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CSIRO telescope proves identity of first known `middleweight` black hole

Tuesday - Jul 10, 2012, 07:00pm (GMT+5.5)
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Washington -  Observation of outbursts of super-hot gas by a CSIRO radio telescope has confirmed the identity of the first known “middleweight” black hole.

Called HLX-1 (“hyper-luminous X-ray source 1”), the black hole lies in a galaxy called ESO 243-49, about 300 million light-years away.

Before it was found, astronomers had good evidence for only supermassive black holes - those a million to a billion times the mass of the Sun-and “stellar mass” ones, three to thirty times  the mass of the Sun.

“This is the first object that we’re really sure is an intermediate-mass black hole,” said Dr. Sean Farrell, an ARC Postdoctoral Fellow at the University of Sydney and a member of the research  team, which included astronomers from France, Australia, the UK and the USA.

CSIRO’s Dr. Ron Ekers, who studies supermassive black holes in the centers of galaxies, said “We don’t know for sure how supermassive black holes form, but they might come from  medium-size ones merging. So finding evidence of these intermediate-mass black holes is exciting.”

HLX-1 was discovered by chance in 2009, because it stood out as a very bright X-ray source.

As gas from a star or gas cloud is being sucked into a black hole, it is heated to extreme temperatures and shines in X-rays.

“A number of other bright X-ray sources have been put forward as possibly being middleweight black holes. But all of those sources could be explained as resulting from lower mass black  holes,” Dr. Farrell said.

“Only this one can’t. It is ten times brighter than any of those other candidates. We are sure this is an intermediate-mass black hole-the very first,” he added.

Since 2010 the researchers have been studying the black hole with CSIRO’s Compact Array radio telescope near Narrabri, New South Wales.

By looking at the source’s X-ray output, the researchers predicted two occasions when it should also be brightening in radio waves-and they were right both times.

Dr. Farrell speculated that a companion star traverses a very eccentric orbit around the black hole. When the companion comes close, the black hole strips gas from its partner, and it is this  that gives rise to the X-ray flaring.

The brightness of the X-ray and radio flares have allowed the team to put an upper limit on the mass of the black hole of 90,000 times the mass of the Sun. However, Dr. Farrell said that this

is a conservative estimate, and that for a variety of reasons a lower figure of around 20,000 solar masses is more likely.

Why have we found only this one confirmed intermediate-mass black hole? “There maybe lots of others out there that are not currently feeding, and so are not detectable, or are feeding at a

very low rate, so they don’t stand out as intermediate-mass black holes,” Dr. Ekers said.

HLX-1 may have been the central black hole of a low-mass “dwarf” galaxy, Dr. Farrell speculates; a dwarf galaxy that was swallowed by the larger galaxy ESO 243-49, just as our own Milky Way

Galaxy has swallowed dwarf galaxies.

There is evidence of star-formation about HLX-1, which would be consistent with a “plunging dwarf”.

The research team is now looking for other signs of disturbance around the site of the black hole, such as gas streams, which would also support this idea.

Science Express has reported the finding online.





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