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Hubble Finds Mysterious Disk of Blue Stars Around a Black Hole European Space Agency
(Image courtesy of European Space Agency/Hubble Space
Telescope) Astronomers using the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope have identified the
source of a mysterious blue light surrounding a supermassive black hole in our
neighbouring Andromeda Galaxy (M31). Though the light has puzzled astronomers
for more than a decade, the new discovery makes the story even more mysterious. By finding the disk of stars, astronomers also have collected what they say
is ironclad evidence for the existence of the monster black hole. The evidence
has helped astronomers rule out all alternative theories for the dark mass in
the Andromeda Galaxy's core, which scientists have long suspected was a black
hole. "Seeing these stars is like watching a magician pulling a rabbit out of
a hat. You know it happened but you don't know how it happened," said Tod
Lauer of the National Optical Astronomy Observatory in Tucson, Arizona. He and a
team of astronomers, led by Ralf Bender of the Max Planck Institute for
Extraterrestrial Physics in Garching, Germany, and John Kormendy of the
University of Texas in Austin, made the Hubble observations. The team's results
will be published in the Sept. 20, 2005 issue of the Astrophysical Journal. Hubble Probes Strange Blue Light Astronomer Ivan King of the University of
Washington and colleagues first spotted the strange blue light in 1995 with the
Hubble Space Telescope. He thought the light might have come from a single,
bright blue star or perhaps from a more exotic energetic process. Three years
later, Lauer and Sandra Faber of the University of California at Santa Cruz used
Hubble again to study the blue light. Their observations indicated that the blue
light was a cluster of blue stars. Now, new spectroscopic observations by Hubble's Space Telescope Imaging
Spectrograph (STIS) reveal that the blue light consists of more than 400 stars
that formed in a burst of activity about 200 million years ago. The stars are
tightly packed in a disk that is only a light-year across. The disk is nested
inside an elliptical ring of older, cooler, redder stars, which was seen in
previous Hubble observations. "The blue stars in the disk are so short-lived that it is unlikely in
the long 12-billion-year history of Andromeda that such a short-lived disk would
appear now," Lauer said. "That's why we think that the mechanism that
formed this disk of stars probably formed other stellar disks in the past and
will trigger them again in the future. We still don't know, however, how such a
disk could form in the first place. It still remains an enigma." The astronomers credit Hubble's superb vision for finding the disk.
"Only Hubble has the resolution in blue light to observe this disk,"
said team member Richard Green of the National Optical Astronomy Observatory in
Tucson. "It is so small and so distinct from the surrounding red stars that
we were able to use it to probe into the very dynamical heart of Andromeda.
These observations were taken by the members of our team that built STIS. We
designed its visible channel specifically to seize such an opportunity - to
measure starlight closer to a black hole than in any other galaxy outside our
own." Solid Evidence for a Monster Black Hole In addition to the discovery of the
disk of stars, the astronomers used this uniquely close look at Andromeda to
prove unambiguously that the galaxy hosts a central black hole. In 1988, in
independent ground-based studies, John Kormendy and the team of Alan Dressler
and Douglas Richstone discovered a central dark object in Andromeda that they
believed was a supermassive black hole. This was the first strong case for what
are now 40 detections of black holes, most of them made by Hubble. Those
observations, however, did not definitively rule out other, very exotic, and far
less likely, alternatives. The STIS observations of Andromeda are so precise that astronomers have
eliminated all other possibilities for what the central, dark object could be.
They also calculated that the black hole's mass is 140 million Suns, which is
three times more massive than once thought. So far, dark clusters have definitively been ruled out in only two galaxies,
NGC 4258 and our galaxy, the Milky Way. "These two galaxies give us
unambiguous proof that black holes exist," Kormendy added. "But both
are special cases - NGC 4258 contains a disk of water masers that we observe
with radio telescopes, and our galactic center is so close that we can follow
individual stellar orbits. Andromeda is the first galaxy in which we can exclude
all exotic alternatives to a black hole using Hubble and using the same
techniques by which we find almost all supermassive black holes." "Studying black holes always was a primary mission of Hubble,"
Kormendy said. "Nailing the black hole in Andromeda is without a doubt an
important part of its legacy. It makes us much more confidant that the other
central dark objects detected in galaxies are black holes, too." "Now that we have proven that the black hole is at the centre of the
disk of blue stars, the formation of these stars becomes hard to
understand," Bender added. "Gas that might form stars must spin around
the black hole so quickly - and so much more quickly near the black hole than
farther out - that star formation looks almost impossible. But the stars are
there." A Galaxy's Active Core The black hole and the disk of stars are not the only
pieces of architecture in Andromeda's core. A team led by Lauer and Faber used
Hubble in 1993 to discover that the galaxy appears to have a double cluster of
stars at its centre. This finding was a surprise, because two clusters should
merge into one in only a few hundred thousand years. Scott Tremaine of Princeton
University solved this problem by suggesting that the "double nucleus"
was actually a ring of old, red stars. The ring looked like two star clusters
because astronomers were only seeing the stars on the opposite ends of the ring.
The ring is about five light-years from the black hole and its surrounding disk
of blue stars. The disk and the ring are tilted at the same angle as viewed from
Earth, suggesting that they may be related. Although astronomers are surprised to find a blue disk of stars swirling
around a supermassive black hole, they also say the puzzling architecture may
not be that unusual. "The dynamics within the core of this neighbouring galaxy may be more
common than we think," Lauer explained. "Our own Milky Way apparently
has even younger stars close to its own black hole. It seems unlikely that only
the closest two big galaxies should have this odd activity. So this behaviour
may not be the exception but the rule. And we have found other galaxies that
have a double nucleus." From: http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2005/09/050921075452.htm
Posting date: 10/2/2005
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