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For the first time, astronomers have
probed the physical environment of repeating X-ray outbursts near monster black
holes thanks to data from NASA’s NICER (Neutron star Interior Composition
Explorer) and other missions.
Scientists have only recently
encountered this class of X-ray flares, called QPEs, or quasi-periodic
eruptions. A system astronomers have nicknamed Ansky is the eighth QPE source
discovered, and it produces the most energetic outbursts seen to date. Ansky
also sets records in terms of timing and duration, with eruptions every 4.5
days or so that last approximately 1.5 days.
“These QPEs are mysterious and intensely interesting phenomena,” said Joheen Chakraborty, a graduate student at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in Cambridge. “One of the most intriguing aspects is their quasi-periodic nature. We’re still developing the methodologies and frameworks we need to understand what causes QPEs, and Ansky’s unusual properties are helping us improve those tools.”
Watch how astronomers used data from NASA’s NICER
(Neutron star Interior Composition Explorer) to study a mysterious cosmic
phenomenon called a quasi-periodic eruption, or QPE.
NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center
Ansky’s name comes from
ZTF19acnskyy, the moniker of a visible-light outburst seen in 2019. It was
located in a galaxy about 300 million light-years away in the constellation
Virgo. This event was the first indication that something unusual might be happening.
A paper about Ansky, led by Chakraborty, was published Tuesday in The
Astrophysical Journal.
A leading theory suggests that QPEs
occur in systems where a relatively low-mass object passes through the disk of
gas surrounding a supermassive black hole that holds hundreds of thousands to billions of
times the Sun’s mass.
When the lower-mass object punches
through the disk, its passage drives out expanding clouds of hot gas that we
observe as QPEs in X-rays.
Scientists think the eruptions' quasi-periodicity occurs because the smaller object’s orbit is not perfectly circular and spirals toward the black hole over time. Also, the extreme gravity close to the black hole warps the fabric of space-time, altering the object’s orbits so they don’t close on themselves with each cycle. Scientists’ current understanding suggests the eruptions repeat until the disk disappears or the orbiting object disintegrates, which may take up to a few years.
A system astronomers call Ansky, in the galaxy at the
center of this image, is home to a recently discovered series of quasi-periodic
eruptions.
Sloan Digital Sky Survey
“Ansky’s extreme properties may be due to the nature of the disk around its
supermassive black hole,” said Lorena Hernández-García, an astrophysicist at
the Millennium Nucleus on Transversal Research and Technology to Explore
Supermassive Black Holes, the Millennium Institute of Astrophysics, and
University of Valparaíso in Chile. “In most QPE systems the supermassive black
hole likely shreds a passing star, creating a small disk very close to itself.
In Ansky’s case, we think the disk is much larger and can involve objects
farther away, creating the longer timescales we observe.”
Hernández-García, in addition to
being a co-author on Chakraborty’s paper, led the study that discovered Ansky’s QPEs, which was
published in April in Nature Astronomy and used data from NICER, NASA’s Neil Gehrels Swift Observatory and Chandra X-ray Observatory, as well as ESA’s (European Space Agency’s) XMM-Newton space telescope.
NICER’s position on the International
Space Station allowed it to observe Ansky about 16 times every day from May to July
2024. The frequency of the observations was critical in detecting the X-ray
fluctuations that revealed Ansky produces QPEs.
Chakraborty’s team used data from
NICER and XMM-Newton to map the rapid evolution of the ejected material driving
the observed QPEs in unprecedented detail by studying variations in X-ray
intensity during the rise and fall of each eruption.
The researchers found that each impact resulted in about a Jupiter’s worth of mass reaching expansion velocities around 15% of the speed of light.
The NICER (Neutron star Interior Composition Explorer)
X-ray telescope is reflected on NASA astronaut and Expedition 72 flight
engineer Nick Hague’s spacesuit helmet visor in this high-flying “space-selfie”
taken during a spacewalk on Jan. 16, 2025.
NASA/Nick Hague
The NICER telescope’s ability to
frequently observe Ansky from the space station and its unique measurement
capabilities also made it possible for the team to measure the size and
temperature of the roughly spherical bubble of debris as it expanded.
“All NICER’s Ansky observations used in
these papers were collected after the instrument experienced a ‘light leak’ in
May 2023,” said Zaven Arzoumanian, the mission’s science lead at NASA’s Goddard
Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland. “Even though the leak – which was patched in January –
affected the telescope’s observing strategy, NICER was still able to make vital
contributions to time domain astronomy, or the study of changes in the cosmos
on timescales we can see.”
After the repair, NICER continued
observing Ansky to explore how the outbursts have evolved over time. A paper
about these results, led by Hernández-García and co-authored by Chakraborty, is
under review.
Observational studies of QPEs like
Chakraborty’s will also play a key role in preparing the science community for
a new era of multimessenger astronomy, which combines measurements using light, elementary particles, and
space-time ripples called gravitational waves to better understand objects and
events in the universe.
One goal of ESA’s future LISA (Laser Interferometer Space Antenna) mission, in which NASA is a partner, is to study extreme
mass-ratio inspirals — or systems where a low-mass object orbits a much more
massive one, like Ansky. These systems should emit gravitational waves that are
not observable with current facilities. Electromagnetic studies of QPEs will
help improve models of those systems ahead of LISA’s anticipated launch in the
mid-2030s.
“We’re going to keep observing Ansky for
as long as we can,” Chakraborty said. “We’re still in the infancy of
understanding QPEs. It’s such an exciting time because there’s so much to
learn.”
By Jeanette
Kazmierczak
NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md.
Source: NASA’s NICER Maps Debris From Recurring Cosmic Crashes - NASA Science
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