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accretion disc
(redirected from Accretion disks)

   Also found in: Wikipedia 0.03 sec.

accretion disc

In astronomy, flattened ring of gas and dust orbiting an object in space, such as a star or black hole. The orbiting material is accreted (gathered in) from a neighbouring object such as another star. Giant accretion discs are thought to exist at the centres of some galaxies and quasars.

If the central object of the accretion disc has a strong gravitational field, as with a neutron star or a black hole, gas falling onto the accretion disc releases energy, which heats the gas to extreme temperatures and emits short-wavelength radiation, notably X-rays.



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? Mentioned in ? References in periodicals archive
 
Although the accretion disks emit X rays, computer simulations have indicated that the disks around black holes are, in astronomical terms, cool and thin.
Nordsieck says that by analogy with much larger systems that have accretion disks, such as quasars, the clouds represent gas jets propelled by Beta Lyrae's disk.
 
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