Comments about the article in Nature: The data-driven ****
Following is a discussion about this article in Nature Vol 593 20 May 2021, by Davide Castelvechi
To study the full text select this link:
https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-024-00223-4
- The text in italics is copied from the article
- Immediate followed by some comments
In the last paragraph I explain my own opinion.
Contents
Reflection
Introduction
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1. Rain from space
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In the latest study, astrophysicist Laura Olivera-Nieto at the Max Planck Institute for Nuclear Physics in Heidelberg, Germany, and her collaborators studied a microquasar called SS 433.
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Okay
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The black hole lies in the Aquila Constellation at around 18,000 light years (5.5 kiloparsecs) from the Solar System, and forms a binary system together with a large star.
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That this is a binary system is a very important fact. It creates a stable system, but both components are instable.
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Matter ejected from the star swirls around the black hole then spirals into it, generating highly energetic jets.
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That is one way how binary systems can merge.
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2. Cosmic clues
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