A group of Cambridge astronomers have detected what appears
to be the rapid spinning of hot gas as it falls into a supermassive black
hole. These first of their kind
observations help pinpoint the mass of the hungry maw that is devouring
material from an inward-spiraling disk.
The hefty black hole lies at the center of the galaxy NGC
3516, which is about 100 million light years away in the direction of the Big
Dipper. Material pulled in by the
hole's immense gravitational field forms a disk that is heated to high
temperatures, causing it to glow over a broad range of frequencies.
The XMM-Newton satellite observed a sudden brightening of
the disk in X-rays. Andrew Fabian from Cambridge University and his colleagues
have interpreted this as an X-ray flare occurring close to the black hole. An X-ray flare is somewhat like a solar
flare, Fabian said, but its energy is 10 trillion times stronger. The light from the flare excited nearby iron
atoms in the accretion disk, causing them to emit a bundle of photons at a
specific frequency.
"It is as if a bit of the disk is being painted," Fabian
said.
The light from the iron atoms changed over time, implying
that the "painted" gas was orbiting a very massive object. Calculations involving Einstein's general
relativity showed that this object, the black hole, weighs between 10 and 50 million
solar masses.
This result, which will be published in an upcoming issue of
the Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, agrees with other
estimates for the mass of the black hole.
Four Quick Years
The XMM observation lasted about a day, recording four
revolutions of the excited gas. The
implied radius is similar to the Earth's distance to the sun, which prompted
Fabian to imagine what it might be like riding along side the swirling gas. With a "year" lasting only seven hours, an
intrepid disk surfer would be traveling at about a tenth of the speed of
light.
The sky around Fabian's observer would be overwhelmed by the
black hole, whose width is between 40 and 200 times that of our sun. How exactly all this would look is difficult
to fathom, as the immense gravity would bend light in strange ways.
"It would be a spectacular sight," Fabian said.
But the wonderment would be over all too soon. Fabian suspects that the highlighted gas
fell into the unforgiving black hole just a few days after the measurements.
The exact timing of the demise depends on the viscosity in the disk and whether
the black hole itself is spinning or not.
Pattern Recognition
Flares are a common occurrence around these supermassive
black holes. In fact, the tell-tale
observations of NGC 3516 were made three years ago, but it took this recent
analysis to uncover the flare's secret.
The lead author, Kazushi Iwasawa, produced a map of the X-ray light that
revealed a saw tooth pattern in the data.
"The eye is very good at picking out patterns," Fabian
remarked.
The researchers perceived a variation in the excited iron's
frequency, which they attributed to the rotation of the gas as it switches
between moving towards us to moving away from us. The frequency shift, called a Doppler shift, is similar to the
pitch changes in a "bullroarer" - a traditional instrument that is swung by a
string around the player's head.
Besides the Doppler shift, there is also an overall shift
down in frequency, as photons lose some of their energy climbing out of the
gravitational well around the black hole.
Possible Fluke
Although the saw tooth pattern matches theoretical
expectations for gas spinning around a black hole, it is difficult to make
definitive statements with only four periods of revolution.
"I think we are lucky.
We are at the very limits of detectability," Fabian said.
The researchers ran simulations to confirm that the periodic
variation they were seeing wasn't just a random fluke in the noise. Fabian said that he and his colleagues are
optimistic that the effect is real, but some astronomers have reservations.
"The reactions range from 'Wow' to 'I'm not really sure
about this,'" Fabian said.