An artist’s concept of a supermassive black hole, a
surrounding disk of material falling towards the black hole and a jet
containing particles moving away at close to the speed of light. This black
hole represents a recently-discovered quasar powered by a black hole. New
Chandra observations indicate that the black hole is growing at a rate that
exceeds the usual limit for black holes, called the Eddington Limit. Credit:
NASA/CXC/SAO/M. Weiss
X-ray: NASA/CXC/INAF-Brera/L. Ighina et al.;
Illustration: NASA/CXC/SAO/M. Weiss; Image Processing: NASA/CXC/SAO/N. Wolk
A black hole is growing at one of the fastest rates ever recorded,
according to a team of astronomers. This discovery from NASA’s Chandra X-ray
Observatory may help explain how some black holes can reach enormous masses
relatively quickly after the big bang.
The black hole weighs about a
billion times the mass of the Sun and is located about 12.8 billion light-years
from Earth, meaning that astronomers are seeing it only 920 million years after
the universe began. It is producing more X-rays than any other black hole seen
in the first billion years of the universe.
The black hole is powering what
scientists call a quasar, an extremely bright object that outshines entire
galaxies. The power source of this glowing monster is large amounts of matter
funneling around and entering the black hole.
While the same team discovered it
two years ago, it took observations from Chandra in 2023 to discover what sets
this quasar, RACS J0320-35, apart. The X-ray data reveal that this black hole
appears to be growing at a rate that exceeds the normal limit for these
objects.
“It was a bit shocking to see this
black hole growing by leaps and bounds,” said Luca Ighina of the Center for
Astrophysics | Harvard & Smithsonian in Cambridge, Massachusetts, who led
the study.
When matter is pulled toward a
black hole it is heated and produces intense radiation over a broad spectrum,
including X-rays and optical light. This radiation creates pressure on the
infalling material. When the rate of infalling matter reaches a critical value,
the radiation pressure balances the black hole’s gravity, and matter cannot
normally fall inwards any more rapidly. That maximum is referred to as the
Eddington limit.
Scientists think that black holes
growing more slowly than the Eddington limit need to be born with masses of
about 10,000 Suns or more so they can reach a billion solar masses within a
billion years after the big bang — as has been observed in RACS J0320-35. A
black hole with such a high birth mass could directly result from an exotic
process: the collapse of a huge cloud of dense gas containing unusually low
amounts of elements heavier than helium, conditions that may be extremely rare.
If RACS J0320-35 is indeed growing
at a high rate — estimated at 2.4 times the Eddington limit — and has done so
for a sustained amount of time, its black hole could have started out in a more
conventional way, with a mass less than a hundred Suns, caused by the implosion
of a massive star.
“By knowing the mass of the black
hole and working out how quickly it’s growing, we’re able to work backward to
estimate how massive it could have been at birth,” said co-author Alberto
Moretti of INAF-Osservatorio Astronomico di Brera in Italy. “With this
calculation we can now test different ideas on how black holes are born.”
To figure out how fast this black
hole is growing (between 300 and 3,000 Suns per year), the researchers compared
theoretical models with the X-ray signature, or spectrum, from Chandra, which
gives the amounts of X-rays at different energies. They found the Chandra
spectrum closely matched what they expected from models of a black hole growing
faster than the Eddington limit. Data from optical and infrared light also
supports the interpretation that this black hole is packing on weight faster
than the Eddington limit allows.
“How did the universe create the
first generation of black holes?” said co-author Thomas of Connor, also of the
Center for Astrophysics. “This remains one of the biggest questions in
astrophysics and this one object is helping us chase down the answer.”
Another scientific mystery
addressed by this result concerns the cause of jets of particles that move away
from some black holes at close to the speed of light, as seen in RACS J0320-35.
Jets like this are rare for quasars, which may mean that the rapid rate of
growth of the black hole is somehow contributing to the creation of these jets.
The quasar was previously
discovered as part of a radio telescope survey using the Australian Square
Kilometer Array Pathfinder, combined with optical data from the Dark Energy
Camera, an instrument mounted on the Victor M. Blanco 4-meter Telescope at the
Cerro Tololo Inter-American Observatory in Chile. The U.S. National Science
Foundation National Optical-Infrared Astronomy Research Laboratory’s
Gemini-South Telescope on Cerro Pachon, Chile was used to obtain the accurate
distance of RACS J0320-35.
A paper describing these results
has been accepted for publication in The Astrophysical Journal and is available here.
NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama, manages the Chandra program. The Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory’s Chandra X-ray Center controls science operations from Cambridge, and flight operations from Burlington, Massachusetts.
Source: NASA's Chandra Finds Black Hole With Tremendous Growth - NASA
No comments:
Post a Comment