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Location: Mothership -> UFO -> Updates -> 1998 -> Sep -> Re: 'Supermassive' Black Hole Found In Center Of

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Re: 'Supermassive' Black Hole Found In Center Of

From: Stig Agermose <Stig_Agermose@online.pol.dk>
Date: Wed, 9 Sep 1998 02:20:26 +0200
Fwd Date: Wed, 09 Sep 1998 11:27:11 -0400
Subject: Re: 'Supermassive' Black Hole Found In Center Of


Source: ScienceDaily

http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/1998/09/980908074632.htm

Links are preceded by asterisks.

Stig

*******

Source: *National Science Foundation

Posted=BF9/8/98
'Supermassive' Black Hole Found In The Center Of Our Galaxy 

The presence of an enormous black hole at the center of our
galaxy has been detected by a researcher funded, in part, by the
National Science Foundation (NSF). The evidence is being
reported this week at the Central Parsecs Galactic Center
Workshop '98 in Tucson, Arizona, by Andrea Ghez, of the
University of California-Los Angeles.

"What lies in the center of the Milky Way has been one of this
century's 'big' science questions," said Terry Oswalt, NSF
program manager for Stellar Astronomy and Astrophysics. "Ghez's
work has massive implications on our understanding of how
galaxies evolve."

Black holes are formed from the remnants of collapsed stars. A
black hole consists of a large mass compacted so densely that
not even light can escape its force of gravity. Since Ghez could
not directly see a black hole, she inferred its presence by
searching for the gravitational influence it imposes on nearby
objects she could see, namely stars.

In 1995, using the Keck I Telescope atop Mauna Kea in Hawaii,
Ghez began tracking the movement of 200 stars near the galactic
center. She found at least 20 stars that exhibited the telling
signs of influence by extreme gravitational forces.

These stars are spiraling around the black hole at speeds of up
to three million miles per hour-about 10 times the speed at
which stars typically move. In order to account for the rapid
speeds of these stars, Ghez determined that an object 2.6
million times more massive than our Sun must be concentrated
into a single black hole.

Just getting a clear view of the center of our galaxy is an
impressive feat in itself. To overcome the distortion created by
the Earth's atmosphere, Ghez made her observations using a
technique called "infrared speckle interferometry." The
procedure, which she helped develop, uses computers to analyze
thousands of high-speed, high-resolution snapshots.

The result: an image that has at least 20 times better
resolution than those made by traditional earthbound imaging
techniques. "It's like putting on glasses," said Ghez.

Using this technique in 1995, Ghez witnessed the disappearance
of a star that was, at the time, the closest object to the black
hole. Whether the star was sucked into the black hole, or simply
went behind it, scientists may never know.

But we have little to fear about a similar fate for Earth, since
the center of the Milky Way galaxy is approximately 24,000 light
years away. Because of the Earth's position on an outer arm of
the spiraling Milky Way, much of our knowledge about galaxies
does not come from our own. Ghez's research, however, gives us a
definitive view about a part of Galaxy that we have never seen
before.

"There is an incredible amount of matter between us and the
center of the Milky Way to obscure our view," said Oswalt. "Ghez
has pulled the living room shades open a bit and finally given
us a good look at what's going on in our own backyard."

The Central Parsecs Galactic Center Workshop '98, is being held
in Tucson, Arizona from September 7 to 11. For more information,
contact Alaina Levine at (520) 621-4969, or visit the website
at:

http://www.mpifr-bonn.mpg.de/gc98

Copyright =A9 1995-98 ScienceDaily Magazine | Email:

editor@sciencedaily.com

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