| |
|||
|
Contact: Bill
Steigerwald
|
|
![]() |
|
|
March 24, 2003
- RELEASE
NO: 03-33 NEW CLASS OF HOT-TEMPERED BLACK HOLES BUCKS TRENDS NASA scientists have found two smoking-gun features of an intermediate-mass black hole that suggest these newly identified objects are fundamentally different from other types of black holes, running hotter than expected. The observation further establishes these objects as a new class of black hole, yet offers a perplexing twist: Intermediate-mass black holes do not appear to suck in matter the same way as their larger and smaller cousins do. Drs. Tod Strohmayer and Richard Mushotzky of NASA Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md., present these findings today at a press conference at the meeting of the High Energy Astrophysics Division of the American Astronomical Society at Mt. Tremblant, Quebec. The observation was made with the European Space Agency's XMM-Newton satellite and NASA's Rossi X-ray Timing Explorer. "We have been neatly assembling pieces of the black-hole puzzle over the years," said Strohmayer. "Now we have new pieces, some of which are familiar and others which don't seem to fit. A picture may emerge in which intermediate-mass black holes are a different beast altogether." Black holes are objects so dense and have a gravitational potential so heightened that nothing, not even light, can escape the pull if it ventures too close. Although the black holes themselves are invisible, the region surrounding them glow furiously as matter pours in. Stellar
black holes are the remains of massive stars that have imploded, left
with the mass of up to about ten suns. Supermassive black holes contain
the mass of millions to billions of suns confined to a region about the
size of our Solar System. Scientists suspect that intermediate black holes
contain the mass of about 500 to 10,000 suns. Stellar and supermassive
black Scientists
call intermediate-mass black holes ultra-luminous X-ray sources (ULXs).
While they are clearly extremely bright sources of X-ray radiation, these
objects could be smaller black holes with all of their energy (or, light)
beamed in our direction, like a flashlight shined directly into the eyes.
This would make them appear intrinsically brighter (and more massive) Strohmayer
and Mushotzky's observation strongly rules out the beaming model for one
of the brightest ULXs in galaxy M82. The scientists uncovered, for the
first time, a type of flickering in this ULX's X rays called quasiperiodic
oscillations (QPOs). The oscillations likely arise from gas The
scientists also detected the first "broad iron line" from a
ULX. This refers to a pattern of X-ray light from iron atoms stretched
by extreme gravity, a telltale sign of black hole shenanigans afoot, as
Einstein predicted. The one-two punch of a QPO and broad iron line suggests
that this What
the scientists cannot explain, however, is why the M82 ULX accretion disk
is so hot. Theory predicts that smaller black holes have hotter accretion
disks, particularly in the inner ring closest to the black hole. This
is because material can swirl faster and more closely around a stellar "Something new and exotic may be taking place in this object to heat the accretion disk to such high temperatures," said Strohmayer. "The nature of these objects is one of the most interesting conundrums in high energy astrophysics." XMM-Newton was launched from French Guiana in December 1999 and carries three advanced X-ray telescopes. NASA Goddard hosts the XMM U.S. guest visitor support center. NASA Goddard operates the Rossi Explorer, which was launched in 1995. For
animation, refer to the directory at: -end-
|
|||