The expectation of the subject 'object' is not a accurate representation of all astronomical phenomenon. However if the intent of the question is to describe the area or phenomenon outside a black hole's event horizon, then the answer would be an accretion disk. Matter falling onto a black hole can form an accretion disk heated by friction, forming some of the brightest objects in the universe.
It is believed that quasars are most likely caused by supermassive black holes. Matter falling into the black hole would emit the radiation that has been observed.
Yes. Matter falls into black holes all the time; the first known black hole was the "Cygnus X1" black hole, which was discovered by the X-ray emissions caused by matter being pulled off the companion star and falling into the black hole.
Actually ,Black is not a color........an object which absorbs all the light rays falling on it without reflecting anything appears to be black...
They don't directly emit light, but anything falling into them will emit strong electromagnetic radiation - due to the acceleration of the matter falling into the black hole. Also, the black hole attracts all matter near it.
A quasar is believed to have a supermassive black hole at its center. The radiation is emitted outside the black hole's event horizon - from matter that is falling into the black hole.
It is not known how many black holes exist. One of the main reasons is that, if matter is not actually falling into the black hole, it is impossible to detect.
A quasar is a disk of superheated material falling into a supermassive black hole. The radiation from a quasar is so intense that it actually pushes matter away from the black hole, preventing it from falling in. This process limits how fast a black hole can grow.
The falling action of a story refers to the events that occur following the climax. In Poe's "The Black Cat," the falling action occurs after the police discover the dead body of the wife, and realize that it was the cries of the cat that caused the body to be found.
Black holes are black because their gravitational pull is so strong that not even light can escape from them. This strong gravitational pull is caused by the massive amount of matter packed into a small space, creating a dense and compact object with intense gravity.
The extreme energies associated with matter falling into a black hole often excite it enough to produce characteristic x-ray emissions.
a black hole is caused by a supernova, then the black hole forms. the matter sucked in and gets shot through a worm hole. after the wormhole the matter gets shot out a white hole. the wormhole is impossible to see, for witch this hard to belive for it goes from one end of the galixy to the other endhope i helped!
It is not known what happens to matter inside a black hole. The point of origin of the universe is currently believed to be the Big Bang, which is different from a black hole. The gravitational pull of a black hole is so strong that matter is compressed to a point of infinite density at the singularity, according to general relativity.