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Black hole expelled from its parent galaxy (4/30/2008)
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| Artist's conception of a black hole ejected from a galaxy - Image Credit: Illustration: MPE, optical image: HST |
Gravitational rocket propelled the monster at a speed of thousands of kilometres per second
By an enormous burst of gravitational waves that accompanies the merger of two black holes the newly formed black hole was ejected from its galaxy. This extreme ejection event, which had been predicted by theorists, has now been observed in nature for the first time. The team led by Stefanie Komossa from the Max Planck Institute for extraterrestrial Physics (MPE) thereby opened a new window into observational astrophysics. The discovery will have far-reaching consequences for our understanding of galaxy formation and evolution in the early Universe, and also provides observational confirmation of a key prediction from the General Theory of Relativity (Astrophysical Journal Letters, May 10, 2008).
When two black holes merge, waves of gravitational radiation ripple outward through the galaxy at the speed of light. Because the waves are emitted mainly in one direction, the black hole itself is pushed in the opposite direction, much like the recoil that accompanies the firing of a rifle or the launching of a rocket. The black hole is booted from its normal location in the nucleus of the galaxy. If the kick velocity is high enough, the black hole can escape the galaxy completely.
The MPE team's discovery verifies, for the first time, that these extreme events actually occur; up to now they had only been simulated in supercomputers. The recoiling black hole caught the astrophysicists' attention by its high speed - 2650 km/s - which was measured via the broad emission lines of gas around the black hole. At this speed, one could travel from New York to Los Angeles in just under two seconds. Because of the tremendous power of the recoil the black hole, which has a mass of several 100 millions solar masses, was catapulted from the core of its parent galaxy.
In addition to the emission lines from gas bound to the recoiling black hole, the astronomers were also struck by a remarkably narrow set of emission lines originating from gas left behind in the galaxy. This gas has been excited by radiation from the recoiling black hole.
Gas that moves with the black hole - the so-called accretion disk gas - continues to "feed" the recoiling black hole for millions of years. In the process of being accreted, this gas shines in X-rays. In fact the team around Komossa also detected this X-ray emission from the disk around the black hole at a distance of 10 billion light years: by chance the region was scanned by the satellite ROSAT, and at the extreme end of the visual field an X-ray source was discovered the position of which corresponds with the distant galaxy.
The new discovery is also important because it indirectly proves that black holes do in fact merge and that the mergers are sometimes accompanied by large kicks. This process had been postulated by theory, but never before confirmed via direct observation. Another implication of the discovery is that there must be galaxies without black holes in their nuclei - as well as black holes which float forever in space between the galaxies. This raises new questions for the scientists: Did galaxies and black holes form and evolve jointly in the early Universe? Or was there a population of galaxies which had been deprived of their central black holes? And if so, how was the evolution of these galaxies different from that of galaxies that retained their black holes?
In a close interplay between theory and observation, the astrophysicists prepare to answer these questions. Various detectors on earth and in space, for example the space interferometer LISA, will be set on the track of gravitational waves. The discovery of the MPE team will provide new impetus for theorists to develop more detailed models of the superkicks and their consequences for the evolution of black holes and galaxies.
Original paper:
ApJ Letters, 678, L81, 2008 (May 10, 2008)
Note: This story has been adapted from a news release issued by the Max Planck Institute for Extraterrestrial Physics
Comments:
| 1. |
John |
4/30/2008 12:39:01 PM MST |
that artist rendering is pathetic. what a great way to tarnish your reputation. |
| 2. |
Jasper |
4/30/2008 12:42:49 PM MST |
@John: i think that black hole was originally ment to be the flying spaghetti monster. |
| 3. |
Erin |
4/30/2008 1:20:34 PM MST |
I think someone in that solar system just knows how to use the force. |
| 4. |
Ben |
4/30/2008 1:22:14 PM MST |
Great, aside from worrying about getting hit by a asteroid we now have to worry about getting hit by a massive black hole.
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| 5. |
Bryan |
4/30/2008 2:27:45 PM MST |
I kinda like the picture. It's just missing some googely-eyes and pointy teeth. Rawr! Monster Black Hole from the Gaaaaalaxy of Doooooom! |
| 6. |
Alan |
4/30/2008 3:07:26 PM MST |
That must be the Black Hole Sun that Soundgarden was talking about all along. Musicians? Nay! Astronomer-Prophets are they! |
| 7. |
Anthony H. |
4/30/2008 4:55:47 PM MST |
That is an amazing finding - but I concur with the synopsis of the supposed artist's rendering. Maybe they'll get past 3rd grade this year and make a better picture in a few months. |
| 8. |
Roger |
4/30/2008 5:13:08 PM MST |
I find this difficult to believe. How long before we all lose confidence in professional astronomers? |
| 9. |
Jeff |
4/30/2008 5:27:46 PM MST |
What a horrendous artist rendition. However, a very interesting article.
LOL @ the guy who mentioned Black Hole Sun
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| 10. |
Jeffrey |
5/1/2008 4:31:47 PM MST |
To Roger:
I obviously don't know your background, but your dismissive assessment doesn't strike me as well-informed. I'm an astrophysics student and happen to have a small amount of knowledge on the subject.
Black hole mergers are a phenomenon well-explored by theoretical work, including simulations; they are a direct application of general relativity. Active galactic nuclei (AGN), which contain supermassive black holes, have been extensively observed, provide a possible location for such a black hole merger. The statistics of AGN (distribution of peculiar velocities and density in space) suggest that given the number we have observed, we should expect to find perhaps one or a few such mergers. I'm of course not saying that their analysis and conclusions are fool-proof, but that the result is quite believable.
And yes, the artist rendition is unfortunate, but it doesn't change the physics behind the discovery!
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| 11. |
Roger |
5/1/2008 5:49:24 PM MST |
Although I have a B.S. (in biology and chemistry), I still don't "buy" all the fantasies of astrophysics. I am especially suspicious when I see the words "theoretical", "possible", "suggest", "expect", and "perhaps". Those taxpayer-supported jobs provide too much free time to speculate. |
| 12. |
dagbrown |
5/2/2008 10:46:30 AM MST |
I *love* the artist's rendition of a black hole being unceremoniously ejected from a galaxy! It looks like something directly out of the Weekly World News! Which makes it quintuply awesome just for that.
Also, I have no problems with the science in this article. I know how gravity slingshots work.
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| 13. |
Mick |
5/9/2008 5:52:37 PM MST |
Interesting article, but there is no way this is right: "...detected this X-ray emission from the disk around the black hole at a distance of 10 billion light years"
The edge of the observable universe is only 13-14billion light years away. I assume this is a miss print.
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| 14. |
Jaime |
5/13/2008 3:19:34 PM MST |
To Roger.
How many things that we know for a fact now, were at some point or another "theoretical" or "speculative." There is more out there than what you can touch, and some times the only way to understand a phenomenon is to INTELLIGENTLY deduct what would happen based on the knowledge that you have.
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| 15. |
Mic |
5/13/2008 7:38:17 PM MST |
LOL, nice one, funny rendering, reminds me of Casper the ghost :D
As to theory, well everything is possible, I wonder what happens to galaxy without black hole to keep things moving, Our own galaxy will face same predicament in mare 3 billion years time.
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| 16. |
MIke |
12/16/2008 12:57:22 PM MST |
That is most definitely *NOT* a black hole. That is the elusive Dark Fried Egg of Doom.
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| 17. |
Alicia |
3/6/2009 12:57:35 PM MST |
If you look at it with your head sideways it kinda looks like a black hole with some messed up cloud with a black blob in it. Or spag ball.:) |
| 18. |
ALICIA |
3/6/2009 1:03:05 PM MST |
HAY now if you look at it totaly upsidown on the cloud thing it looks like a kid that has spiky hair...:) |
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