Posted on 12/29/2011 9:54:25 PM PST by SunkenCiv
Explanation: The monster at the center of our Galaxy is about to get fed. Recent observations by the Very Large Telescopes indicate that a cloud of gas will venture too close to the supermassive black hole at the Galactic center. The gas cloud is being disrupted, stretched out, heated up, and some of it is expected to fall into the black hole over the next two years. In this artist's illustration, what remains of the blob after a close pass to the black hole is shown in red and yellow, arching out from the gravitational death trap to its right. The cloud's orbit is shown in red, while the orbits of central stars are shown in blue. The infalling nebula is estimated to contain several times the mass of our Earth, while the central black hole, thought to correspond to the radio source Sagittariaus A*, contains about four million times the mass of our Sun. Once it falls in, nothing is expected to be heard from the doomed gas ever again.
(Excerpt) Read more at 129.164.179.22 ...
[Illustration Credit: ESO/MPE/Marc Schartmann]
Very cool. Thanks for posting, I love these pics.
My pleasure. I love insomnia. ;’)
They infer their orbits using an inferometer, right?
And misery loves company.
Two things, one is black holes don’t “suck in” anything. They have exactly the same mass as their components. Yes, gravity has compressed them to the point that at their surface light gets bent back in, but you can safely orbit a black hole with no trouble.
Second, for an astronomy article, this one misses a big point: This gas cloud had its encounter with the Milky Way singularity some 50,000 years ago. We’re just lucky in that we happen to be in a position technologically to see the sequence after the fact, since the photons that reflect this event are just now reaching us. /pedantic
Was thinking the same thing it’s already happened we’re just watching the movie now (darned late releases). The other thing I was surprised about is they didn’t mention the possibility of any X-ray type emissions which I’ve heard can occur when things are “gobbled”.
” Once it falls in, nothing is expected to be heard from the doomed gas ever again.”
But will you be able to smell it? (Sorry - couldn’t help myself)
“...you can safely orbit a black hole with no trouble.”
How often have you done that?
I’m still only bullseye-ing womp rats in my T-16, but better astrophysicists than me tell me that it is no more difficult to orbit a black hole than it is to orbit a star or any other object.
;’)
Pull my extremely elongated finger. ;’)
It can be done that way.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Interferometry
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Optical_interferometry
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Very_Long_Baseline_Interferometry
Black holes suck in Mecca, but then, everything sucks in Mecca.
Maybe you can. X radiation and gravitational sheering effect does a number on the hull of most spacecraft that try that maneuver!
Are you sure? Because I saw a movie once in which a black hole sucked things in and you know the movies are pretty much based on sound science... ;)
Diner - as in a place which serves food, as opposed to one who dines, reminded me of Millaways - The Restaurant at the End of the Universe, from “The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy” series. (Don’t Panic)
Just don’t get closer than 3 Schwarzschild radii and you’ll do just fine - I’ve followed that particular advice and have been happily orbiting the black hole in question for close to 46 years.
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