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Doomed
Matter Near Black Hole Gets Second Lease on Life
25 March 2003 -- Supermassive black holes, notorious
for ripping apart and swallowing stars, might also help seed interstellar
space with the elements necessary for life, such as hydrogen, carbon,
oxygen and iron, scientists say.
Using NASA's Chandra X-ray Observatory and ESA's XMM-Newton satellite,
scientists at Penn State and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology
found evidence of high-speed winds blowing away copious amounts of gas
from the cores of two quasar galaxies, which are thought to be powered
by black holes.
"The winds we measured imply that as much as a billion suns' worth
of material is blown away over the course of a quasar's lifetime,"
said Dr. George Chartas of the Penn State Astronomy and Astrophysics
Department, who led the observations.
The winds might also regulate black hole growth and spur the creation
of new stars, according to the science team, which includes Drs. Niel
Brandt and Gordon Garmire of Penn State and Dr. Sarah Gallagher
of MIT.
These results are presented today in a press conference at the meeting
of the High Energy Astrophysics Division of the American Astronomical
Society at Mt. Tremblant, Quebec. Different from high-speed jets shooting
off subatomic particles, the newly identified gusts arise from the disk
of matter orbiting the black hole, called the accretion disk, once thought
to be a one-way ticket into the black hole.
Black holes are objects so dense that nothing, not even light, can escape
their gravitational attraction. But this only applies once matter crosses
the theoretical border of a black hole, called the event horizon. Outside
the event horizon, the tug of gravity is strong, but matter and light
can escape.
Theorists have suggested that a wind could blow away material from its
accretion disk and pepper the interstellar region with heavier elements.
The wind is created by radiation pressure, analogous to earthly winds
created by varying high and low air pressure systems.
Chartas and his colleagues observed two quasars, which are exceedingly
distant star-like objects thought to be the bright cores of galaxies fueled
by a supermassive black hole. With Chandra, the team observed a quasar
called APM 08279+5255; and with the European Space Agency's XMM-Newton,
they observed a quasar named PG1115+080.
Both quasars are billions of light years away from Earth. However, APM
08279+5255 was naturally magnified by a factor of about 100 and PG1115+080
by a factor of about 25 through a process called gravitational lensing.
Essentially, their light, while en route to us, was distorted and magnified
by the gravity of intervening galaxies acting like telescope lenses.
With the natural boost in magnification, coupled with the X-ray observatories'
abilities, the scientists could ascertain several key properties in the
quasar light, such as the speed of the gas that absorbed the light, as
well as the material's proximity to the black hole.
The team found the first observational evidence of a wind component transporting
a substantial amount of carbon, oxygen and iron into the interstellar
and intergalactic medium. The wind was moving at 40 percent light speed,
considerably faster than predicted.
Brandt
said the observation may spur new theoretical work about black hole winds
and their effect on their environs. For example, Brandt said, "the
wind might provide insight to the relationship between black hole mass
and the central bulge of its host galaxy."
Chandra, launched in July 1999, is the third in NASA's Great Observatory
series, a sister craft to the Hubble Space Telescope. ESA's XMM-Newton
was launched from French Guiana in December 1999 and carries three advanced
X-ray telescopes.
NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Ala., manages the Chandra program, and TRW, Inc., Redondo Beach, Calif., is the prime contractor for the spacecraft. The Smithsonian's Chandra X-ray Center controls science and flight operations from Cambridge, Mass., for the Office of Space Science at NASA Headquarters, Washington.
[ Christopher Wanjek, NASA]
UNIVERSITY CONTACTS:
George Chartas at Penn State: (+1) 814-863-7946,
gchartas@astro.psu.edu
Niel Brandt at Penn State: (+1) 814-865-3509, nbrandt@astro.psu.edu
Gordon Garmire at Penn State: (+1) 814-865-1117 or 863-9550, ggarmire@astro.psu.edu
Sarah Gallagher at MIT: (+1) 617-258-7348, scg@space.mit.edu
Barbara K. Kennedy (PIO) at Penn State: (+1) 814-863-4682, science@psu.edu
Images:
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Accretion Disk In this animation, we see a supermassive black hole (thought to
power quasars) with its accretion disk -- gas from stars flowing
into the black hole. Wind generated by the black hole (due to radiation pressure) can
blow material away from the accretion disk, which was once thought
to be a one-way ticket into the black hole. CREDIT: NASA/ESA/GSFC
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Quasar APM 08279+5255 This quasar is at a distance of over 5 billion light years from
Earth, a redshift of 3.91. This is an X-ray image captured by the
orbiting Chandra X-ray Observatory. APM 08279+5255 is magnified
naturally through gravitational lensing by a factor of about 100.
This means that the quasars light, while en route to us, was distorted
and magnified by the gravity of intervening galaxies acting like
telescope lenses. A wind generated by a supermassive black hole at the heart of APM
08279+5255 blows gas away from the black hole. As much as a billion
suns' worth of material is blown away over the course of a quasar's
lifetime. CREDIT: NASA/CXC/G. Chartas et al. |
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Quasar PG 1115+080 This quasar is at a distance of over 5 billion light years from
Earth, a redshift of 1.72. This is an X-ray image captured by the
orbiting Chandra X-ray Observatory. PG 1115+080 is magnified naturally
through gravitational lensing by a factor of about 100. This means
that the quasars light, while en route to us, was distorted and
magnified by the gravity of intervening galaxies acting like telescope
lenses. A wind generated by a supermassive black hole at the heart of PG
1115+080 blows gas away from the black hole. As much as a billion
suns' worth of material is blown away over the course of a quasar's
lifetime. CREDIT: NASA/CXC/G. Chartas et al.
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