Why LIGO's Black Holes Probably Didn't Come From a Single Star 46
An anonymous reader writes: Ever since LIGO first announced the direct detection of gravitational waves from two merging black holes, the physics and astronomy community has been struggling to understand an unexpected phenomenon that appears to have come along with it: a short-period gamma ray burst. Arriving just 0.4 seconds after the gravitational waves did, the Fermi satellite's detection doesn't line up with models of black hole mergers. It's thought that short-period GRBs originate from neutron star-neutron star mergers, and so seeing this has led to speculation of new physics, including from Avi Loeb at Harvard that perhaps LIGO's twin black holes came from inside the same star. However, this explanation is exceedingly unlikely, and there are a number of astrophysical explanations that don't require new physics like Loeb's explanation would.
No Forbes link please (Score:5, Insightful)
On scientific matter Forbes is really not the appropriate source.
Re:No Forbes link please (Score:5, Interesting)
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I have several aggressive ad blockers, privacy guard add-ons and even an ad blocker blocker and Forbes works fine for me. I only need to click deep links twice for some reason.
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"their site is worthless if you have an adblocker"
They're doing you a favor, since the articles have negative value.
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Re: No Forbes link please (Score:2)
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No Neutrinos Supports This (Score:2)
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Warning: Forbes link (Score:2, Funny)
The last link goes to StartsWithABang.
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Speaking of black holes...
Millisecond pulsars (Score:2, Informative)
There are millisecond pulsars, which are pulsars with a frequency above 1 Hz. The fastest rotating pulsar is PSR J1748-2446ad, with a frequency of 716 Hz. It's estimated that at the surface of the pulsar, at its equator, moves at 24% of the speed of light. It's pretty remarkable, but it's hardly the only millisecond pulsar. Now imagine if during the course of a star's death it became asymmetrical enough that the rotation caused it to develop a dumbbell shape. That could conceivably lead to binary neutron st
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The relativity common is around six events like this a year I believe. Or at least that was what the guy who designed/built a bunch of the electronics in the detector said in the Colloquium on Wednesday if I recall correctly.
My understanding is when the upgrades to advanced LIGO (LIGO was an older detector/experiment) are finished they should be able to detect neutron stars coalescing which is believed to be a far more common occurrence. Probably several times a week; again from memory,
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IIRC six a year was what they were expecting when they designed LIGO. There was some speculation (not sure how reliable) that that rate might be a bit low, since there were (I believe) two or three other possibilities already in the data.
Hypothetic discussion (Score:4, Informative)
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No, more like a flounder.
Single star to black hole (Score:2)
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Sources of Gravitational Waves [ligo.org]
"In general, any acceleration that is not spherically or cylindrically symmetric will produce a gravitational wave. Consider a star that goes supernova. This explosion will produce gravitational waves if the mass is not ejected in a spherically symmetric way, although the center of mass may be in the same position before and after the explosion. Another example is a spinning star. A perfectly spherical star will not produce a gravitational wave, but a lumpy star will."
"There
Detection not just creation (Score:3)
Why can't a single massive star collapsing into a black hole not trigger gravitational waves
It's not just a matter of producing the waves you need to produce a large enough amplitude that you can detect it. Planets orbiting stars should in theory produce gravitational waves too but the masses and accelerations involved create such a tiny amplitude at such a low frequency that even within the solar system we can't detect that source.
Re:Single star to black hole (Score:4, Informative)
The signal they detected has a quickly increasing frequency and amplitude, then a ringdown. You can't get that with a supernova, but it fits well what's expected from a couple of black holes spiraling together and merging. Thriip.
Gravity waves to gamma rays? (Score:2)
What is high-intensity grav radiation LIKE? (Score:3)
This boggles my mind, too -- that much energy radiated away as gravitational waves in a fraction of a second.
I have some referents for electromagnetic radiation -- I know what, say, a kilojoule of light is like, and what it can do when radiated over a few seconds or a few milliseconds. But what would it be like to have your body exposed to a gravitational wave pulse carrying several kilojoules, or megajoules, or terajoules? Would you even notice?