black hole

Black hole phenomena

Explores black hole phenomena, focusing on their nature, roles in galaxies, and impacts such as the formation of active galactic nuclei and galaxy evolution.

About

Black holes are among the most fascinating objects in astrophysics, and it is now thought that many of the most energetic processes in the universe are related, or attributable to, these enigmatic phenomena. Astrophysicists at RSAA study many aspects of the nature of black holes and the roles that they play in galaxies, including:

  • supermassive black holes in galaxies and the formation of active galactic nuclei as material is accreted by the black hole
  • feedback of mass and energy from the nucleus of galaxies as the black hole accretes matter, and how this affects the galaxies, their surroundings, and the way that they grow and develop
  • radio galaxies and the nature of the relativistic jets that are formed in the active galactic nucleus
  • constructing theoretical and computational models of accretion disks around black holes and jets and outflows associated with these phenomena
  • making detailed observations of galaxies, to understand how the central black hole affects their structure and dynamics, and to measure the black hole mass.
  • investigating the nature of the objects that produce highly energetic 'gamma ray bursts' in the distant universe.

Our theoretical astrophysicists develop and run sophisticated computational models to simulate the physical processes at work in these complex systems. They use powerful high-performance computing systems, including the Computational Astrophysics Laboratory (COALA) at RSAA, the ANU Supercomputer Facility (ANUSF), and other supercomputers in Australia.

Projects

In this project you will use some combination of theoretical population synthesis calculations and/or analysis of public data from the Fermi telescope to examine the question: what is the real origin of the Galactic Centre Gamma-Ray Excess?

Student intake

Open for Honours, PhD students

People

News

The fastest-growing black hole ever recorded – devouring the equivalent of one sun every day – has been discovered by RSAA researchers at The Australian National University (ANU).

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ANU will play a major role in the Taipan galaxy survey, which will for the first time measure the current expansion rate of the Universe with one per cent precision.

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The seven mirror segments will form the heart of the Giant Magellan Telescope, designed to have a resolving power 10 times greater than that of the Hubble Space Telescope.

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A team of international astrophysicists led by ANU has shown how most of the antimatter in the Milky Way forms.

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Aiming to find out if the turbulence in the large-scale disk was the same as that found in small-scale simulations, they performed demanding computations on National Computational Infrastructure (NCI) supercomputers at the ANU campus.

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