A disk of hot gas swirls around a black hole in this illustration. The stream of gas stretching to the right is what remains of a star that was pulled apart by the black hole. A cloud of hot plasma (gas atoms with their electrons stripped away) above the black hole is known as a corona. Credits: NASA/JPL-Caltech
Recent observations of a black hole devouring a wandering star may help
scientists understand more complex black hole feeding behaviors.
Multiple NASA
telescopes recently observed a massive black hole tearing apart an unlucky star
that wandered too close. Located about 250 million light-years from Earth in
the center of another galaxy, it was the fifth-closest example of a black hole
destroying a star ever observed.
Once the star had been thoroughly ruptured
by the black hole’s gravity, astronomers saw a dramatic rise in high-energy
X-ray light around the black hole. This indicated that as the stellar material
was pulled toward its doom, it formed an extremely hot structure above the
black hole called a corona. NASA’s NuSTAR (Nuclear Spectroscopic Telescopic
Array) satellite is the most sensitive space telescope capable of observing
these wavelengths of light, and the event’s proximity provided an unprecedented
view of the corona’s formation and evolution, according to a new study
published in the Astrophysical
Journal.
The work demonstrates how the destruction
of a star by a black hole – a process formally known as a tidal disruption
event – could be used to better understand what happens to material that’s
captured by one of these behemoths before it’s fully devoured.
Most black holes that scientists can study
are surrounded by hot gas that has accumulated over many years, sometimes
millennia, and formed disks billions of miles wide. In some cases, these disks
shine brighter than entire galaxies. Even around these bright sources, but especially
around much less active black holes, a single star being torn apart and
consumed stands out. And from start to finish, the process often takes only a
matter of weeks or months. The observability and short duration of tidal
disruption events make them especially attractive to astronomers, who can tease
apart how the black hole’s gravity manipulates the material around it, creating
incredible light shows and new physical features.
“Tidal disruption events are a sort of cosmic laboratory,” said study co-author Suvi Gezari, an astronomer at the Space Telescope Science Institute in Baltimore. “They’re our window into the real-time feeding of a massive black hole lurking in the center of a galaxy.”
When a star wanders too close to a black hole, the intense gravity will stretch the star out until it becomes a long river of hot gas, as shown in this animation. The gas is then whipped around the black hole and is gradually pulled into orbit, forming a bright disk. Credits: Science Communication Lab/DESY
A Surprising Signal
The focus of the new study is an event called AT2021ehb, which took place
in a galaxy with a central black hole about 10 million times the mass of our
Sun (about the difference between a bowling ball and the Titanic). During this
tidal disruption event, the side of the star nearest the black hole was pulled
harder than the far side of the star, stretching the entire thing apart and
leaving nothing but a long noodle of hot gas.
Scientists think that the stream of gas gets whipped around a black hole
during such events, colliding with itself. This is thought to create shock
waves and outward flows of gas that generate visible light, as well as
wavelengths not visible to the human eye, such as ultraviolet light and X-rays.
The material then starts to settle into a disk rotating around the black hole
like water circling a drain, with friction generating low-energy X-rays. In the
case of AT2021ehb, this series of events took place over just 100 days.
The event was first spotted on March 1, 2021, by the Zwicky Transient Facility (ZTF), located at the Palomar Observatory in Southern California. It
was subsequently studied by NASA’s Neil Gehrels Swift Observatory and Neutron star Interior Composition
Explorer (NICER) telescope (which observes longer X-ray
wavelengths than Swift).
Then, around 300 days after the event was first spotted, NASA’s NuSTAR began
observing the system. Scientists were surprised when NuSTAR detected a corona –
a cloud of hot plasma, or gas atoms with their electrons stripped away – since
coronae usually appear with jets of gas that flow in opposite directions from a
black hole. However, with the AT2021ehb tidal event, there were no jets, which
made the corona observation unexpected. Coronae emit higher-energy X-rays than
any other part of a black hole, but scientists don’t know where the plasma
comes from or exactly how it gets so hot.
“We’ve never seen a tidal disruption event with X-ray emission like this
without a jet present, and that’s really spectacular because it means we can
potentially disentangle what causes jets and what causes coronae,” said Yuhan
Yao, a graduate student at Caltech in Pasadena, California, and lead author of
the new study. “Our observations of AT2021ehb are in agreement with the idea
that magnetic fields have something to do with how the corona forms, and we
want to know what’s causing that magnetic field to get so strong.”
Yao is also leading an effort to look for more tidal disruption events
identified by ZTF and to then observe them with telescopes like Swift, NICER,
and NuSTAR. Each new observation offers the potential for new insights or
opportunities to confirm what has been observed in AT2021ehb and other tidal
disruption events. “We want to find as many as we can,” Yao said.
More About the Mission
A Small Explorer mission led by Caltech and managed by NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Southern California for the agency’s Science Mission Directorate in Washington, NuSTAR was developed in partnership with the Danish Technical University and the Italian Space Agency (ASI). The spacecraft was built by Orbital Sciences Corp. in Dulles, Virginia. NuSTAR’s mission operations center is at the University of California, Berkeley, and the official data archive is at NASA’s High Energy Astrophysics Science Archive Research Center at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center. ASI provides the mission’s ground station and a mirror data archive. Caltech manages JPL for NASA.
For more information about the NuSTAR mission, visit: https://www.nustar.caltech.edu/
Source: NASA Gets Unusually Close Glimpse of Black Hole Snacking on Star | NASA
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