Black Holes: X-rays, Gamma Rays & Light Emission

In summary, X-rays and gamma rays can escape from a black hole's event horizon through the emission of superheated accretion disks or through Hawking radiation. However, black holes themselves do not emit light. To observe these emissions, space-based or sensitive, Earth-based observatories are used.
  • #1
Pakbabydoll
45
0
IF nothing can escape from a black hole's event horizon,
then how do x-rays and Gamma rays escape? and how does it emits light?
it says in "Brief History of Time" that the light it emits is just at the boundary of the event horizon. So then how does it escape the gravity and reach earth? (x-rays) since Gamma rays can't get through the atmosphere. :uhh:
 
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  • #2
In most cases it will be a superheated accretion disk that is generating the X-ray emmisions. As you can imagine when somehing falls toward a black hole it loses an enormous amount of potential energy and this will heat an accretion disk to the point where it emits x-rays. Black holes do not emit light, but stuff that has not crossed the event horizon can.

You may find the following link interesting as it has a lot of information about X-ray binaries.

http://imagine.gsfc.nasa.gov/docs/science/know_l2/binaries.html
 
  • #3
Even a black hole without accretion disk will emmit extremely faint radiation - the so called Hawking radiation. It is a speculative quantum calculation first done by Hawking showing that the observer at infinity detects flux of particles comming from the black hole. The flux was formed during the formation of the black hole just outside its horizon.

An eternal black hole (not formed by collapse of matter) doesn't emmit Hawking radiation.

The calculation is speculative because it was done in a 'semiclassical approximation' to Quantum gravity, a theory yet to be created.
 
  • #4
Pakbabydoll said:
So then how does it escape the gravity and reach earth? (x-rays) since Gamma rays can't get through the atmosphere. :uhh:
Space observatories? Sensitive, Earth-based observatories? This seems an unrelated question to your first one about BHs.
 

1. What are black holes?

Black holes are regions in space where the gravitational pull is so strong that even light cannot escape. They are formed when a massive star dies and its core collapses under its own weight.

2. How do black holes emit X-rays, gamma rays, and light?

When matter falls into a black hole, it becomes extremely heated and emits high-energy radiation in the form of X-rays, gamma rays, and light. This is caused by friction and compression as the matter accelerates towards the black hole's event horizon.

3. Can we see black holes?

No, black holes themselves cannot be seen as they do not emit any light. However, we can observe the effects of black holes on their surroundings, such as the emission of X-rays, gamma rays, and light, and the distortion of light from stars and galaxies behind them.

4. How do scientists study black holes?

Scientists use a variety of tools and techniques to study black holes. These include telescopes that can detect X-rays, gamma rays, and other high-energy radiation, as well as computer simulations and mathematical models.

5. Are black holes dangerous to Earth?

No, black holes are not a threat to Earth. The closest known black hole is located about 1,000 light years away, which is too far to cause any harm. Additionally, black holes do not actively seek out and consume matter, and their gravitational pull would need to be much stronger to affect Earth's orbit.

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