|   |  Astronomy Picture of the Day  | 
 APOD: 1997 January 15 – Black Hole Signature From Advective Disks
APOD: 1997 January 15 – Black Hole Signature From Advective Disks 
Explanation: 
What does a black hole look like?  If alone,
a black hole
would indeed appear
quite black, but many black hole candidates are part of binary star systems.
 So how does a black hole binary system
look different from a neutron star binary system?
 The above drawings indicate it
is difficult to tell!  Recent theoretical work,
however, has provided a new way to tell them apart: advective accretion flows (ADAFs).
 A black hole system so equipped
would appear much darker than a similar neutron star
system.  The difference is caused by the hot gas from the ADAF disk
falling through the event horizon
of the black hole and disappearing - gas that would have emitted
much light were the central object only a neutron star.  Recent observations
of the soft X-ray transient
V404 Cyg
has yielded a spectrum
much like an ADAF onto a  black hole
- and perhaps brighter than allowable from an ADAF onto a neutron
star.
 APOD: 2004 2002 September 8 – Too Close to a Black Hole
APOD: 2004 2002 September 8 – Too Close to a Black Hole 
 Explanation:  
What would you see if you went right up to a 
black hole? 
Above are two computer generated images 
highlighting how strange things would look. 
On the left is a normal star field containing the
constellation Orion. 
Notice the three stars of nearly equal brightness that make up 
Orion's Belt. 
On the right is the same star field but this time with a 
black hole superposed in the center of the frame. 
The 
black hole has such strong 
gravity that light is noticeably bent towards it - 
causing some very unusual 
visual distortions.
In the distorted frame, every star in the normal frame 
has at least two bright images - one on each side of the
black hole. 
In fact, near the 
black hole, you can see the whole sky - 
light from every direction is 
bent around and comes back to you. 
Black holes are thought to be the densest state of matter, 
and there is 
indirect evidence for their presence in 
stellar binary systems 
and the centers of 
globular clusters, 
galaxies, and 
quasars.
 APOD: 2004 February 24 - X-Rays Indicate Star Ripped Up by Black Hole
APOD: 2004 February 24 - X-Rays Indicate Star Ripped Up by Black Hole 
 Explanation: 
What could rip a star apart?  
A black hole.  
Giant black holes in just the right mass range would 
pull on the front of a closely passing star much more 
strongly than on the back.  
Such a strong tidal force would stretch out a star and 
likely cause some of the star's gasses to fall into the black hole.  
The infalling gas has been predicted 
to emit just the same blast of 
X-rays that have 
recently been seen in the center of galaxy 
RX J1242-11.  
Above, an artist's illustration depicts the 
sequence of destruction (assuming that 
image-distorting gravitational-lens effects of the 
black hole are somehow turned off).  
Most of the stellar remains would be flung out into the galaxy.  
Such events are rare, occurring perhaps only 
one in 10,000 years for typical 
black holes at the center of 
typical galaxies.
 Authors & editors: 
Robert Nemiroff
(MTU) &
Jerry Bonnell
(USRA)
NASA Web Site Statements, Warnings, and 
Disclaimers
 NASA Official:  Jay Norris.
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EUD at
NASA /
GSFC
& Michigan Tech. U.