Nearly a decade ago, NASA's Chandra X-ray Observatory caught signs of what
appeared to be a black hole snacking on gas at the middle of the nearby Sculptor
galaxy. Now, NASA's Nuclear Spectroscopic Telescope Array (NuSTAR), which sees
higher-energy X-ray light, has taken a peek and found the black hole asleep.
"Our results imply that the black hole went dormant in the past 10 years,"
said Bret Lehmer of the Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, and NASA's Goddard
Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md. "Periodic observations with both Chandra and
NuSTAR should tell us unambiguously if the black hole wakes up again. If this
happens in the next few years, we hope to be watching." Lehmer is lead author of
a new study detailing the findings in the Astrophysical Journal.
The slumbering black hole is about 5 million times the mass of our sun. It
lies at the center of the Sculptor galaxy, also known as NGC 253, a so-called
starburst galaxy actively giving birth to new stars. At 13 million light-years
away, this is one of the closest starbursts to our own galaxy, the Milky Way.
The Milky Way is all around more quiet than the Sculptor galaxy. It makes far
fewer new stars, and its behemoth black hole, about 4 million times the mass of
our sun, is also snoozing.
"Black holes feed off surrounding accretion disks of material. When they run
out of this fuel, they go dormant," said co-author Ann Hornschemeier of Goddard.
"NGC 253 is somewhat unusual because the giant black hole is asleep in the midst
of tremendous star-forming activity all around it."
The findings are teaching astronomers how galaxies grow over time. Nearly all
galaxies are suspected to harbor supermassive black holes at their hearts. In
the most massive of these, the black holes are thought to grow at the same rate
that new stars form, until blasting radiation from the black holes ultimately
shuts down star formation. In the case of the Sculptor galaxy, astronomers do
not know if star formation is winding down or ramping up.
"Black hole growth and star formation often go hand-in-hand in distant
galaxies," said Daniel Stern, a co-author and NuSTAR project scientist at NASA's
Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif. "It's a bit surprising as to what's
going on here, but we've got two powerful complementary X-ray telescopes on the
case."
Chandra first observed signs of what appeared to be a feeding supermassive
black hole at the heart of the Sculptor galaxy in 2003. As material spirals into
a black hole, it heats up to tens of millions of degrees and glows in X-ray
light that telescopes like Chandra and NuSTAR can see.
Then, in September and November of 2012, Chandra and NuSTAR observed the same
region simultaneously. The NuSTAR observations -- the first-ever to detect
focused, high-energy X-ray light from the region -- allowed the researchers to
say conclusively that the black hole is not accreting material. NuSTAR launched
into space in June of 2012.
In other words, the black hole seems to have fallen asleep. Another
possibility is that the black hole was not actually awake 10 years ago, and
Chandra observed a different source of X-rays. Future observations with both
telescopes may solve the puzzle.
"The combination of coordinated Chandra and NuSTAR observations is extremely
powerful for answering questions like this," said Lou Kaluzienski, NuSTAR
Program Scientist at NASA Headquarters in Washington. "Now, we can get all sides
of the story."
The observations also revealed a smaller, flaring object that the researchers
were able to identify as an "ultraluminous X-ray source," or ULX. ULXs are black
holes feeding off material from a partner star. They shine more brightly than
typical stellar-mass black holes generated from dying stars, but are fainter and
more randomly distributed than the supermassive black holes at the centers of
massive galaxies. Astronomers are still working to understand the size, origins
and physics of ULXs.
"These stellar-mass black holes are bumping along near the center of this
galaxy," said Hornschemeier. "They tend to be more numerous in areas where there
is more star-formation activity."
If and when the Sculptor's slumbering giant does wake up in the next few
years amidst all the commotion, NuSTAR and Chandra will monitor the situation.
The team plans to check back on the system periodically.
NuSTAR is a Small Explorer mission led by the California Institute of
Technology in Pasadena.
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