Thousands of black holes may be
orbiting Milky Way center, scientists say
Posted Jan. 12, 2005
Courtesy Chandra X-ray Observatory
and World Science staff
Ten thousand
or more black holes may be swarming around the Milky Way’s central,
supermassive black hole, scientists say. A black hole is an object so compact
that its gravity overpowers anything that would escape its surface, even light.
The black holes orbiting the
galactic center would be relatively small ones, formed by collapsed stars, and
seem to have migrated into the region over several billion years, the scientists
said.
The data may also help
astronomers better understand how the supermassive black hole at the center of
the Milky Way grows: perhaps by cannibalizing smaller black holes, the
researchers added.
The finding was announced this
week by Michael Muno of the University of California, Los Angeles at a meeting
of the American Astronomical Society in San Diego, Calif. It was made using
NASA’s Chandra X-ray Observatory, an instrument that measures emissions of
X-ray radiation by stars and other celestial objects, as part of an ongoing
monitoring of the region around Sagittarius A*, the supermassive black hole at
the center of the Milky Way.
Muno and colleagues analyzed
X-ray sources near the galaxy’s center. The regions around black holes
sometimes emit powerful X-rays as a result of the violent processes that occur
as black holes swallow surrounding material.
Among the thousands of X-ray
sources detected within 70 light years of Sgr A*, Muno and his colleagues
searched for those most likely to be active black holes and neutron stars. A
neutron star is another type of collapsed star that is also extremely dense,
though less so than a black hole. One spoonful of neutron star material is
believed to weigh as much as all the cars on Earth.
Muno and colleagues selected
only the brightest sources whose X-ray output varied widely. These
characteristics are believed to identify black holes and neutron stars that are
swallowing material from “companion stars” that are orbiting them.
Of the seven sources that met
these criteria, four are within three light years of Sagittarius A*, Muno said.
This high concentration of X-ray sources near the center “implies that a huge
number of black holes and neutron stars have gathered in the center of the
Galaxy,” Muno said.
Mark Morris, also of UCLA and a
collaborator of Muno, predicted a decade ago that a process called dynamical
friction would cause stellar black holes to sink toward the center of the
Galaxy. Black holes are formed as remnants of the explosions of massive stars
and have masses of about 10 suns. As black holes orbit the center of the Galaxy
at a distance of several light years, they pull on surrounding stars, which pull
back on the black holes.
The net effect is that black
holes spiral inward, and the low-mass stars move out. From the estimated number
of stars and black holes in the Galactic Center region, dynamical friction is
expected to produce a dense swarm of 20,000 black holes within three light years
of Sagittarius A*. A similar effect is at work for neutron stars, but to a
lesser extent because they have a lower mass.
Once black holes are
concentrated near Sagittarius A*, they will have many close encounters with
normal stars there. Some of these normal stars are in binary star systems,
meaning they have a companion star and the two stars orbit each other.
The intense gravity of a black
hole can induce an ordinary star to “change partners” and pair up with the
black hole while ejecting its companion. This process and a similar one for
neutron stars are expected to produce several hundreds of black hole and neutron
star binary systems.
“If only one percent of these
binary systems are X-ray active each year, they can account for the sources we
see,” said Eric Pfahl of the University of Virginia in Charlottesville and a
coauthor of a paper describing these results that has been submitted to the
Astrophysical Journal Letters.
“Although the evidence is
mostly circumstantial, it makes a strong case for the existence of a large
population of neutron stars and stellar-mass black holes within three
light-years of the center of our Galaxy.”
The black holes and neutron
stars in the cluster are expected to gradually be swallowed by the supermassive
black hole, Sagittarius A*, at a rate of about one every million years. At this
rate, about 10,000 black holes and neutron stars would have been captured in a
few billion years, adding about 3 percent to the mass of the central
supermassive black hole, which is currently estimated to contain the mass of 3.7
million suns.
In the meantime, black holes
will fling low-mass stars out of the central region. This expulsion will reduce
the likelihood that normal stars will be captured by the central supermassive
black hole. This may explain why the central regions of some galaxies, including
the Milky Way, look fairly calm even though they contain a supermassive black
hole, the astronomers said.
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