phenomenon known as frame dragging it creates the spinning [top] like wobbling effect.

Frame Dragging happens when "the intense gravitational force of the black hole pulls space-time around it as it spins."

8,000 light years from Earth, V404 is the first black hole 'observed' behaving in this fashion.


Original Submission

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The cookie monster part is my own personal spin but...

According to a recent paper (DOI: 10.1093/mnras/stw571) :

In June 2015, a black hole called V404 Cygni underwent dramatic brightening for about two weeks, as it devoured material that it had stripped off an orbiting companion star.

the black hole emitted dazzling red flashes lasting just fractions of a second, as it blasted out material that it could not swallow.
nom, nom, nom

Each flash was blindingly intense, equivalent to the power output of about 1,000 suns, and some of the flashes were shorter than 1/40th of a second — about ten times faster than the duration of a typical blink of an eye. Such observations require novel technology, so astronomers used the ULTRACAM fast imaging camera mounted on the William Herschel Telescope in La Palma, on the Canary Islands.

Original article is here...
http://www.southampton.ac.uk/news/2016/03/red-flares-black-hole.page


Original Submission

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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Sunday May 19 2019, @08:34AM (1 child)

    by Anonymous Coward on Sunday May 19 2019, @08:34AM (#845206)

    "The mind wobbles!" [imgflip.com]

    And just as unseriously, given the gravity well, there are likely relativistic effects nearby too.

    As such, isn't it really wibbly-wobbly, timey-wimey, and not just wobbly?

    Just sayin'.

    • (Score: 2) by aristarchus on Sunday May 19 2019, @09:19AM

      by aristarchus (2645) on Sunday May 19 2019, @09:19AM (#845207) Journal

      Black holes are smaller on the inside than they are on the outside. Supermassively so. Kind of a reverse-Tardis.

  • (Score: 2) by Runaway1956 on Sunday May 19 2019, @03:42PM (2 children)

    by Runaway1956 (2926) Subscriber Badge on Sunday May 19 2019, @03:42PM (#845253) Journal

    "We were gobsmacked by what we saw in this system — it was completely unexpected,"

    <sarcasm> Thankfully, we know so much now, that we'll never be gobsmacked again!! <sarcasm>

    • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Sunday May 19 2019, @05:15PM (1 child)

      by Anonymous Coward on Sunday May 19 2019, @05:15PM (#845270)

      we'll never be gobsmacked again

      Runaway, "smacking the gob" does not mean what you think it means, you wanker!

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