J.D. Harrington
Headquarters, Washington
202-358-5241
j.d.harrington@nasa.gov
Megan Watzke
Chandra X-ray Center, Cambridge, Mass.
617-496-7998
mwatzke@cfa.harvard.edu
WASHINGTON -- Astronomers have found
strong evidence that a massive black hole is being ejected from its host galaxy
at a speed of several million miles per hour. New observations from NASA's
Chandra X-ray Observatory suggest that the black hole collided and merged with
another black hole and received a powerful recoil kick from gravitational wave
radiation.
"It's hard to believe that a
supermassive black hole weighing millions of times the mass of the sun could be
moved at all, let alone kicked out of a galaxy at enormous speed," said
Francesca Civano of the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics (CfA), who
led the new study. "But these new data support the idea that gravitational
waves -- ripples in the fabric of space first predicted by Albert Einstein but
never detected directly -- can exert an extremely powerful force."
Although the ejection of a supermassive
black hole from a galaxy by recoil because more gravitational waves are being
emitted in one direction than another is likely to be rare, it nevertheless
could mean that there are many giant black holes roaming undetected out in the
vast spaces between galaxies.
"These black holes would be
invisible to us," said co-author Laura Blecha, also of CfA, "because
they have consumed all of the gas surrounding them after being thrown out of
their home galaxy."
Civano and her group have been studying
a system known as CID-42, located in the middle of a galaxy about 4 billion
light years away. They had previously spotted two distinct, compact sources of
optical light in CID-42, using NASA's Hubble Space Telescope.
More optical data from the ground-based
Magellan and Very Large Telescopes in Chile supplied a spectrum (that is, the
distribution of optical light with energy) that suggested the two sources in
CID-42 are moving apart at a speed of at least 3 million miles per hour.
Previous Chandra observations detected a
bright X-ray source likely caused by super-heated material around one or more
supermassive black holes. However, they could not distinguish whether the
X-rays came from one or both of the optical sources because Chandra was not
pointed directly at CID-42, giving an X-ray source that was less sharp than
usual.
"The previous data told us that
there was something special going on, but we couldn't tell if there were two
black holes or just one," said another co-author Martin Elvis, also of
CfA. "We needed new X-ray data to separate the sources."
When Chandra's sharp High Resolution
Camera was pointed directly at CID-42, the resulting data showed that X-rays
were coming only from one of the sources. The team thinks that when two
galaxies collided, the supermassive black holes in the center of each galaxy
also collided. The two black holes then merged to form a single black hole that
recoiled from gravitational waves produced by the collision, which gave the
newly merged black hole a sufficiently large kick for it to eventually escape
from the galaxy.
The other optical source is thought to
be the bright star cluster that was left behind. This picture is consistent
with recent computer simulations of merging black holes, which show that merged
black holes can receive powerful kicks from the emission of gravitational
waves.
There are two other possible
explanations for what is happening in CID-42. One would involve an encounter
between three supermassive black holes, resulting in the lightest one being
ejected. Another idea is that CID-42 contains two supermassive black holes
spiraling toward one another, rather than one moving quickly away.
Both of these alternate explanations
would require at least one of the supermassive black holes to be very obscured,
since only one bright X-ray source is observed. Thus the Chandra data support
the idea of a black hole recoiling because of gravitational waves.
These results will appear in the June 10
issue of The Astrophysical Journal.
NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center in
Huntsville, Ala., manages the Chandra Program for the agency's Science Mission
Directorate in Washington. The Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory in
Cambridge, Mass., controls Chandra's science and flight operations.
For Chandra images, multimedia and
related materials, visit http://www.nasa.gov/chandra.
For an additional interactive image,
podcast, and video on the finding, visit http://chandra.si.edu.
- end -
No comments:
Post a Comment