Their powerful
magnetic field lines accelerate electrons to high speeds, causing them to collide with photons, which split into pairs of electrons and...
The blackhole acts like a flywheel: As matter falls into it and increases itsspin, it stores energy; it releases energy again and slows down a bitas
the magnetic field lines accelerate charged particles.
As matter falls into it and increases its spin, it stores energy; it releases energy again and slows down a bit as
the magnetic field lines accelerate charged particles.
Not exact matches
On Earth, the brightest auroras (the high - altitude glows often called the northern and southern lights) are generated when electrons in outer space near Earth are
accelerated by large electrical potentials, or voltages, along the
lines in our planet's
magnetic field and slam into gas molecules in the upper atmosphere above polar regions.
As the pulses approached Earth, the ultralow frequency waves made the planet's
magnetic field lines oscillate and
accelerated electrons traveling along the
field lines to extraordinarily high speeds.
As the
magnetic field lines pushed close together, the long
lines broke apart and reformed like a single stretched rubber band, forming a slingshot that propels the plasma and releases the energy into the plasma,
accelerating the plasma and heating it.
Then, immediately afterwards, Earth's
magnetic field lines vibrate at ultra-low frequencies to further
accelerate the electrons — and all that can happen in just 15 minutes.