Hundreds of black holes previously hidden, or buried, have been found using NASA’s Chandra X-ray Observatory. This result helps give astronomers a more accurate census of black holes in the universe.
The black holes in this new study are the supermassive variety
that contain millions or even billions of times the mass of the Sun. While
astronomers think that almost all large galaxies harbor giant black holes in
their centers, only some of the black holes will be actively pulling in
material that produces radiation, and some will be buried underneath dust and
gas.
A survey has revealed hundreds of previously unidentified black holes using
data from the Chandra Source Catalog and the Sloan Digitized Sky Survey (SDSS).
Researchers compared the X-ray and optical data for a class of objects known as
“XBONGs” (X-ray bright, optically normal galaxies) to reveal about 400
supermassive black holes. These graphics show these XBONGs in X-rays from
Chandra and optical light from SDSS. Credits: X-ray: NASA/CXC/SAO/D. Kim
et al.; Optical/IR: Legacy Surveys/D. Lang (Perimeter Institute)
By combining data from the Chandra Source Catalog – a public repository
including hundreds of thousands of X-ray sources detected by the observatory
over its first 15 years – and optical data from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey
(SDSS), a team of astronomers was able to identify hundreds of black holes that
had previously been hidden. They are in galaxies not previously identified to
contain quasars, extremely bright objects with rapidly growing supermassive
black holes.
“Astronomers have already identified huge numbers of black holes, but many
remain elusive,” said Dong-Woo Kim of the Center for Astrophysics | Harvard
& Smithsonian (CfA), who led the study. “Our research has uncovered a
missing population and helped us understand how they are behaving.”
For about 40 years scientists have known about galaxies that look normal in
optical light – with light from stars and gas but not the distinctive optical
signatures of a quasar – but shine brightly in X-rays. They refer to these
objects as “X-ray bright optically normal galaxies” or “XBONGs.”
By systematically combing through the deep Chandra Source Catalog and
comparing to SDSS optical data, the researchers identified 817 XBONG
candidates, more than ten times the number known before Chandra was in
operation. Chandra’s sharp images, matching the quality of those from SDSS, and
the large amount of data in the Chandra Source Catalog made it possible to
detect this many XBONG candidates. Further study revealed that about half of
these XBONGs represent a population of previously hidden black holes.
“These results show how powerful it is to compare X-ray and optical data
mines,” said co-author Amanda Malnati, an undergraduate student at Smith
College in Northampton, Massachusetts. “The Chandra Source Catalog is a growing
treasure that will help astronomers make discoveries for years to come.”
X-rays are particularly useful to search for rapidly growing black holes
because material swirling around them is superheated to millions of degrees and
glows strongly in X-ray wavelengths. A thick cocoon of gas and dust surrounding
a black hole will block most or all the light at optical wavelengths. X-rays,
however, pass through the cocoon much more easily to be detected by
Chandra.
After studying the amount of X-rays detected at different energies for each
source, the team concluded that about half the XBONG candidates involve X-ray
sources that are buried under thick gas because relatively small amounts of
low- energy X-rays were detected. Such X-rays are blocked more easily by layers
of surrounding gas than higher- energy ones.
These X-ray sources are so bright that almost all of them must be from
material surrounding rapidly growing supermassive black holes. Data from NASA's
Wide-Field Infrared Survey Explorer provides additional evidence that about
half of the XBONGs are buried, growing supermassive black holes. These black
holes range in distances between 550 million and 7.8 billion light-years from
Earth.
“It’s not every day that you can say you discovered a black hole,” said
co-author Alyssa Cassity, a graduate student at the University of British
Columbia, “so, it’s very exciting to realize that we have discovered hundreds
of them.”
The explanation for the XBONGs that are not buried underneath thick gas is
less clear. About 100 of the X-ray sources may not be single points of X-rays
sources, but instead appear spread out. Some of these may be galaxies in
previously unidentified groups or clusters of galaxies, which are known to
contain large quantities of hot, X-ray emitting gas. No more than about 20% of
the XBONGs can be categorized this way. The remaining 30% may contain some
supermassive black holes located in galaxies where the optical signals from the
supermassive black holes are diluted by relatively bright light from stars.
Scientists will need additional research to sort out the true nature of these
XBONGs.
Dong-Woo Kim presented these results at the 241st meeting of the American Astronomical Society in Seattle, WA.
NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center manages the Chandra program. The Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory's Chandra X-ray Center controls science operations 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: http://www.nasa.gov/chandra
Source: Astronomers
Dig Out Buried Black Holes with NASA's Chandra | NASA
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