Can you repost that link? There doesn't seem to be anything in the Šubr et al. paper that makes that claim.douglas wrote:Bruce, in the Heart of Orion APOD I posted a link that described Subr claiming the BH would be in the exact center point of the 4 Trapezium stars, so your binary component would be there.BDanielMayfield wrote:How bright is this possible binary companion expected to be? Aren't there likely to be numerous lesser stars within the Trapezium that we simply can't see due to dust extinction?
Blackholes: Accretion Vs Expulsion
- Chris Peterson
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Re: Blackholes: Accretion Vs Expulsion
Chris
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Cloudbait Observatory
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Re: Blackholes: Accretion Vs Expulsion
There is no dust extinction in the direction of the Trapezium? A critic of professional astronomers should know that the light from all stars are dimmed at least a little by the interstellar dust between the source and the receiver. The ONC region looks pretty dusty to me.douglas wrote:Bruce, in the Heart of Orion APOD I posted a link that described Subr claiming the BH would be in the exact center point of the 4 Trapezium stars, so your binary component would be there. You would have no dust extinction there.BDanielMayfield wrote:How bright is this possible binary companion expected to be? Aren't there likely to be numerous lesser stars within the Trapezium that we simply can't see due to dust extinction?douglas wrote:Don't forget the BH in Orion is theorized to be part of a binary, itself. Neither can be observed
Bruce
His analysis speaks of his software's inability to correlate results with detected objects. This is why he should have included "ultimately possible" in his descriptors. It's only ultimate, and of the purest of theoretical.
I also posted a link or two of Chandra's imaging of the Trapezium. No stressed stars were found in it, emitting, in the center of the 4. Nothing at any wavelength is emitting as a point source in the middle of the Trapezium.
Subr needs his feet held to the fire, as do his peer review reviewers.
What does the word 'ultimately' mean to you, in the context that you are insisting that Subr et al should have used it in their paper? I've read a few astronomical papers, articles, etc., but I don't remember ever seeing the expression "ultimately possible".
Ultimately, the debate about the possible IMBH within the Trapezium will be resolved.
Bruce, the ultimate optimist.
Just as zero is not equal to infinity, everything coming from nothing is illogical.
Re: Blackholes: Accretion Vs Expulsion
I believe it was in one of the subsidiary links where the author had dialogue with either Subr or another astrophysicist. An analysis of his methods, and where the simulation would dictate the object had to be?Chris Peterson wrote:Can you repost that link? There doesn't seem to be anything in the Šubr et al. paper that makes that claim.douglas wrote:Bruce, in the Heart of Orion APOD I posted a link that described Subr claiming the BH would be in the exact center point of the 4 Trapezium stars, so your binary component would be there.BDanielMayfield wrote:How bright is this possible binary companion expected to be? Aren't there likely to be numerous lesser stars within the Trapezium that we simply can't see due to dust extinction?
Re: Blackholes: Accretion Vs Expulsion
Quaint. Subr uses a simulation, generates a need for a binary [?] system for the hole, and Bruce needs the companion "extinguished" by interstellar dustBDanielMayfield wrote:There is no dust extinction in the direction of the Trapezium? A critic of professional astronomers should know that the light from all stars are dimmed at least a little by the interstellar dust between the source and the receiver. The ONC region looks pretty dusty to me.douglas wrote:Bruce, in the Heart of Orion APOD I posted a link that described Subr claiming the BH would be in the exact center point of the 4 Trapezium stars, so your binary component would be there. You would have no dust extinction there.BDanielMayfield wrote:
How bright is this possible binary companion expected to be? Aren't there likely to be numerous lesser stars within the Trapezium that we simply can't see due to dust extinction?
Bruce
His analysis speaks of his software's inability to correlate results with detected objects. This is why he should have included "ultimately possible" in his descriptors. It's only ultimate, and of the purest of theoretical.
I also posted a link or two of Chandra's imaging of the Trapezium. No stressed stars were found in it, emitting, in the center of the 4. Nothing at any wavelength is emitting as a point source in the middle of the Trapezium.
Subr needs his feet held to the fire, as do his peer review reviewers.
What does the word 'ultimately' mean to you, in the context that you are insisting that Subr et al should have used it in their paper? I've read a few astronomical papers, articles, etc., but I don't remember ever seeing the expression "ultimately possible".
Ultimately, the debate about the possible IMBH within the Trapezium will be resolved.
Bruce, the ultimate optimist.
C'mon boys & girls, we're being a bit silly defending his model's results, aren't we?
Definitely: "wink"
Geck: "forests" of observations rendering astronomical phenomena understandable .. to be replaced by defense of untenable terms, keys of the kingdom handed away to simulators, is it?
And most of all, don't describe that replacement as 'chivalric hijacking'?
"vendettas' of "novice" hijackers? First Subr 'was here', then he's not.
Resolve that nastiness, right?
Re: Blackholes: Accretion Vs Expulsion
Quoting Subr, himself:BDanielMayfield wrote:There is no dust extinction in the direction of the Trapezium? A critic of professional astronomers should know that the light from all stars are dimmed at least a little by the interstellar dust between the source and the receiver. The ONC region looks pretty dusty to me.douglas wrote:Bruce, in the Heart of Orion APOD I posted a link that described Subr claiming the BH would be in the exact center point of the 4 Trapezium stars, so your binary component would be there. You would have no dust extinction there.BDanielMayfield wrote:
How bright is this possible binary companion expected to be? Aren't there likely to be numerous lesser stars within the Trapezium that we simply can't see due to dust extinction?
Bruce
His analysis speaks of his software's inability to correlate results with detected objects. This is why he should have included "ultimately possible" in his descriptors. It's only ultimate, and of the purest of theoretical.
I also posted a link or two of Chandra's imaging of the Trapezium. No stressed stars were found in it, emitting, in the center of the 4. Nothing at any wavelength is emitting as a point source in the middle of the Trapezium.
Subr needs his feet held to the fire, as do his peer review reviewers.
What does the word 'ultimately' mean to you, in the context that you are insisting that Subr et al should have used it in their paper? I've read a few astronomical papers, articles, etc., but I don't remember ever seeing the expression "ultimately possible".
Ultimately, the debate about the possible IMBH within the Trapezium will be resolved.
Bruce, the ultimate optimist.
" .. likely to be a member of a binary system with ≈ 70% probability. In such a case, it could be detected either due to short periods of enhanced accretion of stellar winds from the secondary star during pericentre passages, or through a measurement of the motion of the secondary whose velocity would exceed 10 kms−1 along the whole orbit."
https://arxiv.org/pdf/1209.2114.pdf