A spectacular set of rings around a black hole has been captured using NASA's Chandra X-ray Observatory and Neil Gehrels Swift Observatory. The X-ray images of the giant rings have revealed new information about dust located in our Galaxy, using a similar principle to the X-rays performed in doctor's offices and airports.
The black hole is part of a binary system called V404 Cygni, located about
7,800 light-years away from Earth. The black hole is actively pulling material
away from a companion star — with about half the mass of the Sun — into a disk
around the invisible object. This material glows in X-rays, so astronomers
refer to these systems as "X-ray binaries."
On June 5 2015, Swift discovered a burst of X-rays from V404 Cygni. The
burst created the high-energy rings from a phenomenon known as light echoes.
Instead of sound waves bouncing off a canyon wall, the light echoes around V404
Cygni were produced when a burst of X-rays from the black hole system bounced
off of dust clouds between V404 Cygni and Earth. Cosmic dust is not like
household dust but is more like smoke, and consists of tiny, solid particles.
In a new composite image, X-rays from Chandra (light blue) have been
combined with optical data from the Pan-STARRS telescope on Hawaii that show
the stars in the field of view. The image contains eight separate concentric
rings. Each ring is created by X-rays from V404 Cygni flares observed in 2015
that reflect off different dust clouds. (An artist's illustration explains how the
rings seen by Chandra and Swift were produced. To simplify the graphic, the
illustration shows only four rings instead of eight.)
The team analyzed 50 Swift observations made in 2015 between June 30 and
August 25. Chandra observed the system on July 11 and 25. It was such a bright
event that the operators of Chandra purposely placed V404 Cygni in between the
detectors so that another bright burst would not damage the instrument.
The rings tell astronomers not only about the black hole's behavior, but
also about the landscape between V404 Cygni and Earth. For example, the
diameter of the rings in X-rays reveals the distances to the intervening dust
clouds the light ricocheted off. If the cloud is closer to Earth, the ring
appears to be larger and vice versa. The light echoes appear as narrow rings
rather than wide rings or haloes because the X-ray burst lasted only a relatively
short period of time.
The researchers also used the rings to probe the properties of the dust
clouds themselves. The authors compared the X-ray spectra — that is, the
brightness of X-rays over a range of wavelengths — to computer models of
dust with different compositions. Different compositions of dust will result in
different amounts of the lower energy X-rays being absorbed and prevented from
being detected with Chandra. This is a similar principle to how different parts
of our body or our luggage absorb different amounts of X-rays, giving
information about their structure and composition.
The team determined that the dust most likely contains mixtures of graphite
and silicate grains. In addition, by analyzing the inner rings with Chandra,
they found that the densities of the dust clouds changes are not uniform in all
directions. Previous studies have assumed that they did not.
This result is related to a similar finding of the X-ray binary Circinus X-1, which contains a
neutron star rather than a black hole, published in a paper in the June 20,
2015, issue of The Astrophysical Journal, titled, "Lord of the Rings: A Kinematic Distance to Circinus
X-1 from a Giant X-Ray Light Echo" (preprint). This
study was also led by Sebastian Heinz.
The V404 Cygni results were led by the same astronomer, Sebastian Heinz of
the University of Wisconsin in Madison. This paper was published in the July 1,
2016 issue of The Astrophysical Journal (preprint). The co-authors of the study
are Lia Corrales (University of Michigan); Randall Smith (Center for
Astrophysics | Harvard & Smithsonian); Niel Brandt (The Pennsylvania State
University); Peter Jonker (Netherlands Institute for Space Research); Richard
Plotkin (University of Nevada, Reno) and Joey Neilson (Villanova University).
NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center manages the Chandra program. The
Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory's Chandra X-ray Center controls science
from Cambridge, Massachusetts, and flight operations from Burlington,
Massachusetts.
Image credit: X-ray: NASA/CXC/U.Wisc-Madison/S. Heinz et al.;
Optical/IR: Pan-STARRS
Read more from NASA's Chandra
X-ray Observatory.
For more Chandra images, multimedia and related materials, visit: http://www.nasa.gov/chandra
Source: https://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/chandra/images/huge-rings-around-a-black-hole.html
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