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Space News: Black holes are mysterious, yet also deceptively simple − a new space mission may help physicists answer hairy questions about these astronomical objects

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Written by: Gaurav Khanna, University of Rhode Island
Published: 18 May 2024

 

An illustration of a supermassive black hole. NASA/JPL

Physicists consider black holes one of the most mysterious objects that exist. Ironically, they’re also considered one of the simplest. For years, physicists like me have been looking to prove that black holes are more complex than they seem. And a newly approved European space mission called LISA will help us with this hunt.

Research from the 1970s suggests that you can comprehensively describe a black hole using only three physical attributes – their mass, charge and spin. All the other properties of these massive dying stars, like their detailed composition, density and temperature profiles, disappear as they transform into a black hole. That is how simple they are.

The idea that black holes have only three attributes is called the “no-hair” theorem, implying that they don’t have any “hairy” details that make them complicated.

Black holes are massive, mysterious astronomical objects.

Hairy black holes?

For decades, researchers in the astrophysics community have exploited loopholes or work-arounds within the no-hair theorem’s assumptions to come up with potential hairy black hole scenarios. A hairy black hole has a physical property that scientists can measure – in principle – that’s beyond its mass, charge or spin. This property has to be a permanent part of its structure.

About a decade ago, Stefanos Aretakis, a physicist currently at the University of Toronto, showed mathematically that a black hole containing the maximum charge it could hold – called an extremal charged black hole – would develop “hair” at its horizon. A black hole’s horizon is the boundary where anything that crosses it, even light, can’t escape.

Aretakis’ analysis was more of a thought experiment using a highly simplified physical scenario, so it’s not something scientists expect to observe astrophysically. But supercharged black holes might not be the only kind that could have hair.

Since astrophysical objects such as stars and planets are known to spin, scientists expect that black holes would spin as well, based on how they form. Astronomical evidence has shown that black holes do have spin, though researchers don’t know what the typical spin value is for an astrophysical black hole.

Using computer simulations, my team has recently discovered similar types of hair in black holes that are spinning at the maximum rate. This hair has to do with the rate of change, or the gradient, of space-time’s curvature at the horizon. We also discovered that a black hole wouldn’t actually have to be maximally spinning to have hair, which is significant because these maximally spinning black holes probably don’t form in nature.

Detecting and measuring hair

My team wanted to develop a way to potentially measure this hair – a new fixed property that might characterize a black hole beyond its mass, spin and charge. We started looking into how such a new property might leave a signature on a gravitational wave emitted from a fast-spinning black hole.

A gravitational wave is a tiny disturbance in space-time typically caused by violent astrophysical events in the universe. The collisions of compact astrophysical objects such as black holes and neutron stars emit strong gravitational waves. An international network of gravitational observatories, including the Laser Interferometer Gravitational-wave Observatory in the United States, routinely detects these waves.

Our recent studies suggest that one can measure these hairy attributes from gravitational wave data for fast-spinning black holes. Looking at the gravitational wave data offers an opportunity for a signature of sorts that could indicate whether the black hole has this type of hair.

Our ongoing studies and recent progress made by Som Bishoyi, a student on the team, are based on a blend of theoretical and computational models of fast-spinning black holes. Our findings have not been tested in the field yet or observed in real black holes out in space. But we hope that will soon change.

LISA gets a go-ahead

In January 2024, the European Space Agency formally adopted the space-based Laser Interferometer Space Antenna, or LISA, mission. LISA will look for gravitational waves, and the data from the mission could help my team with our hairy black hole questions.

Three spacecrafts spaced apart sending light beams towards each other while orbiting the Sun
The LISA spacecrafts observing gravitational waves from a distant source while orbiting the Sun. Simon Barke/Univ. Florida, CC BY

Formal adoption means that the project has the go-ahead to move to the construction phase, with a planned 2035 launch. LISA consists of three spacecrafts configured in a perfect equilateral triangle that will trail behind the Earth around the Sun. The spacecrafts will each be 1.6 million miles (2.5 million kilometers) apart, and they will exchange laser beams to measure the distance between each other down to about a billionth of an inch.

LISA will detect gravitational waves from supermassive black holes that are millions or even billions of times more massive than our Sun. It will build a map of the space-time around rotating black holes, which will help physicists understand how gravity works in the close vicinity of black holes to an unprecedented level of accuracy. Physicists hope that LISA will also be able to measure any hairy attributes that black holes might have.

With LIGO making new observations every day and LISA to offer a glimpse into the space-time around black holes, now is one of the most exciting times to be a black hole physicist.The Conversation

Gaurav Khanna, Professor of Physics, University of Rhode Island

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

Stoebe selected as new Lakeport Police chief

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Written by: Elizabeth Larson
Published: 17 May 2024
Capt. Dale Stoebe. Courtesy photo.

LAKEPORT, Calif. — After a nationwide search for a new police chief, the city of Lakeport said this week that it has chosen a longtime member of the Lakeport Police Department to lead the agency.

City Manager Kevin Ingram made the final decision to hire Capt. Dale Stoebe to take over the role.

Stoebe will oversee an agency with 13 sworn officers who serve a city of just under 5,000 residents but which attracts thousands more daily visitors as well as tourists.

“As someone who grew up here in this wonderful community, it is both a profound honor and a personal responsibility for me to serve as your police chief,” said Stoebe in a statement released by the city. “I am deeply committed to the safety and well-being of Lakeport, and I promise to lead with the same dedication and care that I would for my own family. Together, we will continue to foster a safe, supportive, and thriving environment for all our residents.”

Stoebe, a lifelong Lakeport resident, has been with the Lakeport Police Department since 1990. He will succeed Chief Brad Rasmussen, who is set to retire in September and has served as chief since May of 2011.

Rasmussen was elected as the new District 4 representative on the Lake County Board of Supervisors in the March primary and will take office in January.

In its announcement on the hiring, the city said that Stoebe was chosen as the top candidate “through a rigorous assessment process” that was part of the extensive national search facilitated by Bob Hall & Associates Executive Recruiters.

Rasmussen announced his candidacy for supervisor in March of 2023. Six months later, in September, he asked for, and received, the City Council’s approval for Stoebe to travel to the Federal Bureau of Investigation National Academy in Quantico, Virginia.

Rasmussen said the agency had applied to the FBI in early 2022 to have Stoebe admitted to the 10-week academy, the nation’s “top leadership course for police leaders.”

Stoebe attended from January through March. The FBI sponsored the course but the city paid for travel, which was expected to be less than $2500.

In January, the same month that Stoebe left for the academy, the City Council unanimously approved a $27,000 contract with Bob Hall & Associates for the recruitment.

Administrative Services Director/City Clerk Kelly Buendia told the council in January that staff was asking to hire the firm because they had concluded that the recruitment “quickly gets out of our scope.”

The city’s announcement included a statement from Councilmember Stacey Mattina. “I am excited to have Captain Stoebe take the reins. He already understands the public safety needs of Lakeport and has long established strong community relationships.”

Stoebe initially was hired as a reserve officer in 1990, and was hired as a full-time officer in 1993.

In his 33 years with the department, the city said Stoebe has served in capacities including patrol officer, narcotics task force member and school resource officer, where he was involved in teaching the Drug Abuse Resistance Education, or D.A.R.E., program.

He worked for 10 years as a detective. Stoebe was the initial detective leading the investigation of the October 2022 murder of Barbara La Forge in her downtown frame shop. That case remains the city’s only unsolved murder.

In 2006, he was promoted to sergeant, a role in which he served for eight years. At that point, the city said he took on responsibilities in police operations, recruiting and internal affairs.

Transparent California, the state’s largest pay and pension database, shows Stoebe serving as a sergeant until 2015, and then his title changing to police officer III in 2016. The following year, he was once again listed as sergeant.

Two months after the departure of Lt. Jason Ferguson in July of 2019 to take the chief of police job in Cloverdale, Stoebe was promoted to lieutenant and became second in command of the department, overseeing all its functions.

City officials said the recruitment process started with executive recruiters gathering input from the City Council, members of the Lakeport community, police department staff, and city staff, which set the stage for a nationwide search.

The four most qualified candidates participated in interview panel assessments, which included three panels — one of police chiefs from around the region, another of city staff leadership and the third a community panel.

Following three hours of interviews and being evaluated by 13 different assessors, candidates who city officials said “most closely aligned with the public safety needs of the community” were invited to an interview with Ingram, who ultimately made the decision. Under the city’s governance structure, the city manager hires the police chief.

“Capt. Stoebe was selected after receiving strong feedback from the community panel as well as the other assessors and highlighting his deep-rooted commitment to public safety in Lakeport,” Ingram said.

“The City of Lakeport looks forward to Captain Stoebe's leadership as he assumes his new role as Police Chief, continuing to enhance the safety and well-being of the community,” the city said in its announcement.

The pay rate for Stoebe has so far not been disclosed, but Transparent California shows Ramussen’s pay totals about $130,000 a year, excluding benefits, while Stoebe’s 2022 pay was just over $104,000.

It’s expected that the City Council will discuss and approve Stoebe’s employment contract at an upcoming meeting

Email Elizabeth Larson at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.. Follow her on Twitter, @ERLarson, or Lake County News, @LakeCoNews.

Thompson secures historic discharge petition on Fire Victims Tax Relief Bill

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Written by: LAKE COUNTY NEWS REPORTS
Published: 17 May 2024
On Wednesday, Rep. Mike Thompson (CA-04) and Rep. Greg Steube (FL-17) led a bipartisan group of 218 Members of Congress to successfully advance a discharge petition which will force House Speaker Mike Johnson to bring the Federal Disaster Tax Relief Act (H.R. 5863) to the House floor for a vote.

The bill would exempt thousands of qualified wildfire victims in California, including PG&E fire victims, from having to pay federal income tax on their settlement money or pay tax on attorney fees that are included in the settlement.

This relief would also apply retroactively to qualified victims.

“Fire survivors have been through enough in the wake of losing their homes and livelihoods to wildfires. It’s wrong to tax them on the settlement money meant to help them rebuild their lives,” said Thompson on Wednesday. “Today’s historic discharge petition reaffirms the House’s strong, bipartisan support for survivors and sends a clear message to Republicans who have stopped this bill in the Senate: It’s time to work with us to pass much-needed relief for disaster victims.”

The bill excludes from taxpayer gross income, for income tax purposes, any amount received by an individual taxpayer as compensation for expenses or losses incurred due to a qualified wildfire disaster (a disaster declared after 2014 as a result of a forest or range fire).

It also excludes relief payments for losses resulting from the East Palestine, Ohio, train derailment on Feb. 3, 2023 and designates Hurricane Ian, among other federally declared disasters, as a qualified disaster for the purposes of determining the tax treatment of certain disaster-related personal casualty losses.

The action marks only the third time a House discharge petition has succeeded in the last 22 years.

Next, the discharge motion will enter a waiting period for seven legislative days after which any signatory may call it up for a House vote.

Once called, it must be scheduled for a vote within two legislative days.

Thompson represents California’s Fourth Congressional District, which includes all or part of Lake, Napa, Solano, Sonoma and Yolo counties.

California bills to watchdog utility spending pass through suspense file

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Written by: LAKE COUNTY NEWS REPORTS
Published: 17 May 2024
Two bills that proponents say would move the needle on California's electricity rate crisis by increasing oversight of utility spending on wildfire mitigation and other infrastructure investments emerged from the Senate suspense file on Thursday, a key hurdle.

SB 1003 (Dodd) would require utilities to demonstrate their wildfire mitigation plans prioritize affordable, timely solutions proven to effectively reduce risk.

AB 2054 (Bauer-Kahan) would prevent utilities from automatically passing excessive project costs on to ratepayers for projects like wildfire mitigation.

Wildfire mitigation is the biggest driver of skyrocketing electricity bills in recent years.

Instead of prioritizing cost-effective solutions, The Utility Report Network, or TURN, said utilities are incentivized to pursue the most expensive option — undergrounding power lines at a cost of up to $6.1 million per mile — because they can earn a lucrative rate of return.

TURN said the consequences have been severe rate shocks for Californians.

"SB 1003 and AB 2054 emerged from the suspense file today, an important step towards advancing oversight of utility spending in California,” Katy Morsony, legislative and assistant managing attorney at TURN, said Thursday.

“For too long, utilities have treated customers like a credit card — passing along budget overruns without regulator approval and choosing the most expensive option for wildfire mitigation to maximize profits. Enough is enough. It's time for lawmakers to prove they're working for utility customers, not executives,” Morsony said.
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