Chandra pinpoints
edge of accretion disk around black hole
Using four
NASA space observatories, astronomers have shown that a flaring black
hole source has an accretion disk that stops much farther out than some
theories predict. This provides a better understanding of how energy
is released when matter spirals into a black hole.
On April 18,
2000, the Hubble Space Telescope and the Extreme Ultraviolet Explorer
observed ultraviolet radiation from the object known as XTE J1118+480,
a black hole roughly seven times the mass of the Sun, locked in a close
binary orbit with a Sun-like star. Simultaneously, the Rossi X-ray Timing
Explorer observed high-energy X-rays from matter plunging toward the
black hole, while the Chandra X-ray Observatory focused on the critical
energy band between the ultraviolet and high-energy X-rays, providing
the link that tied all the data together.
"By combining
the observations of XTE J1118+480 at many different wavelengths, we
have found the first clear evidence that the accretion disk can stop
farther out," said Jeffrey McClintock of the Harvard-Smithsonian Center
for Astrophysics who led the Chandra observations. "The Chandra data
indicate that this accretion disk gets no closer to the event horizon
than about 600 miles, a far cry from the 25 miles that some had expected."
Scientists theorize that the accretion disk is truncated there because
the material erupts into a hot bubble of gas before taking its final
plunge into the black hole.
Matter stripped
from a companion star by a black hole can form a flat, pancake-like
structure, called an "accretion disk." As material spirals toward the
inner edge of the accretion disk, it is heated by the immense gravity
of the black hole, which causes it to radiate in X-rays. By examining
the X-rays, researchers can gauge how far inward the accretion disk
extends.
Most astronomers
agree that when material is transferred onto the black hole at a high
rate, then the accretion disk will reach to within about 25 miles of
the event horizon -- the surface of "no return" for matter or light
falling into a black hole. However, scientists disagree on how close
the accretion disk comes when the rate of transfer is much less.
"The breakthrough
came when Chandra did not detect the X-ray signature one would expect
if the accretion disk came as near as 25 miles," said Ann Esin, a Caltech
theoretical astrophysicist who led a group that explored the implications
of the observations. "This presents a fundamental problem for models
in which the disk extends close to the event horizon."
In March 2000,
XTE J1118+480 experienced a sudden eruption in X-rays that led to the
discovery of the object by RXTE. The X-ray source was in a direction
where absorption by gas and dust was minimal, allowing ultraviolet and
low-energy X-rays to be observed. In the following month, an international
team organized observations of XTE J1118+480 in other wavelengths.
Chandra observed
XTE J1118+480 for 27,000 seconds with its Low-Energy Transmission Grating
(LETG) and the Advanced CCD Imaging Spectrometer (ACIS). The research
team for this investigation also included scientists from both the United
States (CfA, MIT, University of Notre Dame, Lawrence Livermore National
Laboratory, NASA Goddard Space Flight Center) and the United Kingdom
(The Open University, University of Southampton, Mullard Radio Astronomy
Observatory).
The LETG was
built by the SRON and the Max Planck Institute, and the ACIS instrument
by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Mass., and
Penn State University, University Park. NASA's Marshall Space Flight
Center in Huntsville, Ala., manages the Chandra program. TRW,Inc., Redondo
Beach, Calif., is the prime contractor for the spacecraft. The Smithsonian's
Chandra X-ray Center controls science and flight operations from Cambridge,
Mass.
Images associated
with this release are available on the World Wide Web at:
http://chandra.harvard.edu
and
http://chandra.nasa.gov