Learn about new developments in the study of supermassive black holes. Through the capture and analysis of twenty years of high-resolution imaging, the UCLA Galactic Center Group has moved the case for a supermassive black hole at the center of our galaxy from a possibility to a certainty and provided the best evidence to date for the existence of these truly exotic objects. This was made possible with the first measurements of stellar orbits around a galactic nucleus. Further advances in state-of-the-art of high-resolution imaging technology on the world’s largest telescopes have greatly expanded the power of using stellar orbits to study black holes. Recent observations have revealed an environment around the black hole that is quite unexpected (young stars where there should be none; a lack of old stars where there should be many; and a puzzling new class of objects). Continued measurements of the motions of stars have solved many of the puzzles posed by these perplexing populations of stars. This work is providing insight into how black holes grow and the role that they play in regulating the growth of their host galaxies. Measurements this past year of stellar orbits at the Galactic Center have provided new insight on how gravity works near a supermassive hole, a new and unexplored regime for this fundamental force of nature.
時間:2021.05.12(三) 07:30~08:30
頻道:
●Facebook live
●YouTube live: RASCANADA channel
講者:Prof. Andrea Ghez(2020 Nobel Prize for Physics Laureate)
【此屬轉載訊息,以主事單位發佈為準】
主辦單位
●The Royal Astronomical Society of Canada
●Canadian Astronomical Society - Société Canadienne d’Astronomie
●IREx - Institut de recherche sur les exoplanètes
此活動由The Royal Astronomical Society of Canada & SocSociété Canadienne d’Astronomie & Institut de recherche sur les exoplanètes主辦。