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Chandra sees remarkable
eclipse of black hole
04/12/2007
From http://www.physorg.com
(Additional comments below)
A remarkable eclipse of a supermassive
black hole and the hot gas disk around it has been observed with
NASA's Chandra X-ray Observatory. This eclipse has allowed two key
predictions about the effects of supermassive black holes to be
tested.
Just as eclipses of the Sun and moon give astronomers rare
opportunities to learn about those objects, an alignment in a nearby
galaxy has provided a rare opportunity to investigate a supermassive
black hole.
The supermassive black hole is located in NGC 1365, a galaxy 60
million light years from Earth. It contains a so called active
galactic nucleus, or AGN. Scientists believe that the black hole at
the center of the AGN is fed by a steady stream of material,
presumably in the form of a disk. Material just about to fall into a
black hole should be heated to millions of degrees before passing
over the event horizon, or point of no return.
The disk of gas around the central black hole in NGC 1365 produces
copious X-rays but is much too small to resolve directly with a
telescope. However, the disk was eclipsed by an intervening cloud,
so observation of the time taken for the disk to go in and out of
eclipse allowed scientists to estimate the size of the disk.
"For years we've been struggling to confirm the size of this X-ray
structure," said Guido Risaliti of the Harvard-Smithsonian Center
for Astrophysics (CfA) in Cambridge, Mass, and the Italian Institute
of Astronomy (INAF). "This serendipitous eclipse enabled us to make
this breakthrough."
The Chandra team directly measured the size of the X-ray source as
about seven times the distance between the Sun and the Earth. That
means the source of X-rays is about 2 billion times smaller than the
host galaxy and only about 10 times larger than the estimated size
of the black hole's event horizon, consistent with theoretical
predictions.
"Thanks to this eclipse, we were able to
probe much closer to the edge of this black hole than anyone has
been able to before," said co-author Martin Elvis from CfA.
"Material this close in will likely cross the event horizon and
disappear from the universe in about a hundred years, a blink of an
eye in cosmic terms."
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See Wal Thornhill's article "The
Madness of Black Holes." |
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