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Black hole came from a shredded galaxy

This black hole is unique in that it’s the only intermediate-mass black hole scientists have found so far.
By Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, Cambridge, Massachusetts Published: February 16, 2012
Black hole ESO 243-49
This spectacular edge-on galaxy, called ESO 243-49, is home to an intermediate-mass black hole that may have been stripped off of a cannibalized dwarf galaxy. Credit: NASA/ESA/S. Farrell (Sydney Institute for Astronomy, Univ. of Sydney)
Astronomers using NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope have found a cluster of young blue stars encircling the first intermediate-mass black hole ever discovered. The presence of the star cluster suggests that the black hole was once at the core of a now-disintegrated dwarf galaxy. The discovery of the black hole and the star cluster has important implications for understanding the evolution of supermassive black holes and galaxies.

“For the first time, we have evidence on the environment, and thus the origin, of this middle-weight black hole,” said Mathieu Servillat, who worked at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics in Cambridge, Massachusetts, when this research was conducted.

Astronomers know how massive stars collapse to form stellar-mass black holes, but it’s not clear how supermassive black holes, which weigh billions of times the mass of our Sun, form in the cores of galaxies. One idea is that supermassive black holes may build up through the merger of smaller, intermediate-mass black holes weighing hundreds to thousands of Suns.

Sean Farrell from the Sydney Institute for Astronomy in Australia discovered this unusual black hole in 2009 using the European Space Agency’s XMM-Newton X-ray space telescope. Known as Hyper-Luminous X-ray source 1 (HLX-1), the black hole weighs in at 20,000 solar masses and lies toward the edge of the galaxy ESO 243-49, which is 290 million light-years from Earth.

Farrell and his team then observed HLX-1 simultaneously with NASA’s Swift observatory in X-ray and Hubble in near-infrared, optical, and ultraviolet wavelengths. The intensity and the color of the light show a cluster of young stars, 250 light-years across, encircling the black hole. Hubble can’t resolve the stars individually because the suspected cluster is too far away. The brightness and color are consistent with other clusters of young stars seen in other galaxies.

Farrell’s team detected blue light from hot gas in the accretion disk swirling around the black hole. However, they also detected red light produced by much cooler gas, which would most likely come from stars. Computer models suggested the presence of a massive young cluster of stars encircling the black hole.

“What we can definitely say with our Hubble data is that we require both emission from an accretion disk and emission from a stellar population to explain the colors we see,” said Farrell.

Such young clusters of stars are commonly seen in nearby galaxies, but not outside the flattened starry disk, as found with HLX-1. The best explanation is that the HLX-1 black hole was the central black hole in a dwarf galaxy. The larger host galaxy then captured the dwarf. Most of the dwarf’s stars were stripped away through the collision between the galaxies. At the same time, new young stars formed in the encounter. The interaction that compressed the gas around the black hole also triggered star formation.

Farrell and Servillat found that the star cluster must be less than 200 million years old. This means that the bulk of the stars were formed following the dwarf’s collision with the larger galaxy. The age of the stars tells how long ago the two galaxies crashed into each other.

The future of the black hole is uncertain at this stage. It depends on its trajectory, which is currently unknown. It’s possible the black hole may spiral into the center of the big galaxy and eventually merge with the supermassive black hole there. Alternately, the black hole could settle into a stable orbit around the galaxy. Either way, it’s likely to fade away in X-rays as it depletes its supply of gas.

“This black hole is unique in that it’s the only intermediate-mass black hole we’ve found so far. Its rarity suggests that these black holes are only visible for a short time,” said Servillat.

More observations are planned this year to track the history of the interaction between the two galaxies.

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5 stars
JOHN C KREMER from COLORADO said:
We should attempt to study and find why there are so many globular clusters surrounding most galaxies that are close enough to visually inspect. These clusters hold some of the oldest stars in the universe. Why is this so? Perhaps these clusters have some massive mass that they can form arround, say an intermediate massive black hole - weighing somewhere between 10,000 to several hundred thousand sun masses. This size would be just about right to collect some of the larger stars from the earliest gas clouds formed after the big bang and start a progression to larger and larger clusters, ending with a colliding collection of billions of these clusters forming the suppermasssive blackhole to todays galaxies. The globular clusters left behind this massive central collection would be the globular clusters we find today.
Now we must try and find how those mid size black holes came to be.
JOHN MOES from MICHIGAN said:
A dwarf galaxy with HLX-1, a black hole weighing 20,000 solar masses in its center, must have had close to a billion stars in it. Then it crashes through an arm of galaxy ESO 243-49, and we don't see a ripple in the spiral? ESO 243-49 strips all billion old stars away from the dwarf leaving HLX-1 hanging out in the open practically naked, and doesn't leave a hint of a swelling in the arm of the spiral? How do we know that HLX-1 with its blue stars isn't barreling toward us a long way away from ESO 243-49?
5 stars
BILL SIMPSON from LOUISIANA said:
A more detailed examination of the galaxy reveals that the line through the center appears to be slightly warped, and not as exactly centered in the central mass of stars, as one might expect . Could the merger have cause that slight distortion? We will never know.
It could be just the angle that we see it from. I would like to visualize what tilting it up, with a dust lane out from the center, would do to the perspective in my mind, but it's too hard. I'm guessing that is what is causing the apparent distortion, not actual asymmetry. I forgot that it is 3 dimensional, not 2.
When you look at it on your computer screen, it's easy to forget how big it is. Travelling at the speed of light, it would take many lifetimes to make it from one side to the other. That is the only way to get a grasp of the enormous size of a galaxy. And they occupy a TINY portion of all space! It is like trying to grasp the size the size of the Sun. Looking at it through your solar telescope, and it is easy to forget that it takes 109 Earths to go across the face. Planets are tiny specks compared to stars. That galaxy up there has at least hundreds of billions of them, maybe trillions. Ponder that, or not.
5 stars
BILL SIMPSON from LOUISIANA said:
That galaxy is so symmetric it looks fake. Note all the other ones in the frame. Less than 200 million years means the early dinosaurs were walking around when it happened. I doubt we will last as long as they did. The James Webb telescope will spend some time on this one, if it works. It would be good if they could put it at the Lagrange point along with the planned space station, so that they could fix it when something goes wrong. As expensive as it will be, don't count on more than one being built, unless China builds one.
Two black holes merging should be interesting to watch. I wonder if anything could be learned about the internal structure as they hit? Probably not, but you never know. This discovery seems to add evidence to the theory that all galaxies have black holes at the center. I thought so, ever since they found the first one. The giant scopes planned for Hawaii & Chile might be able to do some measurements to determine if this hole will orbit, or crash into the center. Mirrors of that size at those high elevations using the latest adaptive optics should be able to do some amazing work. Lasers and electronic digital computers are turning out to be quite useful devices. And they are less than a century old. Now if only someone can find something to replace all that energy we get from cheap crude oil.
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