Modeling Black Holes Is Easier with a Flicker of Light
A rotating Hayward black hole model using flickering light from accretion disks better simulates magnetic field shifts seen in supermassive black holes, study authors say.
3 Articles
3 Articles
Modeling black holes is easier with a flicker of light
A few days ago, I wrote about non-singular black hole models, specifically one known as the Hayward model. Since its introduction in 2006, several variations of the Hayward model have been introduced, including a rotating model similar to the Kerr metric used to study the supermassive black holes we've observed directly. This raises an interesting question: what if we use a rotating Hayward model instead of the usual Kerr model? A recent study a…
A few days ago, I wrote about non-singular black hole models, especially the one known as the Hayward model. Since its introduction in 2006, several variants of the Hayward model have been introduced, including a rotational model similar to the Kerr metric used to study supermassive black holes [...]
Coverage Details
Bias Distribution
- 100% of the sources are Center
 
Factuality
To view factuality data please Upgrade to Premium

