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Community shelf Community shelf -> did u know:Even thin galaxies can grow to massive black holes?? THis article has grt pics. -> Go to message
This Post 0 points    (Olaaa!! Perrrfect answer.   in 0 votes )   [?]
17 replies   
after rating, plz do leave your gracious comments here!
Catalogs Discussion Forums -> Integral Calculus -> solve: JEE Integration question I: All math genii invited... -> Go to message
This Post 0 points    (Olaaa!! Perrrfect answer.   in 0 votes )   [?]
7 replies   
oh yes, saw it..
did u rate my article yet??
Community shelf Community shelf -> did u know:Even thin galaxies can grow to massive black holes?? THis article has grt pics. -> Go to message
This Post 0 points    (Olaaa!! Perrrfect answer.   in 0 votes )   [?]
17 replies   
hey guys ,see what cool pics are there?
Catalogs Discussion Forums -> General -> Hey everyone!! Check out the cool article on black holes(below)..Plz rate if u like it.. -> Go to message
This Post 0 points    (Olaaa!! Perrrfect answer.   in 0 votes )   [?]
8 replies   
If Your'e not reading the article,your'e cerainly missing something very special......
Catalogs Discussion Forums -> Integral Calculus -> solve: JEE Integration question I: All math genii invited... -> Go to message
This Post 0 points    (Olaaa!! Perrrfect answer.   in 0 votes )   [?]
7 replies   
hey fennyman;
I wanted only the integration in detail.
The rest,toh i know.
By the way ,check out my cool article on blaack holes.PLZ DO RATE.
Catalogs Discussion Forums -> General -> Hey everyone!! Check out the cool article on black holes(below)..Plz rate if u like it.. -> Go to message
This Post 0 points    (Olaaa!! Perrrfect answer.   in 0 votes )   [?]
8 replies   
Hey everyone!! Check out the cool article on black holes..Plz rate if u like it..
Community shelf Community shelf -> did u know:Even thin galaxies can grow to massive black holes?? THis article has grt pics. -> Go to message
This Post 0 points    (Olaaa!! Perrrfect answer.   in 0 votes )   [?]
17 replies   
Thanx alot sti, can u encourage others to rate the article..
Community shelf Community shelf -> did u know:Even thin galaxies can grow to massive black holes?? THis article has grt pics. -> Go to message
This Post 0 points    (Olaaa!! Perrrfect answer.   in 0 votes )   [?]
17 replies   
This article is great .With pictures like the,i will give a perfect rating.
Catalogs Discussion Forums -> Integral Calculus -> solve: JEE Integration question I: All math genii invited... -> Go to message
This Post 0 points    (Olaaa!! Perrrfect answer.   in 0 votes )   [?]
7 replies   
Come on guys, dont u know yo integrate??
Community shelf Community shelf -> did u know:Even thin galaxies can grow to massive black holes?? THis article has grt pics. -> Go to message
This Post 42 points    (Olaaa!! Perrrfect answer.   in 9 votes )   [?]
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Even Thin Galaxies Can Grow Fat Black Holes
01.10.08
 
This artist's concept illustrates the two types of spiral galaxies that populate our universe. This artist's concept illustrates the two types of spiral galaxies that populate our universe: those with plump middles, or central bulges (upper left), and those lacking the bulge (foreground). Image credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech
? Full image and caption
NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope has detected plump black holes where least expected -- skinny galaxies.


Like people, galaxies come in different shapes and sizes. There are thin spirals both with and without central bulges of stars, and more rotund ellipticals that are themselves like giant bulges. Scientists have long held that all galaxies except the slender, bulgeless spirals harbor supermassive black holes at their cores. Furthermore, bulges were thought to be required for black holes to grow.
                                            
The new Spitzer observations throw this theory into question. The infrared telescope surveyed 32 flat and bulgeless galaxies and detected monstrous black holes lurking in the bellies of seven of them. The results imply that galaxy bulges are not necessary for black hole growth; instead, a mysterious invisible substance in galaxies called dark matter could play a role.


"This finding challenges the current paradigm. The fact that galaxies without bulges have black holes means that the bulges cannot be the determining factor, " said Shobita Satyapal of the George Mason University, Fairfax, Va. "It's possible that the dark matter that fills the halos around galaxies plays an important role in the early development of supermassive black holes."

Satyapal presented the findings today at the 211th meeting of the American Astronomical Society in Austin, Texas. A study from Satyapal and her team will be published in the April 10 issue of the Astrophysical Journal.  A massive black hole  

Our own Milky Way is an example of a spiral galaxy with a bulge; from the side, it would look like a plane seen head-on, with its wings out to the side. Its black hole, though dormant and not actively "feeding," is several million times the mass of our sun.

Previous observations had suggested that bulges and black holes flourished together like symbiotic species. For instance, supermassive black holes are almost always about 0.2 percent the mass of their galaxies' bulges. In other words, the more massive the bulge, the more massive the black hole. Said Satyapal, "Scientists reasoned that somehow the formation and growth of galaxy bulges and their central black holes are intimately connected."

But a wrinkle appeared in this theory in 2003, when astronomers at the University of California, Berkeley, and Observatories of the Carnegie Institution of Washington, Pasadena, Calif., discovered a relatively "lightweight" supermassive black hole in a galaxy lacking a bulge. Then, earlier this year, Satyapal and her team uncovered a second supermassive black hole in a similarly svelte galaxy.

In the latest study, Satyapal and her colleagues report the discovery of six more hefty black holes in thin galaxies with minimal bulges, further weakening the "bulge-black hole" theory. Why hadn't anybody seen these black holes before? According to the scientists, bulgeless galaxies tend to be very dusty, letting little visible light escape. But infrared light can penetrate dust, so the team was able to use Spitzer's infrared spectrograph to reveal the "fingerprints" of active black holes lurking in galaxies millions of light years away.

"A feeding black hole spits out high-energy light that ionizes much of the gas in the core of the galaxy," said Satyapal. "In this case, Spitzer identified the unique fingerprint of highly ionized neon -- only a feeding black hole has the energy needed to excite neon to this state." The precise masses of the newfound black holes are unknown.

If bulges aren't necessary ingredients for baking up supermassive black holes, then perhaps dark matter is. Dark matter is the enigmatic substance that permeates galaxies and their surrounding halos, accounting for up to 90 percent of a galaxy's mass. So-called normal matter makes up stars, planets, living creatures and everything we see around us, whereas dark matter can't be seen. Only its gravitational effects can be felt. According to Satyapal, dark matter might somehow determine the mass of a black hole early on in the development of a galaxy.
 
 
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Catalogs Discussion Forums -> Integral Calculus -> solve: JEE Integration question I: All math genii invited... -> Go to message
This Post 0 points    (Olaaa!! Perrrfect answer.   in 0 votes )   [?]
7 replies   
any forum expert ??
Catalogs Discussion Forums -> Integral Calculus -> solve: JEE Integration question I: All math genii invited... -> Go to message
This Post 0 points    (Olaaa!! Perrrfect answer.   in 0 votes )   [?]
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Anyone good enough there?**
Catalogs Discussion Forums -> Integral Calculus -> solve: JEE Integration question I: All math genii invited... -> Go to message
This Post 0 points    (Olaaa!! Perrrfect answer.   in 0 votes )   [?]
7 replies   
integrate and solve for t:
 
[0][2R] dx=[0][t] dt/(1/vo-1/r),
where r=radius;
         x=displacement
         t=time;
         vo:velocity;
        
answer is given: t=r/vo(1-e-2)
Catalogs Discussion Forums -> Mechanics -> An object attched to vertical spring is slowly lowered -> Go to message
This Post 0 points    (Olaaa!! Perrrfect answer.   in 0 votes )   [?]
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Come on rate me!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Catalogs Discussion Forums -> Mechanics -> An object attched to vertical spring is slowly lowered -> Go to message
This Post 2 points    (Olaaa!! Perrrfect answer.   in 1 votes )   [?]
9 replies   
Hey crack!
if you think i was right,why dont't you give me a rating.
 
 
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