Sneaking a peek inside a black hole’s disk


The NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope has captured this vivid image of spiral galaxy Messier 77 — a galaxy in the constellation of Cetus, some 45 million light-years away from us. The streaks of red and blue in the image highlight pockets of star formation along the pinwheeling arms, with dark dust lanes stretching across the galaxy’s starry centre. The galaxy belongs to a class of galaxies known as Seyfert galaxies, which have highly ionised gas surrounding an intensely active centre.

Spiral galaxy Messier 77, aka NGC 1068, located about 45 million light-years away. The Hubble Space Telescope captured this image of the whole galaxy, and NuSTAR’s high-energy X-rays eyes obtained the view of the disk around the galaxy’s central supermassive black hole (zoomed-in inset). This active black hole is surrounded by extremely thick clouds of gas and dust. The NuSTAR data revealed that the torus of gas and dust surrounding the black hole, also referred to as a doughnut, is more clumpy than previously thought. Read more about this image.

In the view of modern astronomers, a supermassive black hole at the center of a distant galaxy is likely encircled by thick, doughnut-shaped disk or torus of gas and dust. The material in these tori is what feeds an active black hole, that is, one that’s still growing.

Telescopes couldn’t penetrate a supermassive black hole’s torus until recently, but now some can, and NASA released the amazing image above this month (December 17, 2015). It’s a peek inside one of the densest known of these tori, surrounding the black hole at the center of a well-studied spiral galaxy called NGC 1068 (aka M77), located some 47 million light-years away in the direction to the constellation Cetus the Whale. The telescope that acquired this image is called NuSTAR (NASA’s Nuclear Spectroscopic Telescope Array), and it used its X-ray vision to look inside the disk.

It has confirmed that the material in the disk isn’t smooth, but rather clumpy.

Andrea Marinucci of the Roma Tre University in Italy is lead author of the paper describing this new research, published in the Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society. In addition to data from NuSTAR, the team used data from the European Space Agency’s XMM-Newton space observatory. Marinucci said:

Originally, we thought that some black holes were hidden behind walls or screens of material that could not be seen through …

The rotating material is not a simple, rounded doughnut as originally thought, but clumpy.

A NASA statement explained:

Doughnut-shaped disks of gas and dust around supermassive black holes were first proposed in the mid-1980s to explain why some black holes are hidden behind gas and dust, while others are not. The idea is that the orientation of the doughnut relative to Earth affects the way we perceive a black hole and its intense radiation. If the doughnut is viewed edge-on, the black hole is blocked. If the doughnut is viewed face-on, the black hole and its surrounding, blazing materials can be detected. This idea is referred to as the ‘unified model’ because it neatly joins together the different black hole types, based solely upon orientation.

In the past decade, astronomers have been finding hints that these doughnuts aren’t as smoothly shaped as once thought. They are more like defective, lumpy doughnuts that a doughnut shop might throw away.

The new discovery is the first time this clumpiness has been observed in an ultra-thick doughnut, and supports the idea that this phenomenon may be common. The research is important for understanding the growth and evolution of massive black holes and their host galaxies.

Both NuSTAR and XMM-Newton observed the supermassive black hole in NGC 1068 simultaneously on two occasions between 2014 to 2015. On one of those occasions, in August 2014, NuSTAR observed a spike in brightness. NuSTAR observes X-rays in a higher-energy range than XMM-Newton, and, NASA said, those high-energy X-rays can uniquely pierce thick clouds around the black hole.

The scientists say the spike in high-energy X-rays was due to a clearing in the thickness of the material entombing the supermassive black hole. Marinucci commented:

It’s like a cloudy day, when the clouds partially move away from the sun to let more light shine through.

Read more about this new research from NASA

Cetus the Whale

The constellation Cetus the Whale. The image at the top of this post lies hidden in this part of the sky, southward as seen in the evening, in late fall and early winter in the Northern Hemisphere.

Bottom line: New image from NuSTAR of the disk or torus around the supermassive black hole at the center of Messier 77, aka NGC 1068, a distant spiral galaxy. The image – obtained with NuSTAR’s X-ray vision – shows that black hole disks aren’t smooth. Instead, they’re clumpy.



from EarthSky http://ift.tt/1Pi0dHT
The NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope has captured this vivid image of spiral galaxy Messier 77 — a galaxy in the constellation of Cetus, some 45 million light-years away from us. The streaks of red and blue in the image highlight pockets of star formation along the pinwheeling arms, with dark dust lanes stretching across the galaxy’s starry centre. The galaxy belongs to a class of galaxies known as Seyfert galaxies, which have highly ionised gas surrounding an intensely active centre.

Spiral galaxy Messier 77, aka NGC 1068, located about 45 million light-years away. The Hubble Space Telescope captured this image of the whole galaxy, and NuSTAR’s high-energy X-rays eyes obtained the view of the disk around the galaxy’s central supermassive black hole (zoomed-in inset). This active black hole is surrounded by extremely thick clouds of gas and dust. The NuSTAR data revealed that the torus of gas and dust surrounding the black hole, also referred to as a doughnut, is more clumpy than previously thought. Read more about this image.

In the view of modern astronomers, a supermassive black hole at the center of a distant galaxy is likely encircled by thick, doughnut-shaped disk or torus of gas and dust. The material in these tori is what feeds an active black hole, that is, one that’s still growing.

Telescopes couldn’t penetrate a supermassive black hole’s torus until recently, but now some can, and NASA released the amazing image above this month (December 17, 2015). It’s a peek inside one of the densest known of these tori, surrounding the black hole at the center of a well-studied spiral galaxy called NGC 1068 (aka M77), located some 47 million light-years away in the direction to the constellation Cetus the Whale. The telescope that acquired this image is called NuSTAR (NASA’s Nuclear Spectroscopic Telescope Array), and it used its X-ray vision to look inside the disk.

It has confirmed that the material in the disk isn’t smooth, but rather clumpy.

Andrea Marinucci of the Roma Tre University in Italy is lead author of the paper describing this new research, published in the Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society. In addition to data from NuSTAR, the team used data from the European Space Agency’s XMM-Newton space observatory. Marinucci said:

Originally, we thought that some black holes were hidden behind walls or screens of material that could not be seen through …

The rotating material is not a simple, rounded doughnut as originally thought, but clumpy.

A NASA statement explained:

Doughnut-shaped disks of gas and dust around supermassive black holes were first proposed in the mid-1980s to explain why some black holes are hidden behind gas and dust, while others are not. The idea is that the orientation of the doughnut relative to Earth affects the way we perceive a black hole and its intense radiation. If the doughnut is viewed edge-on, the black hole is blocked. If the doughnut is viewed face-on, the black hole and its surrounding, blazing materials can be detected. This idea is referred to as the ‘unified model’ because it neatly joins together the different black hole types, based solely upon orientation.

In the past decade, astronomers have been finding hints that these doughnuts aren’t as smoothly shaped as once thought. They are more like defective, lumpy doughnuts that a doughnut shop might throw away.

The new discovery is the first time this clumpiness has been observed in an ultra-thick doughnut, and supports the idea that this phenomenon may be common. The research is important for understanding the growth and evolution of massive black holes and their host galaxies.

Both NuSTAR and XMM-Newton observed the supermassive black hole in NGC 1068 simultaneously on two occasions between 2014 to 2015. On one of those occasions, in August 2014, NuSTAR observed a spike in brightness. NuSTAR observes X-rays in a higher-energy range than XMM-Newton, and, NASA said, those high-energy X-rays can uniquely pierce thick clouds around the black hole.

The scientists say the spike in high-energy X-rays was due to a clearing in the thickness of the material entombing the supermassive black hole. Marinucci commented:

It’s like a cloudy day, when the clouds partially move away from the sun to let more light shine through.

Read more about this new research from NASA

Cetus the Whale

The constellation Cetus the Whale. The image at the top of this post lies hidden in this part of the sky, southward as seen in the evening, in late fall and early winter in the Northern Hemisphere.

Bottom line: New image from NuSTAR of the disk or torus around the supermassive black hole at the center of Messier 77, aka NGC 1068, a distant spiral galaxy. The image – obtained with NuSTAR’s X-ray vision – shows that black hole disks aren’t smooth. Instead, they’re clumpy.



from EarthSky http://ift.tt/1Pi0dHT

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