Black holes may play important role in evolution of galaxies
March 4th, 2010 - 2:51 pm ICT by ANIWashington, March 4 (ANI): New observations from NASA’s Chandra X-ray Observatory indicate that “average” supermassive black holes may play an important role in the evolution of the galaxies in which they reside, as powerful winds blowing away from the vicinity of such a black hole may shape galaxies.
For years, astronomers have known that a supermassive black hole grows in parallel with its host galaxy.
It has long been suspected that material blown away from a black hole - as opposed to the fraction of material that falls into it - alters the evolution of its host galaxy.
A key question is whether such “black hole blowback” typically delivers enough power to have a significant impact.
Powerful relativistic jets shot away from the biggest supermassive black holes in large, central galaxies in clusters like Perseus are seen to shape their host galaxies, but these are rare.
Dan Evans of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and his colleagues used Chandra for five days to observe NGC 1068, one of the nearest and brightest galaxies containing a rapidly growing supermassive black hole.
This black hole is only about twice as massive as the one in the center of our Galaxy, which is considered to be a rather ordinary size.
The X-ray images and spectra obtained using Chandra’s High Energy Transmission Grating Spectrometer showed that a strong wind is being driven away from the center of NGC 1068 at a rate of about a million miles per hour.
This wind is likely generated as surrounding gas is accelerated and heated as it swirls toward the black hole.
A portion of the gas is pulled into the black hole, but some of it is blown away.
High energy X-rays produced by the gas near the black hole heat the ouflowing gas, causing it to glow at lower X-ray energies.
This study by Evans and colleagues represents the first X-ray observation that is deep enough to make a high quality map of the cone-shaped volume lit up by the black hole and its winds.
By combining measurement of the velocity of the clouds with estimates of the density of the gas, Evans and his colleagues showed that each year several times the mass of the Sun is being deposited out to large distances, about 3,000 light years from the black hole.
The wind may carry enough energy to heat the surrounding gas and suppress extra star formation.
“We have shown that even these middle-of-the-road black holes can pack a punch,” said Evans. “I think the upshot is that these black holes are anything but ordinary,” he added. (ANI)
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