Dubbelosix Posted March 22, 2019 Report Posted March 22, 2019 And those "short bursts from the poles" are what the article is about. Yes? yes. Quote
Dubbelosix Posted March 22, 2019 Report Posted March 22, 2019 More or less, yes. By the way, thinking about this some more, I should add there are other ways for gravitational potential energy to be converted into electromagnetic radiation more directly, near the edge of a black hole. There is something called "synchrotron radiation", in which charged particles drawn in by gravity encounter a magnetic field from the black hole and are thereby caused to move in a circular trajectory. This causes them to emit EM radiation. This mechanism is in fact proposed for "jets" of EM radiation seen in astronomy. More here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Synchrotron_radiation#Synchrotron_radiation_in_astronomy This radiation comes from the accelerated charges in the accretion disk and will of course supply a lot of energy coming from a black hole contributing to the luminosity of the quasar. Quote
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