15.6 Stellar Evolution and Black Holes: V N P e
15.6 Stellar Evolution and Black Holes: V N P e
15.6 Stellar Evolution and Black Holes: V N P e
Radio
astronomers
at
Cambridge
University
discovered
an
unusual
signal
among
their
observationsa
regular
pulsation, such as is shown
in Figure 15.24.
A BINARY PULSAR
The decrease and increase of the pulse rate could be
explained as a Doppler shift if the neutron star were moving first
away from and later toward the Earth. To move in this way, the
pulsar must be in orbit around an unseen companion. Thus we
have a pulsar as part of a binary star system, or a binary pulsar.
Among the general relativity effects that have been observed
in the binary pulsar system is the delay of the pulses due to the
curvature of spacetime. This situation is similar to Figures 15.20
and 15.21, except that the pulsar (instead of Venus) is the origin
of the signals and the curvature is due to the companion star
(instead of the Sun).
BLACK HOLES
In spherical coordinates (r, , ), the spacetime interval for this
solution is
2
2GM
(dr )
2
( ds ) c 1 2 (dt )
r 2 (d ) 2 r 2 sin 2 ( d ) 2
2GM
c r
c 2 r
2
The radial part of this solution (the dr term) has what appears to
be a serious problem: the factor in the denominator can become
zero for a particular r, causing that term in the equation to blow
up. This occurs when r has the value
2GM
rs = Schwarzschild radius / event
r
s
c2
horizon
An object whose mass M lies totally within the corresponding
radius rs is said to be a black hole.
TABLE 15.2 Black Hole Event Horizons
kc
universe at time t,
3
dt
R (t ) At
6G m
result to eliminate R from
Friedmann equation, we obtain
Thus the matter density r decreases with increasing R according to r
R3. Putting this result into Friedmann equation and integrating, we find
R(t ) A' t 1/ 2
1 dR
R dt
3
32G r
1.5 10 s .K
T
t 1/ 2
2H n p
A small fraction of the photons has energies above 2.22 MeV, and
these photons continue to break apart the deuterons (Figure
15.28).
FIGURE 15.28 The thermal
radiation spectrum. The
photons above E0 = 2.22
MeV
are
sufficiently
energetic to break apart
deuterium nuclei.
The distribution where E>> kT, for which it is
approximately
N EE
8E 2 E / kT
0
(hc)3
dE
8E 2 E / kT
( hc) 3
E0
E0
kT
kT
/V
f
E E0
N /V
E
E
0.42e E / kT 0 2 0 2
kT
kT
H p 3He
an
d
H n 3H
He n 4He
an
d
H p 4He
3H 2
cr
0.97 10 26 kg / m 3
8G
cr