tendex line

A tendex line (from the Latin "tendere": To stretch) is a traversal line describing the path matter takes through the accretion disc of a black hole. A tendex line typically follows a spiral around the black hole descending to the event horizon. Matter on this line experiences a stretching effect, while vortex lines describe a twisting effect.{{cite web|title=How to picture a black hole|url=http://m.wired.com/wiredscience/2012/01/black-hole-visuals/?pid=2917&viewall=true|work=Article|publisher=Wired.com|accessdate=26 January 2012}}

Both of these types of lines can be used to visualise black holes, and the ways in which spacetime warps around them. They may also help to explain phenomena such as the 'kicks' observed in simulations of merging black holes as they are flung away from their host galaxies, and may also help in the search for gravitational waves.{{cite web|last1=Shiga|first1=David|title='Tendex' lines help visualise black holes|url=https://www.newscientist.com/article/dn20379-tendex-lines-help-visualise-black-holes.html#.U9jH1fERF_U|website=New Scientist|accessdate=30 July 2014|date=13 April 2011}}

See also

  • [https://arxiv.org/abs/1012.4869 Frame-Dragging Vortexes and Tidal Tendexes Attached to Colliding Black Holes: Visualizing the Curvature of Spacetime]

References

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Category:Black holes

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