NASA's Hubble
Space Telescope and NASA's Chandra X-ray Observatory team up to identify a
possible intermediate-mass black hole.
Credits: NASA,
ESA, CXC, Yi-Chi Chang (National Tsing Hua University); Image Processing:
Joseph DePasquale (STScI)
NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope and
NASA’s Chandra X-ray Observatory have
teamed up to identify a new possible example of a rare class of black holes.
Called NGC 6099 HLX-1, this bright X-ray source seems to reside in a compact
star cluster in a giant elliptical galaxy.
Just a few years after its 1990 launch,
Hubble discovered that galaxies throughout the universe can contain
supermassive black holes at their centers weighing millions or billions of
times the mass of our Sun. In addition, galaxies also contain as many as
millions of small black holes weighing less than 100 times the mass of the Sun.
These form when massive stars reach the end of their lives.
Far more elusive are intermediate-mass
black holes (IMBHs), weighing between a few hundred to a few 100,000 times the
mass of our Sun. This not-too-big, not-too-small category of black holes is
often invisible to us because IMBHs don’t gobble as much gas and stars as the
supermassive ones, which would emit powerful radiation. They have to be caught
in the act of foraging in order to be found. When they occasionally devour a
hapless bypassing star — in what astronomers call a tidal disruption event—
they pour out a gusher of radiation.
The newest probable IMBH, caught snacking in telescope data, is located on the galaxy NGC 6099’s outskirts at approximately 40,000 light-years from the galaxy’s center, as described in a new study in the Astrophysical Journal. The galaxy is located about 450 million light-years away in the constellation Hercules.
A Hubble Space Telescope image of a pair of galaxies:
NGC 6099 (lower left) and NGC 6098 (upper right). The purple blob depicts X-ray
emission from a compact star cluster. The X-rays are produced by an
intermediate-mass black hole tearing apart a star.
Science: NASA, ESA, CXC, Yi-Chi Chang (National Tsing
Hua University); Image Processing: Joseph DePasquale (STScI)
Astronomers first saw an unusual
source of X-rays in an image taken by Chandra in 2009. They then followed its
evolution with ESA’s XMM-Newton space observatory.
“X-ray sources with such extreme
luminosity are rare outside galaxy nuclei and can serve as a key probe for
identifying elusive IMBHs. They represent a crucial missing link in black hole
evolution between stellar mass and supermassive black holes,” said lead author
Yi-Chi Chang of the National Tsing Hua University, Hsinchu, Taiwan.
X-ray emission coming from NGC 6099
HLX-1 has a temperature of 3 million degrees, consistent with a tidal
disruption event. Hubble found evidence for a small cluster of stars around the
black hole. This cluster would give the black hole a lot to feast on, because
the stars are so closely crammed together that they are just a few light-months
apart (about 500 billion miles).
The suspected IMBH reached maximum
brightness in 2012 and then continued declining to 2023. The optical and X-ray
observations over the period do not overlap, so this complicates the
interpretation. The black hole may have ripped apart a captured star, creating
a plasma disk that displays variability, or it may have formed a disk that
flickers as gas plummets toward the black hole.
“If the IMBH is eating a star, how
long does it take to swallow the star’s gas? In 2009, HLX-1 was fairly bright.
Then in 2012, it was about 100 times brighter. And then it went down again,”
said study co-author Roberto Soria of the Italian National Institute for
Astrophysics (INAF). “So now we need to wait and see if it’s flaring multiple
times, or there was a beginning, there was peak, and now it’s just going to go
down all the way until it disappears.”
The IMBH is on the outskirts of the
host galaxy, NGC 6099, about 40,000 light-years from the galaxy’s center. There
is presumably a supermassive black hole at the galaxy’s core, which is
currently quiescent and not devouring a star.
Black Hole Building Blocks
The team emphasizes that doing a
survey of IMBHs can reveal how the larger supermassive black holes form in the
first place. There are two alternative theories. One is that IMBHs are the
seeds for building up even larger black holes by coalescing together, since big
galaxies grow by taking in smaller galaxies. The black hole in the middle of a
galaxy grows as well during these mergers. Hubble observations uncovered a
proportional relationship: the more massive the galaxy, the bigger the black
hole. The emerging picture with this new discovery is that galaxies could have
“satellite IMBHs” that orbit in a galaxy’s halo but don’t always fall to the
center.
Another theory is that the gas clouds in the middle of dark-matter halos in the early universe don’t make stars first, but just collapse directly into a supermassive black hole. NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope’s discovery of very distant black holes being disproportionately more massive relative to their host galaxy tends to support this idea.
However, there could be an observational
bias toward the detection of extremely massive black holes in the distant
universe, because those of smaller size are too faint to be seen. In reality,
there could be more variety out there in how our dynamic universe constructs
black holes. Supermassive black holes collapsing inside dark-matter halos might
simply grow in a different way from those living in dwarf galaxies where
black-hole accretion might be the favored growth mechanism.
"So if we are lucky, we’re going to
find more free-floating black holes suddenly becoming X-ray bright because of a
tidal disruption event. If we can do a statistical study, this will tell us how
many of these IMBHs there are, how often they disrupt a star, how bigger
galaxies have grown by assembling smaller galaxies.” said Soria.
The challenge is that Chandra and
XMM-Newton only look at a small fraction of the sky, so they don’t often find
new tidal disruption events, in which black holes are consuming stars. The Vera
C. Rubin Observatory in Chile, an all-sky survey telescope from the U.S.
National Science Foundation and the Department of Energy, could detect these
events in optical light as far as hundreds of millions of light-years away.
Follow-up observations with Hubble and Webb can reveal the star cluster around
the black hole.
The Hubble Space Telescope has been operating for more than three decades and continues to make ground-breaking discoveries that shape our fundamental understanding of the universe. Hubble is a project of international cooperation between NASA and ESA (European Space Agency). NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland, manages the telescope and mission operations. Lockheed Martin Space, based in Denver, also supports mission operations at Goddard. The Space Telescope Science Institute in Baltimore, which is operated by the Association of Universities for Research in Astronomy, conducts Hubble science operations for NASA.
Source: NASA's Hubble, Chandra Spot Rare Type of Black Hole Eating a Star - NASA Science
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