Black holes can be petite, with masses only about 10 times that of our sun -- or
monstrous, boasting the equivalent in mass up to 10 billion suns. Do black holes
also come in size medium? NASA's Nuclear Spectroscopic Telescope Array, or
NuSTAR, is busy scrutinizing a class of black holes that may fall into the
proposed medium-sized category.
"Exactly how intermediate-sized black holes would form remains an open
issue," said Dominic Walton of the California Institute of Technology, Pasadena.
"Some theories suggest they could form in rich, dense clusters of stars through
repeated mergers, but there are a lot of questions left to be answered."
The largest black holes, referred to as supermassive, dominate the hearts of
galaxies. The immense gravity of these black holes drags material toward them,
forcing the material to heat up and release powerful X-rays. Small black holes
dot the rest of the galactic landscape. They form under the crush of collapsing,
dying stars bigger than our sun.
Evidence for medium-sized black holes lying somewhere between these two
extremes might come from objects called ultraluminous X-ray sources, or ULXs.
These are pairs of objects in which a black hole ravenously feeds off a normal
star. The feeding process is somewhat similar to what happens around
supermassive black holes, but isn't as big and messy. In addition, ULXs are
located throughout galaxies, not at the cores.
The bright glow of X-rays coming from ULXs is too great to be the product of
typical small black holes. This and other evidence indicates the objects may be
intermediate in mass, with 100 to 10,000 times the mass of our sun.
Alternatively, an explanation may lie in some kind of exotic phenomenon
involving extreme accretion, or "feeding," of a black hole.
NuSTAR is joining with other telescopes to take a closer look at ULXs. It’s
providing the first look at these objects in focused, high-energy X-rays,
helping to get better estimates of their masses and other characteristics.
In a new paper from Walton and colleagues accepted for publication in the
Astrophysical Journal, the astronomers report serendipitously finding a ULX that
had gone largely unnoticed before. They studied the object, which lies in the
Circinus spiral galaxy 13 million light-years away, not only with NuSTAR but
also with the European Space Agency's XMM-Newton satellite. Archival data from
NASA's Chandra, Swift and Spitzer space telescopes as well as Japan's Suzaku
satellite, were also used for further studies. "We went to town on this object,
looking at a range of epochs and wavelengths," said Walton.
The results indicate the black hole in question is about 100 times the mass
of the sun, putting it right at the border between small and medium black
holes.
In another accepted Astrophysical Journal paper, Matteo Bachetti of the
Institut de Recherche en Astrophysique et Planétologie and colleagues looked at
two ULXs in NGC 1313, a spiral galaxy known as the "Topsy Turvy galaxy," also
about 13 million light-years way.
These are among the best-studied ULXs known. A single viewing with NuSTAR
showed that the black holes didn't fit with models of medium-size black holes.
As a result, the researchers now think both ULXs harbor small, stellar-mass
black holes. One of the objects is estimated to be big for its size category, at
70 to 100 solar masses.
"It's possible that these objects are ultraluminous because they are
accreting material at a high rate and not because of their size," said Bachetti.
"If intermediate-mass black holes are out there, they are doing a good job of
hiding from us."
NuSTAR is a Small Explorer mission led by Caltech and managed by NASA's Jet
Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif., for NASA's Science Mission Directorate
in Washington. The spacecraft was built by Orbital Sciences Corporation, Dulles,
Va. Its instrument was built by a consortium including Caltech; JPL; the
University of California, Berkeley; Columbia University, New York; NASA's
Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md.; the Danish Technical University in
Denmark; Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, Livermore, Calif.; ATK
Aerospace Systems, Goleta, Calif., and with support from the Italian Space
Agency (ASI) Science Data Center.
NuSTAR's mission operations center is at UC Berkeley, with the ASI providing
its equatorial ground station located at Malindi, Kenya. The mission's outreach
program is based at Sonoma State University, Rohnert Park, Calif. NASA's
Explorer Program is managed by Goddard. JPL is managed by Caltech for NASA.
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