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Bursts Spotted at Milky Way's Black Hole
(SPACE.com)
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Outbursts from the black
hole at the center of our Milky Way galaxy generate material that is stretched
as it orbits near the gravitational behemoth.
New observations from
two telescopes provide a
better look at what's going on down there.
While black holes can't
be seen, material swirling into one is superheated, giving off radiation that
can be observed. While the Milky Way's black hole is not among
the most active in the universe, it is prone to flare-ups.
A team of European and
US astronomers used ESO's Very Large Telescope (VLT)
and the Atacama Pathfinder Experiment (APEX)
telescope, both in Chile, to study light from the black hole, called Sagittarius
A*, at near-infrared wavelengths and the longer submillimeter
wavelengths respectively.
This is the first time
that astronomers have recorded an outburst with these telescopes
simultaneously.
"Observations like
this, over a range of wavelengths, are really the only way to understand what's
going on close to the black hole," said Andreas Eckart
of the University
of Cologne, who led the
team.
Sagittarius A* is about
26,000 light-years away. It is a supermassive black hole with a mass of about 4 million
times that of the sun. Most, if not all, galaxies are thought to have a supermassive black hole in their centers.
"Sagittarius A* is
unique, because it is the nearest of these monster black holes, lying within
our own galaxy," said team member Frederick K. Baganoff
of MIT. "Only for this one object can our current telescopes detect these
relatively faint flares from material orbiting just outside the event
horizon."
The emission from
Sagittarius A* is thought to come from gas thrown off by stars, which then
orbits and falls into the black hole.
The researchers detected
violently variable infrared emission, with four major flares over a six-hour
period. The submillimeter-wavelength results showed
flares that began more than an hour after the infrared flares.
The researchers explain
that this time delay is probably caused by the rapid expansion, at speeds of
about 3.1 million mph (5 million kph), of the clouds
of gas that are emitting the flares. This expansion causes changes in the
character of the emission over time.
The material was moving
at only 0.5 percent of the speed of light. To escape from the very strong
gravity so close to the black hole, the gas would have to be traveling at half
the speed of light — 100 times faster than detected –- and so the researchers
believe that the gas cannot be streaming out in a jet. Instead, they suspect
that a
blob of gas orbiting close to the black hole is being stretched out, like
dough in a mixing bowl, and this is causing the expansion.
Taken from here
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