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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Growing a Kerr Black Hole

Leon F. Phillips
- 15 Oct 2015 - 
- Vol. 6, Iss: 13, pp 1789-1792
TLDR
Theoretically, the center of a black hole is occupied by an ultra-dense, spheroidal core whose diameter is greater than that of the theoretical disk singularity as mentioned in this paper.
Abstract
Growth of a black hole requires the participation of a near-by accretion disk if it is to occur at a significant rate. The Kerr solution of Einstein’s equation is a vacuum solution, but the center of a realistic Kerr black hole is not a vacuum, so the predicted disk singularity does not exist. Instead, the center of a black hole is occupied by an ultra-dense, spheroidal core whose diameter is greater than that of the theoretical disk singularity. The surface of a black hole’s core is continually bombarded by energetic particles from the external universe. Hence the cold remnant of a gravitationally-collapsed star that has often been assumed to be present at the center of a black hole must be replaced conceptually by a quark-gluon plasma whose temperature is of the order of 1012 K or more. The gravitational potential well of a black hole is extremely deep (TeV), but the number of discrete energy levels below the infinite-red-shift surface is finite. Information can be conveyed to observers in the external universe by thermally-excited fermions that escape from levels near the top of a black hole potential well.

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Gravitation and spacetime.

TL;DR: Ohanian and Ruffini's Gravitation and Spacetime, Second Edition, the authors is the best book on the market today of 500 pages or less on gravitation and general relativity.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Black Holes as a Source of High-Energy Neutrinos

TL;DR: The escaping neutrinos could be among the high-energy neutrino that have been detected by the IceCube experiment as mentioned in this paper, which can be regarded as the final product of the stellar collapse that led to formation of the black hole.
Book ChapterDOI

The Environmental Impact of Supermassive Black Holes

Abraham Loeb
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors highlight the principle of self-regulation, by which supermassive black holes grow until they release sufficient energy to unbind the gas that feeds them from their host galaxy, and explain the correlation between the mass of a central black hole and the depth of the gravitational potential well of its host galaxy.
Journal ArticleDOI

Energy levels of Neutrinos in a Gravitational Potential Well

TL;DR: In this article, energy levels for neutrinos in the gravitational potential wells of black holes of sizes ranging from one hundred to one hundred million solar masses, with up to ~10 60 energy levels available below the event horizon and with the capacity to hold two identical fermion neutrons, with opposite spin vectors, in each energy level.
Book ChapterDOI

The Environmental Impact of Supermassive Black Holes

TL;DR: In this article, the authors highlight the principle of self-regulation, by which supermassive black holes grow until they release sufficient energy to unbind the gas that feeds them from their host galaxy, and explain the correlation between the mass of a central black hole and the depth of the gravitational potential well of its host galaxy.
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