Abell 478 and NGC 5044. X-ray: NASA/CXC/Univ. of Bologna/F. Ubertosi; Insets Radio: NSF/NRAO/VLBA; Wide field Image: Optical/IR: Univ. of Hawaii/Pan-STARRS; Image Processing: NASA/CXC/SAO/N. Wolk
A team of astronomers have studied 16 supermassive black holes that are firing powerful beams into space, to
track where these beams, or jets, are pointing now and where they were aimed in
the past, as reported in our latest press release. Using NASA’s Chandra X-ray Observatory and the U.S. National Science Foundation (NSF)
National Radio Astronomical Observatory’s (NRAO) Very Large Baseline Array
(VLBA), they found that some of the beams have changed directions by large
amounts.
These two Chandra images show hot
gas in the middle of the galaxy cluster Abell 478 (left) and the galaxy group NGC 5044 (right). The center of
each image contains one of the sixteen black holes firing beams outwards. Each
black hole is in the center of a galaxy embedded in the hot gas.
In the images below, labels and the radio images appear. Ellipses show a pair of cavities in the hot gas for Abell 478 (left) and ellipses show two pairs of cavities for NGC 5044 (right). These cavities were carved out by the beams millions of years ago, giving the directions of the beams in the past. An X shows the location of each supermassive black hole.
Abell 478 and NGC 5044 (Labeled) X-ray: NASA/CXC/Univ. of Bologna/F. Ubertosi; Insets Radio: NSF/NRAO/VLBA; Wide field Image: Optical/IR: Univ. of Hawaii/Pan-STARRS; Image Processing: NASA/CXC/SAO/N. Wolk
The VLBA images are shown as insets, which reveal where the beams are
currently pointing, as seen from Earth. The radio images are both much smaller
than the X-ray images. For Abell 478 the radio image is about
3% of the width of the Chandra image and for NGC 5044 the radio image is about
4% of the Chandra image’s width.
A comparison between the Chandra
and VLBA images shows that the beams for Abell 478 changed direction by about
35 degrees and the beams for NGC 5044 changed direction by about 70 degrees.
Across the entire sample the researchers found that about a third of the 16 galaxies have beams that are pointing in completely different directions than they were before. Some have changed directions by nearly 90 degrees in some cases, and over timescales between one million years and a few tens of millions of years. Given that the black holes are of the order of 10 billion years old, this represents a relatively rapid change for these galaxies.
Wide Field Views of Abell 478 [Left] and NGC 5044 [Right]. X-ray: NASA/CXC/Univ. of Bologna/F. Ubertosi et al.; Optical/IR: Univ. of Hawaii/Pan-STARRS; IR: NASA/ESA/JPL/CalTech/Herschel Space Telescope
Black holes generate beams when material falls onto them via a spinning
disk of matter and some of it then gets redirected outward. The direction of
the beams from each of these giant black holes, which are likely spinning, is
thought to align with the rotation axis of the black hole, meaning that the
beams point along a line connecting the poles.
These beams are thought to be
perpendicular to the disk. If material falls towards the black holes at a
different angle that is not parallel to the disk, it could affect the direction
of the black hole’s rotation axes, changing the direction of the beams.
Scientists think that beams from
black holes and the cavities they carve out play an important role in how
many stars form in their galaxies. The beams pump energy
into the hot gas in and around the galaxy, preventing it from cooling down
enough to form huge numbers of new stars. If the beams change directions by
large amounts, they can tamp down star formation across much larger areas of
the galaxy.
The paper describing these results
was published in the January 20th, 2024 issue of The Astrophysical Journal, and
is available here. The authors are Francesco Ubertosi (University of
Bologna in Italy), Gerritt Schellenberger (Center for Astrophysics | Harvard
& Smithsonian), Ewan O’Sullivan (CfA), Jan Vrtilek (CfA), Simona
Giacintucci (Naval Research Laboratory), Laurence David (CfA), William Forman
(CfA), Myriam Gitti (University of Bologna), Tiziana Venturi (National
Institute of Astrophysics—Institute of Radio Astronomy in Italy), Christine
Jones (CfA), and Fabrizio Brighenti (University of Bologna).
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.
Read
more from NASA’s Chandra X-ray Observatory.
For more Chandra images, multimedia
and related materials, visit:
https://www.nasa.gov/mission/chandra-x-ray-observatory/
Visual Description:
This image contains two X-ray
images presented side by side, separated by a thin, gray line. On the left is
an image of galaxy cluster Abell 478, and on the right is an image of galaxy
group NGC 5044.
The X-ray image of Abell 478
resembles a gooey, blue substance that has been spilled on a black canvas. Most
of the image is covered in this blue goo texture, which is hot gas in X-ray
light, however there are cavities where no blue texture is present. At the
center of the image is a bright, white region. Within the white region, too
small to identify, exists Abell 478’s supermassive black hole.
The X-ray image of NGC 5044, on our right, is more pixelated than the image of Abell 478. It resembles blue television static or noise, that is present on a television when no transmission signal is detected. Most of the image is covered in this blue static, however there are cavities where no blue static is present. At the center of the image is a bright, white region. Within the white region, too small to identify, exists NGC 5044’s supermassive black hole.
No comments:
Post a Comment