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accretion disc
(redirected from accretion disk)

   Also found in: Dictionary/thesaurus, Encyclopedia, 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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Had the black hole been rotating any slower, it couldn't have whipped nearby space-time into quite as strong a tornado, and the inner part of the accretion disk couldn't have extended quite so close to the event horizon--the boundary between the black hole's maw and the outside world.
Laboratory scientists have demonstrated on Z-pinch facilities that scaled versions of these accretion disk conditions can be recreated for close-up scrutiny.
Gas from the star is pulled toward the black hole, where it forms what's called an accretion disk.
 
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