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Science 30 May 1997:
Vol. 276. no. 5317, pp. 1386 - 1391
DOI: 10.1126/science.276.5317.1386

Articles

Using Neutron Stars and Black Holes in X-ray Binaries to Probe Strong Gravitational Fields

Philip Kaaret, Eric C. Ford

Neutron stars and black holes can be studied by observation of the radiation produced as matter falls into their gravitational fields. X-ray binaries, which are systems consisting of a neutron star or black hole and a companion gaseous star, produce radiation in this manner. Recently, oscillations at frequencies near 1000 cycles per second have been detected from x-ray binaries. These oscillations are likely produced in regions of very strong gravitational fields within a few tens of kilometers of the compact star. The oscillations have been interpreted as evidence for the existence of an innermost stable orbit near a compact star, a key prediction of general relativity theory. The study of x-ray binaries has also advanced the search for definitive evidence of black holes. Recent developments in our understanding of accretion flows in x-ray binaries have provided evidence for the existence of event horizons in x-ray binaries thought to contain black holes.

The authors are at the Columbia Astrophysics Laboratory, Columbia University, New York, NY 10027, USA. E-mail for P. Kaaret: kaaret{at}astro.columbia.edu


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Science. ISSN 0036-8075 (print), 1095-9203 (online)