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Accretion disk

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Revision as of 21:25, 25 January 2026 by DanteWashere (talk | contribs) (Created page with "'''Accretion disk''' is a rotating structure of gas, dust, or plasma formed by material falling toward a central massive object under gravity. It is associated with energy release through friction and heating as material spirals inward. Accretion disks are discussed in astrophysics, high-energy astronomy, and studies of compact objects. == Status == Accretion disks are inferred and observed around objects such as black holes, neutron stars, and young stars. Models desc...")
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Accretion disk is a rotating structure of gas, dust, or plasma formed by material falling toward a central massive object under gravity. It is associated with energy release through friction and heating as material spirals inward.

Accretion disks are discussed in astrophysics, high-energy astronomy, and studies of compact objects.

Status

Accretion disks are inferred and observed around objects such as black holes, neutron stars, and young stars. Models describe their structure, radiation mechanisms, and role in mass transfer and angular momentum transport.

Black hole

Neutron star

Protostar

Astrophysics