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Submission + - Another large Black hole in "our" Galaxy (arxiv.org)

RockDoctor writes: A recent paper on ArXiv reports a novel idea about the central regions of "our" galaxy.

Remember the hoopla a few years ago about radio-astronomical observations producing an "image" of our central black hole — or rather, an image of the accretion disc around the black hole — long designated by astronomers as "Sagittarius A*" (or SGR-A*)? If you remember the image published then, one thing should be striking — it's not very symmetrical. If you think about viewing a spinning object, then you'd expect to see something with a "mirror" symmetry plane where we would see the rotation axis (if someone had marked it). If anything, that published image has three bright spots on a fainter ring. And the spots are not even approximately the same brightness.

This paper suggests that the image we see is the result of the light (radio waves) from SGR-A* being "lensed" by another black hole, near (but not quite on) the line of sight between SGR-A* and us. By various modelling approaches, they then refine this idea to a "best-fit" of a black hole with mass around 1000 times the Sun, orbiting between the distance of the closest-observed star to SGR-A* ("S2" — most imaginative name, ever!), and around 10 times that distance. That's far enough to make a strong interaction with "S2" unlikely within the lifetime of S2 before it's accretion onto SGR-A*.)

The region around SGR-A* is crowded. Within 25 parsecs (~80 light years, the distance to Regulus [in the constellation Leo] or Merak [in the Great Bear]) there is around 4 times more mass in several millions of "normal" stars than in the SGR-A* black hole. Finding a large (not "super massive") black hole in such a concentration of matter shouldn't surprise anyone.

This proposed black hole is larger than anything which has been detected by gravitational waves (yet) ; but not immensely larger — only a factor of 15 or so. (The authors also anticipate the "what about these big black holes spiralling together?" question : quote "and the amplitude of gravitational waves generated by the binary black holes is negligible.")

Being so close to SGR-A*, the proposed black hole is likely to be moving rapidly across our line of sight. At the distance of "S2" it's orbital period would be around 26 years (but the "new" black hole is probably further out than than that). Which might be an explanation for some of the variability and "flickering" reported for SGR-A* ever since it's discovery.

As always, more observations are needed. Which, for SGR-A* are frequently being taken, so improving (or ruling out) this explanation should happen fairly quickly. But it's a very interesting, and fun, idea.

Submission + - Surado, formerly Slashdot Japan, is closing at the end of the month. (srad.jp) 1

AmiMoJo writes: Slashdot Japan was launched on May 28, 2001. On 2025/03/31, it will finally close. Since starting the site separated from the main Slashdot one, and eventually rebranded as "Surado", which was it's Japanese nickname.

Last year the site stopped posting new stories, and was subsequently unable to find a buyer. In a final story announcing the end, many users expressed their sadness and gratitude for all the years of service.

Comment Re:Just include it BUT OFF BY DEFAULT (Score 3, Interesting) 96

The problem is not how well they may protect these snapshots or whether they are enabled by default. That they would exist at all makes every divorce lawyer and prosecutor salivate, let alone the woodies to be found at government security agencies. Even corporations may love this, mandating it is enabled to far better spy on workers, right up until being hit by discovery ;). The true legal liabilities are really staggering.

Comment Re:Copyright owners can change the license (Score 1) 120

This is a legal right of an uncontested exclusive copyright holder (or a group of copyright holders assuming no additional parties or contributors are involved). However, the past remains legally immutable. If something was GPL, that version (and any derivates / future changes to that or prior versions) remain GPL, for example.

Comment Really? (Score 1) 110

You mean all those Asian women with hot profile pictures randomly contacting you with a mostly empty profile other than "aspiring model", "hair designer", or "college student" saying "I love knowing older men with balding hair, a beer belly, and a national security related occupation" actually are real??! Hot dam, maybe even John Bolton and dead Kissinger can get lucky there, too!

Comment Overrun by AI content (Score 1) 89

Soon I'll have a thought, ask ChatGPT to turn my one-phrase idea into a 3-page memo to email my boss, only for him to use ChatGPT to summarize it for him into one concise phrase.

This may sound inane, but I think it's profound. Soon, a big chunk if not the vast majority of content will be AI-generated, and we'll use AI to filter it. The next evolution of crowdsourcing.

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