Phil Armitage

  • Phil Armitage
    JILA Fellow Phil Armitage is moving on from the University of Colorado.
  • Computer simulation of a tidal disruption event involving a pair of supermassive black holes in the center of a recently merged galaxy.
    Galaxy mergers routinely occur in our Universe. And, when they take place, it takes years for the supermassive black holes at their centers to merge into a new, bigger supermassive black hole. However, a very interesting thing can happen when two black holes get close enough to orbit each other every 3–4 months, something that happens just before the two black holes begin their final desperate plunge into each other.
  • Magnetized accretion disks around different black holes.
    Graduate student Greg Salvesen, JILA Collaborator Jake Simon (Southwest Research Institute), and Fellows Phil Armitage and Mitch Begelman decided they wanted to figure out why swirling disks of gas (accretion disks) around black holes often appear strongly magnetized. They also wanted to figure out the mechanism that allowed this magnetization to persist over time.
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