杏吧原创

Bubble of hot electrons seen hurtling around our galaxy鈥檚 black hole

For about two hours, a bubble of extremely hot electrons whirled around the Milky Way鈥檚 supermassive black hole at 30 per cent of the speed of light, and then it was destroyed
This shows a still image of the supermassive black hole Sagittarius A*, as seen by the Event Horizon Collaboration (EHT), with an artist???s illustration indicating where the modelling of the ALMA data predicts the hot spot to be and its orbit around the black hole.
Diagram of the orbit of a bubble of electrons around the Milky Way鈥檚 black hole
EHT Collaboration, ESO/M. Kornmesser

Astronomers have found what appears to be a bubble of hot electrons circling Sagittarius A*, the supermassive black hole at the centre of the Milky Way, at extraordinary speeds. This strange bubble could help us learn about how black holes devour the material around them.

at the Max Planck Institute for Radio Astronomy in Germany and his colleagues used the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) in Chile to observe the area surrounding Sagittarius A* as the black hole was emitting a huge flare of X-rays. Minutes after the flare, they saw an enormous 鈥渉ot spot鈥 of radiation, most likely made up of electrons heated to billions of degrees, circling the black hole on an orbit about the distance that Mercury鈥檚 sits from the sun.

Mercury takes 88 days to orbit the sun, whereas it only took this bubble about 70 minutes to make a loop around Sagittarius A*, meaning that it was travelling at about 30 per cent the speed of light. The researchers were only able to see it for two orbits before it faded from view, either destroyed or no longer emitting light in wavelengths ALMA can see.

鈥淭he bubble cannot be too small, because a small bubble would not disappear that quickly,鈥 says Wielgus. A small bubble would experience less shear force as it travelled around the black hole, so it would live longer. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a huge bubble, it鈥檚 not a tiny little guy.鈥

From observations of just two orbits, the researchers managed to determine that the magnetic fields affecting the bubble seem to be aligned as we would expect them to be based on a model of black holes called the magnetically arrested disc model. 鈥淚t tells us that maybe our models of these systems really have something to do with reality,鈥 says Wielgus.

The orbit of the bubble also implied that the material immediately surrounding the black hole circles it on a path perpendicular to the disc of the galaxy, which means that from Earth we are seeing it from face-on despite being located in the disc, which has been hinted at by previous observations as well. 鈥淲e are in the galactic plane, so it seems like we should be seeing it edge-on, but it is what it is,鈥 he says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 weird.鈥

Studying this area in more detail could help us learn more about how black holes swallow up matter and why they spew out massive flares, but we will have to do that research from afar.

鈥淭he view fromthis bubble would be a sort of magical kaleidoscope 鈥 you鈥檇 look in one direction and see something from a totally different direction because of the light bending in the black hole鈥檚 gravity 鈥 but you would have to be very resilient to survive the many billions of degrees,鈥 says Wielgus. 鈥淚f you magically materialised inside this bubble you would disappear just as quickly.鈥

Astronomy & Astrophysics

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Topics: Black holes