Satellites have shown two mysterious 'black hole' whirlpools in the
South Atlantic ocean - ultra powerful “vortexes” which suck water down
into the depths.
The whirpools - never witnessed before - would
suck down ships, debris and even living creatures, moving 1.3 million
cubic metres of water per second.
Two of the black holes - or “maelstroms” - have been sighted in three months by physicists from Zurich and Miami.
The
powerful vortices of current have been described as ‘maelstroms’ and
are ‘mathematical analogues’ for black holes – which is to say they do
exactly the same with water that black holes do with light.
The
discovery could give new insights into how oceanic currents transport
debris and may even have implications for climate change studies.
Astronomical
black holes bend space and time into a perpetually collapsing vortex.
Light itself bends around them, which enables astronomers to recognise
their existence.
Similarly, these oceanic maelstroms funnel
current into an almost permanent spiral, trapping debris, oil and
potentially living creatures in a body of water. Hardly anything leaks
out.
The scientists used Edgar Allen Poe’s 1841 story ‘A descent into a Maelstrom’ to describe their discovery:
“The
edge of the whirl was represented by a broad belt of gleaming spray;
but no particle of this slipped into the mouth of the terrific funnel…”
The
ability to apply the same mathematical principles to water currents on
earth as black holes in space is an unexpected side-effect of the theory
of general relativity.
This phenomenon has been observed in the
South Atlantic and South-western Indian Ocean, using satellite imagery
designed to spot the aquatic equivalent of black hole currents.
According to scientists, the maelstroms are prevalent in this area
thanks to the southbound Agulhas current in the Indian Ocean.
In a
three-month period, two perfect matches were found to mimic black hole
behaviour, “We have found exceptionally coherent material belts in the
South Atlantic, filled with analogues of photon spheres around black
holes,” said George Haller, from the Swiss Federal Institute of
Technology in Zürich and Francisco Beron-Vera at the University of Miami
in Florida, who worked on the study.
The phrase ‘photon spheres’
refers to the light that is trapped around astronomical black holes, and
in this instance is comparable to the rings of debris that are forming
around these ocean maelstroms. As Haller and Beron-Vera’s findings note,
‘these vortices will capture and swallow nearby passively floating
debris.’
In their research findings, Haller and Beron-Vora
express their surprise at finding real-world examples that hold so
closely to the theoretical equations. ‘Vortices in turbulence are often
envisaged as rotating bodies of fluid, traveling as coherent islands in
an otherwise incoherent ambient flow. This… …view is appealingly simple,
yet challenging to apply in actual vortex detection.’
The
maelstroms are detected by their rotating edges, which the scientists
found were reliable indicators of the vortex within, based on pioneering
research carried out by Stephen Hawking on black holes: ‘Intuitively,
one expects that any…vortex in the fluid must contain such a singularity
in its interior, just as all black holes are expected to contain
Penrose-Hawking singularities. This expectation turns out to be
correct’.
The singularities, as they have been termed, last for
months at a time, moving across the ocean without interference from
other currents.
Thus they can transport water of different
temperatures and salinity to other areas of the ocean, potentially
influencing the regional climate.
Haller and Beron-Vera found
that the vortices transported water in a north-western direction 30%
faster than had previously been reckoned – at a rate equating to 1.3
million cubic metres of water per second.
In addition, the
maelstroms were found to occur four times deeper in the ocean than
previously estimated; the study found examples as deep as 2000m below
the surface.
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