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         Black Holes:     more books (99)
  1. Black Hole #10 by Charles Burns, 2002-12-25
  2. Black Hole #3 by Charles Burns, 2000
  3. Monologues for Calculating the Density of Black Holes by Anders Nilsen, 2009-01-26
  4. Black Holes by Nigel Henbest, Heather Couper, 1996-04-11
  5. Commander Toad and the Big Black Hole (Paperstar Book) by Jane Yolen, 1996-07-16
  6. Kids of the Black Hole: Punk Rock in Postsuburban California by Dewar MacLeod, 2010-11-01
  7. Event Horizon: Black Hole Travel Agency, Book 1 by Jack McKinney, 1991-05-13
  8. Black Holes and Energy Pirates: How to Recognize and Release Them by Jean Jesse Reeder, Jesse Jean Reeder, 2001-06-09
  9. Advance Wars 2: Black Hole Rising (Official Nintendo Player's Guide)
  10. Decoding the Universe: How the New Science of Information Is Explaining Everything in the Cosmos, from Our Brains to Black Holes by Charles Seife, 2007-01-30
  11. Black Holes and Relativistic Stars
  12. Escaping the Black Hole: Minimizing the Damage from the Marketing-Sales Disconnect by Robert J. Schmonsees, 2005-04-05
  13. Black Holes, White Dwarfs and Neutron Stars: The Physics of Compact Objects by Stuart L. Shapiro, Saul A. Teukolsky, 1983-05-06
  14. Cosmic Catastrophes: Exploding Stars, Black Holes, and Mapping the Universe by J. Craig Wheeler, 2007-01-22

61. AdS/CFT (basic) Text - Physics Forums Library
(http//www.bnl.gov/rhic/black_holes.htm), and I wanted to know a little more about what this experiment involved. So, after surfing for a while I
http://www.physicsforums.com/archive/index.php/t-69293.html
Physics Help and Math Help - Physics Forums Physics Beyond the Standard Model sci.physics.strings ... PDA View Full Version : AdS/CFT (basic) DisplayAds("Top"); siguyn@gmail.com
I was reading the news article about the "black holes at RHIC"
(http://www.bnl.gov/rhic/black_holes.htm), and I wanted to know a little
more about what this experiment involved.
So, after surfing for a while I discovered that it was related to
something called Ads/CFT correspondence
I tried to read the information on it here
but unfortunately it would take me years to study/understand all the
math/physics terms/principles involved
Can someone here please explain to a lay person what Ads/CFT means?
Am I right, and was the "black holes at RHIC" really related to Ads/CFT? If so, was this experiment meant to verify some aspect of string theory? Thanks, Guy Nussbaum Chris (in 100 words or less?) AdS/CFT is a dictionary that relates a certain kind of string theory (type IIB propagating in AdS_5 x S^5) to a certain kind of gauge theory (N=4 SU(N) SYM). If you can calculate something in one theory, the

62. Google Search Black Hole, Universe
math.ucr.edu/home/baez/physics/black_holes.html Show matches (Cache) - 5k . imagine.gsfc.nasa.gov/docs/ask_astro/black_holes.html - Show matches
http://www.sidis.net/Google Search black hole, universe1.htm

63. Thaigaming - Black_holes
black_holes . black_holes black_holes is offline. . 22 Jul 2007 2006. Forum,
http://www.thaigaming.com/members/black_holes.htm

64. BLACK HOLES: MIGHTY OATH « Burmese Muslim Minority Homepage
black_holes.jpg. Surah Al Waqia, Surah 56 (The Inevitable,). 75 So, I swear by the place where the stars fall. 76- And that is indeed a mighty oath,
http://hassanoct15.wordpress.com/2008/01/14/black-holes-mighty-oath/
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BLACK HOLES: MIGHTY OATH
Surah Al Waqia, Surah : 56 (The Inevitable,) 75- So, I swear by the place where the stars fall.
76- And that is indeed a mighty oath, if you but knew.
FALLING OF STARS AND MIGHTY OATH
The black holes formed by the collapse of stars by their gravitational force are in perfect conformity with verses 75-76 of the sura, The Inevitable. At the time of the descent of the Quran, the end of a star by being transformed into a black hole was something unknown. A star turning into a black hole and the stages it goes through are very interesting phenomena. Stars that run out of fuel do not immediately collapse. They grow in size at first, as if inflated. Their temperature, around 15 million degrees, rises up to 100 million degrees. They are first transformed into red giants or super giants. The area covered by a super giant is so vast that it can easily contain more than sixty million suns. The immensity of these numerical values is reminiscent of the magnitudes indicated in 76th verse of the sura. Some of the supernovas contract and turn into white dwarf stars whose mass equal the size of a human being but weigh 10 million kilograms. Still greater stars become neutron stars (pulsars), stars supposed to form in the final stage of the stellar evolution; these consist of a super dense mass mainly of neutrons having a strong attractive force. The matter in the neutron stars is extremely dense. Just to give you an idea, a teaspoonful of this matter would weigh one billion tons.While all these spectacular events are taking place, we, on our planet, continue to sleep, run and talk, quite unaware of them. So is our life: rendered possible by forces beyond our ken.

65. Black_holes (page1)
“ ” . - .
http://astronomy4all.com/Pages/starts/black_holes/page1.html

66. Black_holes(page1)
. 4 ( ),
http://ivan-pulsari.hit.bg/Pages/black_holes.html
  • ìàñà M (øâàðöøèëäîâà ÷åðíà äóïêà), ìîìåíò íà èìïóëñà J (êåðîâñêà ÷åðíà äóïêà) åëåêòðè÷åñêè çàðÿä Q (÷åðíà äóïêà íà Êåð – Íþìàí).

Ñïåöèàëèñòè îò èçñëåäîâàòåëñêèÿ öåíòúð îäàðä íà ÍÀÑÀ çà ïúðâè ïúò óñïÿõà äà çàñåêàò èìïóëñè îò óëòðàâèîëåòîâî èçëú÷âàíå, îòäåëÿíî îò ãîðåù ãàç, îêîëî ìàñèâíèÿ êîìïàêòåí îáåêò Cygnus XR-1. Àìïëèòóäàòà íà èìïóëñèòå è òÿõíàòà ïåðèîäè÷íîñò ñå èçìåíÿò òàêà, ñÿêàø òîçè ãîðåù ãàç ïðîïàäà â ÷åðíà äóïêà. È òåçè íàáëþäåíèÿ íå ìîãàò äà áúäàò íàðå÷åíè íàïúëíî íåïîñðåäñòâåíè, íî òå íàïúëíî ñúâïàäàò ñ ïðåñìÿòàíèÿòà. Îòêðèòèåòî å íàïðàâåíî ñëåä ñòàòèñòè÷åñêè àíàëèç íà ðåçóëòàòèòå îò íàáëþäåíèÿòà ïðåç 1992 ã. íà åäíà îò ïúðâèòå çàïîäîçðåíè ÷åðíè äóïêè Ëåáåä É-1 íà ðàçñòîÿíèå 6 000 ñâ.ã. îò íàñ.

67. Category:Black Holes - Doctor Who Wiki
Retrieved from http//tardis.wikia.com/wiki/Categoryblack_holes . Categories Astronomical Objects Spacetime anomalies
http://tardis.wikia.com/wiki/Category:Black_holes
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Category:Black holes
From TARDIS Index File, the free Doctor Who reference.
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Pages in category "Black holes"
There are 4 pages in this category.
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Retrieved from " http://tardis.wikia.com/wiki/Category:Black_holes Categories Astronomical Objects Space-time anomalies Views Personal tools Navigation Search Toolbox wikia

68. ‚±‚Ç‚à‰F’ˆ‹³Žº
Translate this page
http://www.planetary.or.jp/StarChild/black_holes.html
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69. Webkatalog Science Physics Relativity Black_Holes
Top Science Physics Relativity black_holes. Observations (13); Thermodynamics (15); Wormholes (4). Education (10); Simulations (7). See also
http://www.blz-suchen.de/odp/Science/Physics/Relativity/Black_Holes/
Home BLZ-Suche / BIC-Suche Sofort Kredit Katalog ...
  • Simulations See also: This category in other languages: French Spanish
    • Black Hole Images at "Astronomy Picture of the Day" (APOD) - From NASA's "Astronomy Picture of the Day" archive, the three most educational images (editor's choice) related to black holes.
    • Black Holes - Pages by the relativity group at Cambridge University, aimed at a general audience. They include a brief introduction to black holes, information about observational evidence, and a section on black holes and critical phenomena.
    • - Collection of articles about various aspects of black hole physics, from astronomical observations to the question of why black holes have no hair. Part of the "Spotlights on Relativity" series on Einstein Online; written for a general audience.
    • Black Holes and Beyond - Part of the "Spacetime Wrinkles" exhibit published by the National Center for Supercomputing Applications: descriptions of what black holes are, how they might be detected, and what kinds of gravitational waves they should produce. Aimed at a general audience.
    • Do Black Holes Exist in Our Universe?
  • 70. Black Holes - Wiktionary
    edit Noun. black holes. Plural form of black hole. Retrieved from http//en.wiktionary.org/wiki/black_holes . Category English plurals
    http://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/black_holes
    black holes
    Definitions from Wiktionary, a free dictionary
    Jump to: navigation search
    edit English
    edit Noun
    black holes
  • Plural form of black hole
  • Retrieved from " http://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/black_holes Category English plurals Views Personal tools Navigation Search Toolbox In other languages

    71. Black Holes - Scholarpedia
    Retrieved from http//www.scholarpedia.org/article/black_holes . Categories Astrophysics. Views. Article reviews edit this article revisions
    http://www.scholarpedia.org/article/Black_holes
    Black holes
    From Scholarpedia
    Teviet Creighton and Richard H. Price (2008), Scholarpedia, 3(1):4277. revision #37396 [ link to/cite this article Curator: Dr. Teviet Creighton, University of Texas, Brownsville, TX Curator: Dr. Richard H. Price, University of Texas, Brownsville, TX Figure 1: Artist's conception of an accretion disk around a black hole. Credit: NASA/CXC/M.Weiss. Black Holes are regions of space in which gravitational fields are so strong that no particle or signal can escape the pull of gravity. The boundary of this no-escape region is called the event horizon, since distant observers outside the black hole cannot see (cannot get light from) events inside. Although the fundamental possibility of such an object exists within Newton's classical theory of gravitation, Einstein's theory of gravity makes black holes inevitable under some circumstances. Prior to the early 1960s black holes seemed to be only an interesting theoretical concept with no astrophysical plausibility, but with the discovery of quasars in 1963 it became clear that very exotic astrophysical objects could exist. Nowadays it is taken for granted that black holes do exist in at least two different forms. Stellar mass black holes are the endpoint of the death of some stars, and supermassive black holes are the result of coalescences in the centers of most galaxies, including our own. No signal can propagate from inside a black hole, but the gravitational influence of a black hole is always present. (This influence does not

    72. Thermodynamics News On 123 NEWS - All English News Classified By Categories And
    Entire directory, Only in black_holes/Thermodynamics. Top Science Physics Relativity Black Holes Thermodynamics
    http://english.123news.org/english-news.html?/Science/Physics/Relativity/Black_H

    73. Chandra :: Field Guide To X-ray Sources :: Black Holes
    Pages on the website of the Chandra XRay Observatory; includes information about stellar, mid-mass and supermassive black holes, Chandra images,
    http://chandra.harvard.edu/xray_sources/blackholes.html
    Black Holes
    Stellar -Black holes with a mass of about 5 - 100 Suns formed at the end of very massive star's evolutionary cycle. Mid-mass -A newly discovered type of black hole that has a mass of 500 - 1,000's of Suns. Supermassive -Black holes with a mass of a million or more Suns located in the centers of galaxies.
    Chandra Podcast: Black Holes: Tall, Grande, Venti Chandra Special Feature: Exploring Black Holes Chandra Images: Black Holes Black Holes
    CXC Home
    Search ... Blog
    [News by email: Chandra Digest
    [Contact us: cxcpub@cfa.harvard.edu Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics
    60 Garden Street, Cambridge, MA 02138 USA
    Phone: 617.496.7941 Fax: 617.495.7356
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    Chandra X-ray Center, Operated for NASA by the Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory
    This site was developed with funding from NASA under Contract NAS8-03060. Revised: November 29, 2007

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