Weighing in at about 50,000 times the mass of our Sun, the black hole
is smaller than the supermassive black holes (at millions or billions
of solar masses) that lie at the cores of large galaxies, but larger
than stellar-mass black holes formed by the collapse of a massive star.
These so-called intermediate-mass black holes (IMBHs) are a
long-sought "missing link" in black hole evolution. Though there have
been a few other IMBH candidates, researchers consider these new
observations the strongest evidence yet for mid-sized black holes in the
universe.
It took the combined power of two X-ray observatories and the keen
vision of NASA's Hubble Space Telescope to nail down the cosmic beast.
"Intermediate-mass black holes are very elusive objects, and so it is
critical to carefully consider and rule out alternative explanations
for each candidate. That is what Hubble has allowed us to do for our
candidate," said Dacheng Lin of the University of New Hampshire,
principal investigator of the study. The results are published on March
31, 2020, in The Astrophysical Journal Letters.
The story of the discovery reads like a Sherlock Holmes story,
involving the meticulous step-by-step case-building necessary to catch
the culprit.
Lin and his team used Hubble to follow up on leads from NASA's
Chandra X-ray Observatory and ESA's (the European Space Agency) X-ray
Multi-Mirror Mission (XMM-Newton). In 2006 these satellites detected a
powerful flare of X-rays, but they could not determine whether it
originated from inside or outside of our galaxy. Researchers attributed
it to a star being torn apart after coming too close to a
gravitationally powerful compact object, like a black hole.
Surprisingly, the X-ray source, named 3XMM J215022.4?055108, was not
located in a galaxy's center, where massive black holes normally would
reside. This raised hopes that an IMBH was the culprit, but first
another possible source of the X-ray flare had to be ruled out: a
neutron star in our own Milky Way galaxy, cooling off after being heated
to a very high temperature. Neutron stars are the crushed remnants of
an exploded star.
Hubble was pointed at the X-ray source to resolve its precise
location. Deep, high-resolution imaging provides strong evidence that
the X-rays emanated not from an isolated source in our galaxy, but
instead in a distant, dense star cluster on the outskirts of another
galaxy -- just the type of place astronomers expected to find an IMBH.
Previous Hubble research has shown that the mass of a black hole in the
center of a galaxy is proportional to that host galaxy's central bulge.
In other words, the more massive the galaxy, the more massive its black
hole. Therefore, the star cluster that is home to 3XMM J215022.4?055108
may be the stripped-down core of a lower-mass dwarf galaxy that has been
gravitationally and tidally disrupted by its close interactions with
its current larger galaxy host.
IMBHs have been particularly difficult to find because they are
smaller and less active than supermassive black holes; they do not have
readily available sources of fuel, nor as strong a gravitational pull to
draw stars and other cosmic material which would produce telltale X-ray
glows. Astronomers essentially have to catch an IMBH red-handed in the
act of gobbling up a star. Lin and his colleagues combed through the
XMM-Newton data archive, searching hundreds of thousands of observations
to find one IMBH candidate.
The X-ray glow from the shredded star allowed astronomers to estimate
the black hole's mass of 50,000 solar masses. The mass of the IMBH was
estimated based on both X-ray luminosity and the spectral shape. "This
is much more reliable than using X-ray luminosity alone as typically
done before for previous IMBH candidates," said Lin. "The reason why we
can use the spectral fits to estimate the IMBH mass for our object is
that its spectral evolution showed that it has been in the thermal
spectral state, a state commonly seen and well understood in accreting
stellar-mass black holes."
This object isn't the first to be considered a likely candidate for
an intermediate-mass black hole. In 2009 Hubble teamed up with NASA's
Swift observatory and ESA's XMM-Newton to identify what is interpreted
as an IMBH, called HLX-1, located towards the edge of the galaxy ESO
243-49. It too is in the center of a young, massive cluster of blue
stars that may be a stripped-down dwarf galaxy core. The X-rays come
from a hot accretion disk around the black hole. "The main difference is
that our object is tearing a star apart, providing strong evidence that
it is a massive black hole, instead of a stellar-mass black hole as
people often worry about for previous candidates including HLX-1," Lin
said.
Finding this IMBH opens the door to the possibility of many more
lurking undetected in the dark, waiting to be given away by a star
passing too close. Lin plans to continue his meticulous detective work,
using the methods his team has proved successful. Many questions remain
to be answered. Does a supermassive black hole grow from an IMBH? How do
IMBHs themselves form? Are dense star clusters their favored home?
Comments
Post a Comment