Black holes do not emit light, so black holes can not be seen this way. But black holes emit X-rays, but stars are not hot enough to emit X-rays. When black holes suck up stars, energy goes to the black hole, and come out as X-rays.
Scientists can detect black holes by using x-rays and gamma rays. Black holes still can release matter, and black holes give off a lot off x and gamma rays.
Rex
Math...... Math...... and more Math...... You can use math to mathematically represent data such as X-Rays and Gamma Rays.
X-rays are the best band for studying black holes as the radiations emitted by the black hole is X-rays so we can expect the presence of a black hole anywhere in the Universe.
They use X-Rays from the stars being sucked into them.
It doesn't. The X-rays we detect from black holes are generated by superheated matter before it crosses the event horizon.
X-rays locate cavities in teeth.Dentists...holes and your dentist who uses special toolsX-rays are used to locate cavities in teeth.
Black holes can emit X-rays when matter falls into them and gets heated up to very high temperatures, producing intense radiation that includes X-rays. This process is known as accretion, where the matter spirals into the black hole's gravitational pull and releases energy in the form of X-rays.
It could be said that black holes form X-ray energy. As gases gather and become accelerated and compressed in the accretion disc, they get hotter and hotter. By the time these gases cross the event horizon, they can be generating (emitting) X-rays. The black hole itself doesn't emit the X-rays because nothing can escape its intense gravity. Not even light. But the X-rays are a result of the effect of the black hole's gravity.
Gamma rays originate from nuclear reactions, such as those in supernovae, quasars, or radioactive decay. X-rays are produced by high-energy processes, such as those in black holes, neutron stars, and certain astronomical phenomena. Both gamma rays and x-rays are forms of electromagnetic radiation with different wavelengths and energies.
Different types of electromagnetic waves provide different kinds of information. Specifically, black holes will emit large amounts of x-rays.