Astronomers using NASA's Hubble Space Telescope have come up with what they say is some of their best evidence yet for the presence of a rare class of "intermediate-sized" black hole that may be lurking in the heart of the closest globular star cluster to Earth, located 6,000 light-years away.
Like intense gravitational potholes in the
fabric of space, virtually all black holes seem to come in two sizes: small and
humongous. It's estimated that our galaxy is littered with 100 million small
black holes (several times the mass of our Sun) created from exploded stars.
The universe at large is flooded with supermassive black holes, weighing
millions or billions of times our Sun’s mass and found in the centers of
galaxies.
A long-sought missing link is an
intermediate-mass black hole, weighing in somewhere between 100 and 100,000
solar masses. How would they form, where would they hang out, and why do they
seem to be so rare?
A Hubble Space Telescope image of the globular star cluster, Messier 4. The cluster is a dense collection of several hundred thousand stars. Astronomers suspect that an intermediate-mass black hole, weighing as much as 800 times the mass of our Sun, is lurking, unseen, at its core. Credits: ESA/Hubble, NASA
Astronomers have identified other possible
intermediate-mass black holes through a variety of observational techniques.
Two of the best candidates — 3XMM J215022.4−055108, which Hubble helped discover in
2020, and HLX-1, identified in 2009 — reside in dense star clusters
in the outskirts of other galaxies. Each of these possible black holes has the
mass of tens of thousands of suns, and may have once been at the centers of
dwarf galaxies. NASA’s Chandra X-ray observatory has also helped make many
possible intermediate black hole discoveries, including a large sample
in 2018.
Looking much closer to home, there
have been a number of suspected intermediate-mass black holes detected in dense
globular star clusters orbiting our Milky Way galaxy. For example, in 2008, Hubble astronomers announced the
suspected presence of an intermediate-mass black hole in the globular cluster
Omega Centauri. For a number of reasons, including the need for more data,
these and other intermediate-mass black hole findings still remain inconclusive
and do not rule out alternative theories.
Hubble's unique capabilities have
now been used to zero in on the core of the globular star cluster Messier 4
(M4) to go black-hole hunting with higher precision than in previous searches.
"You can't do this kind of science without Hubble," said Eduardo
Vitral of the Space Telescope Science Institute in Baltimore, Maryland, lead
author on a paper to be published in the Monthly
Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society.
Vitral’s team has detected a
possible intermediate-mass black hole of roughly 800 solar masses. The
suspected object can't be seen, but its mass is calculated by studying the
motion of stars caught in its gravitational field, like bees swarming around a
hive. Measuring their motion takes time, and a lot of precision. This is where
Hubble accomplishes what no other present-day telescope can do. Astronomers
looked at 12 years' worth of M4 observations from Hubble and resolved pinpoint
stars.
His team estimates that the black
hole in M4 could be as much as 800 times our Sun's mass. Hubble's data tend to
rule out alternative theories for this object, such as a compact central
cluster of unresolved stellar remnants like neutron stars, or smaller black
holes swirling around each other.
"We have good confidence that
we have a very tiny region with a lot of concentrated mass. It's about three
times smaller than the densest dark mass that we had found before in other
globular clusters," said Vitral. "The region is more compact than
what we can reproduce with numerical simulations when we take into account a
collection of black holes, neutron stars, and white dwarfs segregated at the
cluster's center. They are not able to form such a compact concentration of
mass."
Credits: NASA's Goddard Space
Flight Center; Lead Producer: Paul Morris; Computer Representation of the
Stellar Motions in the Core of M4: Mattia Libralato (AURA/STScI for ESA)
A grouping of close-knit objects
would be dynamically unstable. If the object isn't a single intermediate-mass
black hole, it would require an estimated 40 smaller black holes crammed into a
space only one-tenth of a light-year across to produce the observed stellar
motions. The consequences are that they would merge and/or be ejected in a game
of interstellar pinball.
"We measure the motions of
stars and their positions, and we apply physical models that try to reproduce
these motions. We end up with a measurement of a dark mass extension in the
cluster's center," said Vitral. "The closer to the central mass, more
randomly the stars are moving. And, the greater the central mass, the faster
these stellar velocities."
Because intermediate-mass black
holes in globular clusters have been so elusive, Vitral cautions, "While
we cannot completely affirm that it is a central point of gravity, we can show
that it is very small. It's too tiny for us to be able to explain other than it
being a single black hole. Alternatively, there might be a stellar mechanism we
simply don't know about, at least within current physics."
The Hubble Space Telescope is a project of international cooperation between NASA and ESA. NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland, manages the telescope. The Space Telescope Science Institute (STScI) in Baltimore, Maryland, conducts Hubble and Webb science operations. STScI is operated for NASA by the Association of Universities for Research in Astronomy, in Washington, D.C.
Source: NASA's Hubble Hunts for Intermediate-Sized Black Hole Close to Home | NASA
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