Black Hole Blows Massive Gas Bubble

Astronomers uncovered the most powerful pair of jets ever seen from a black hole, blowing a bubble of hot gas, 1000 light years across.
Combining observations done with ESO's Very Large Telescope and NASA's Chandra X-ray telescope, astronomers have uncovered the most powerful pair of jets ever seen from a stellar black hole. The black hole blows a huge bubble of hot gas, 1000 light-years (Image credit: ESO/L. Calçada)

A newfoundblack hole has been caught in the act of releasing a prodigious amount ofenergy from the most powerful pair of jets ever seen from such a cosmic object.But the real surprise is what is created by those jets.

Astronomersnoticed that the strong jets from this specific type of black hole, called a microquasar,are slamming into the surrounding interstellar gas, heating it and creating a massivebubble of hot gas that is 1,000 light-years across.

"Wehave been astonished by how much energy is injected into the gas by the blackhole," said the study's lead author Manfred Pakull of the University of Strasbourg in France. "This black hole is just a few solar masses,but is a real miniature version of the most powerful quasars and radiogalaxies, which contain black holes with masses of a few million times that ofthe sun."

Thesurprising discovery was made using the European Southern Observatory's VeryLarge Telescope and NASA's Chandra X-ray telescope. The findings are published inthis week's issue of the journal Nature.

"Inmicroquasars the black hole has a companion star, it forms a binary star,"Pakull told SPACE.com. "If the companion star is sufficiently big, itloses material which can fall onto the black hole. During that process (whichwe call accretion), the potential energy of the material is converted into heatand radiation that we observe as X-rays."

Someof that potential energy can also be converted into kinetic energy, he added.That's where the black hole jets come in.

"Inour object, most of the energy is indeed converted into jets, and very littleinto X-ray radiation," Pakull said.

"Thelength of the jets in NGC 7793 is amazing, compared to the size of the blackhole from which they are launched," said co-author Robert Soria of the Mullard Space Science Laboratory at theUniversity College London. "If theblack hole were shrunk to the size of a soccer ball, each jet would extend fromthe Earth to beyond the orbit of Pluto."

Thesmallest stellar black hole discovered so far has a radius of about 9.3 miles(15 km). An average stellar black hole of about 10 solar masses has a radius ofabout 18.6 miles (30 km). In comparison, a "big" stellar black holemay have a radius of up to 186 miles (300 km).

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Denise Chow
NBC News science writer

Denise Chow is a former Space.com staff writer who then worked as assistant managing editor at Live Science before moving to NBC News as a science reporter, where she focuses on general science and climate change. She spent two years with Space.com, writing about rocket launches and covering NASA's final three space shuttle missions, before joining the Live Science team in 2013. A Canadian transplant, Denise has a bachelor's degree from the University of Toronto, and a master's degree in journalism from New York University. At NBC News, Denise covers general science and climate change.