What Does a Black Hole Look Like?

What Does a Black Hole Look Like?

by Charles D. Bailyn
What Does a Black Hole Look Like?

What Does a Black Hole Look Like?

by Charles D. Bailyn

Hardcover(New Edition)

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Overview

A sophisticated introduction to how astronomers identify, observe, and understand black holes

Emitting no radiation or any other kind of information, black holes mark the edge of the universe—both physically and in our scientific understanding. Yet astronomers have found clear evidence for the existence of black holes, employing the same tools and techniques used to explore other celestial objects. In this sophisticated introduction, leading astronomer Charles Bailyn goes behind the theory and physics of black holes to describe how astronomers are observing these enigmatic objects and developing a remarkably detailed picture of what they look like and how they interact with their surroundings.

Accessible to undergraduates and others with some knowledge of introductory college-level physics, this book presents the techniques used to identify and measure the mass and spin of celestial black holes. These key measurements demonstrate the existence of two kinds of black holes, those with masses a few times that of a typical star, and those with masses comparable to whole galaxies—supermassive black holes. The book provides a detailed account of the nature, formation, and growth of both kinds of black holes. The book also describes the possibility of observing theoretically predicted phenomena such as gravitational waves, wormholes, and Hawking radiation.

A cutting-edge introduction to a subject that was once on the border between physics and science fiction, this book shows how black holes are becoming routine objects of empirical scientific study.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780691148823
Publisher: Princeton University Press
Publication date: 08/31/2014
Series: Princeton Frontiers in Physics , #4
Edition description: New Edition
Pages: 224
Product dimensions: 5.20(w) x 8.10(h) x 0.90(d)

About the Author

Charles D. Bailyn is the A. Bartlett Giamatti Professor of Astronomy and Physics at Yale University. He is currently serving as dean of faculty at Yale-NUS College in Singapore. He was awarded the 2009 Bruno Rossi Prize from the American Astronomical Society for his work on measuring the masses of black holes.

Table of Contents

PREFACE xi

1. Introducing Black Holes: Event Horizons and Singularities 1

1.1 Escape Velocity and Event Horizons 3

1.2 The Metric 6

1.3 What Is a Black Hole? 11

2. Accretion onto a Black Hole 13

2.1 Spherical Accretion and the Eddington Limit 14

2.2 Standard Accretion Disks 17

2.3 Radiatively Inefficient Accretion Flows 23

2.4 Accretion Instabilities 24

2.5 Radiation Emission Mechanisms 27

2.6 Radiative Transfer 32

2.7 The α-Disk 35

3. Outflows and Jets 43

3.1 Superluminal Motion 45

3.2 Jet Physics and Magnetohydrodynamics 48

4. Stellar-Mass Black Holes 53

4.1 X-Ray Binaries 54

4.2 Varieties of X-Ray Binaries 58

4.3 X-Ray Accretion States 60

4.4 Compact Objects 63

4.5 Mass Measurements in X-Ray Binaries 68

4.6 Are High-Mass Compact Objects Black Holes? 73

4.7 Isolated Stellar-Mass Black Holes 76

4.8 The Chandrasekhar Limit 79

5. Supermassive Black Holes 84

5.1 Discovery of Quasars 85

5.2 Active Galaxies and Unification 88

5.3 Superluminal Jets and Blazars 94

5.4 Nonaccreting Central Black Holes 98

5.5 Mass Determinations for Extragalactic SMBHs 99

6. Formation and Evolution of Black Holes 106

6.1 Stellar-Mass Black Holes 107

6.2 Supermassive Black Holes 119

7. Do Intermediate-Mass Black Holes Exist? 127

7.1 Ultraluminous X-Ray Binaries 127

7.2 Black Holes in Star Clusters and Low-Mass Galaxies 132

8. Black Hole Spin 135

8.1 The Innermost Stable Circular Orbit 137

8.2 Observations of the ISCO through Line Emission 139

8.3 Observations of the ISCO through Thermal Emission 144

8.4 Consequences of Spin for Jets and Other Phenomena 147

9. Detecting Black Holes through Gravitational Waves 150

9.1 Gravitational Waves and Their Effects 152

9.2 Binary Pulsars 156

9.3 Direct Detection of Gravity Waves 158

9.4 Detecting Astrophysical Signals 163

10. Black Hole Exotica 167

10.1 Hawking Radiation 167

10.2 Primordial Black Holes 171

10.3 Wormholes 174

10.4 Multiverses 176

GLOSSARY 179

INDEX 187

What People are Saying About This

From the Publisher

"This book goes straight to the heart of astronomical intuition and evidence about black holes. Written in a highly accessible style, it provides enough information to educate an undergraduate astronomy or physics major without going into the many details required in a graduate class. I think students will greatly enjoy this book and derive significant insight from it."—Coleman Miller, University of Maryland, College Park

"Providing the essential information on all the key topics, this concise and authoritative book covers the whole field of empirical black-hole studies."—W. Niel Brandt, Pennsylvania State University

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