Astrophysics

  • A model of black hole flares
    Dexter is one of the 347 scientists who worked on the Event Horizon Telescope.
  • While we've known for a while that black holes could rip stars apart, we don鈥檛 know why these events occur so聽frequently. Now, a model by JILA researchers explaining this discrepancy is shown to be promising after passing its first reality test.
    While we've known for a while that black holes could rip stars apart, we don鈥檛 know why these events occur so聽frequently. Now, a model by JILA researchers explaining this discrepancy is shown to be promising after passing its first reality test.
  • Phil Armitage
    JILA Fellow Phil Armitage is moving on from the University of Colorado.
  • Photo of Anne-Marie Madigan
    A 蜜桃传媒破解版下载 researcher who investigates the unusual behavior of icy objects at the outermost edges of the solar system has been named a 2018 Packard Fellow.聽Ann-Marie Madigan is one of 18 scientists and engineers receiving this honor, which is聽handed out annually by the David and Lucile Packard Foundation. The award comes with a no-strings-attached, 5-year grant of $875,000 to support 鈥渢he blue-sky thinking鈥 of researchers across the country.
  • Photograph of the Crab Nebula.
    The lovely Crab Nebula was created by a supernova and its spinning-neutron-star remnant known as a pulsar. Pulsar wind nebulae, such as the Crab, shine because they contain plasmas of charged particles, such as electrons and positrons, traveling at near the speed of light. A key question in astrophysics has long been: What process accelerates some of the charged particles in plasmas to energies much higher than the average particle energy, giving them near light speeds?
  • Artist鈥檚 concept of the Super-Earth planet Gliese 832 c.
    Astrophysicist Jeff Linsky and his colleagues recently created a sophisticated mathematical model of the outer atmosphere of the small M-dwarf star called GJ832. The new model fits well with spectral observations of the star made with the Hubble Space Telescope (HST). This accomplishment bodes well for two reasons: First, it provides a tool for better understanding M-dwarf stars鈥撯搕he most common type of star in our galaxy.
  • 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鈥4 months, something that happens just before the two black holes begin their final desperate plunge into each other.
  • Image illustrating the the tidal disruption of a star by a supermassive black hole.
    When an ordinary star like our Sun wanders very close to a supermassive black hole, it鈥檚 very bad news for the star. The immense gravitational pull of the black hole (i.e., tidal forces) overcomes the forces of gravity holding the star together and literally pulls the star apart. Over time, the black hole swallows half of the star stuff, while the other half escapes into the interstellar medium. This destructive encounter between a supermassive black hole and a star is known as a tidal disruption event.
  • An accretion disk forms stars around a black hole's equator at the same time the black hole is feasting on vast amounts of matter.
    Fellow Mitch Begelman鈥檚 new theory says it鈥檚 possible to form stars while a supermassive black hole consumes massive amounts of stellar debris and other interstellar matter. What鈥檚 more, there鈥檚 evidence that this is exactly what happened around the black hole at the center of the Milky Way some 4鈥6 million years ago, according to Associate Fellow Ann-Marie Madigan.
  • 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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