Rogue black hole discovered only 5000 light-years away - Universe Today by AndyTomaswick
That detection comes at the end of a 6-year observational campaign, with dozens of authors collaborating on a paper recently published in arXiv . Those six years of painstakingly gathered data all started back in 2011, when a star about 20,000 light-years away brightened suddenly.
Scientists were looking for just such an event and had found several before but needed more data to be sure of what they were actually seeing.Microlensing leaves two tell-tale signs. The object in the background of a microlensing event would grow significantly bright, as was seen with this star in 2011. In addition, and if the positioning were lucky enough, telescopes would see the star shift ever so slightly as the massive lensing object passed in front of it. Past observations have shown plenty of brightening events that microlenses might have caused, but astronomers have never before seen the positional shift that would confirm that theory. Kailash Sahu and his colleagues turned Hubble, which is still one of the most functional observation platforms in humanity’s arsenal, toward the star a few weeks after its original brightening. They then checked back in with it periodically over the course of the next six years. In that time frame, they also collected positional data, hoping to use a technique called astrometry to detect slight movements that would indicate the star was subject to a microlensing object between itself and Hubble.A combination of warping and amplification of the star’s light is exactly what Hubble saw. But even that wasn’t conclusive enough to prove that the heavy object in front of the star was a black hole – just that it was heavy enough to cause a microlensing effect. To rule out other potential sources of the microlens, Sahu and his colleagues checked the light level of the lens itself. They did not find any, which would have been the case if another object, such as a brown dwarf, was the cause of the lens. Also, the duration of the lensing effect must last long enough to suggest a particularly deep gravity well. The original event in 2011 lasted 300 days, enough to point to a black hole that weighs approximately 7.1 times that of the sun. With that weight estimate, scientists were also able to estimate how fast the black hole was moving and came up with around 45 kilometers per second – much faster than the stars surrounding it in that area of the Milky Way. Such a speed differential also points to a potential source of the black hole itself – an explosion from a supermassive star probably both created the black hole and kicked it on its way. Sahu estimates the event happened around 100 million years ago, but it is hard to tell as there is no clear, traceable path to where the black hole came from. Even without that clear, traceable path, scientists have now definitively found something they have long sought, and they won’t be alone in doing so. Several all-sky surveys are popping up soon that will help scientiststhe skies for events like that in June 2011, and they will most likely find plenty more. That isn’t to say that any of these hard-to-see masses of gravity will prove a threat to Earth, but the more we leverage new techniques like microlensing, the more likely we are to find any that eventually might be.
United States Latest News, United States Headlines
Similar News:You can also read news stories similar to this one that we have collected from other news sources.
For The First Time, a Lone Black Hole Has Been Found Wandering The Milky WayLike an ancient cardigan, the Milky Way should be absolutely riddled with black holes.
Read more »
A Second Generation of Planets can Form Around a Dying Star - Universe TodayPlans from disks of material rotating around young stars. But now it looks like dying binary stars can form planets, too.
Read more »
A Supercomputer Gives Better Focus to Blurry Radio Images - Universe TodayWith better computers comes more battery imagery. Or at least that’s true most of the time. Supercomputers are extraordinarily good at image processing, so it’s normally worth it when a new algorithm comes along that they can turn their attention to. That’s exactly what happened with an algorithm recently developed by Ph.D. student Frits Sweijen … Continue reading 'A Supercomputer Gives Better Focus to Blurry Radio Images'
Read more »
Rogue cruise ships anchored in Bahamas after fleeing to avoid US warrant over unpaid fuel billsTwo Crystal Cruise vessels are anchored off the coast of Freeport, Bahamas after fleeing to avoid a U.S. warrant for unpaid fuel bills
Read more »
Rogue Crystal Cruise Ships Seized Near BahamasIn a statement to The Daily Beast, Crystal Cruises said it could not comment on “pending legal matters,” but confirmed that there were no guests aboard the cruises as both Crystal Serenity and Crystal Symphony’s voyages ended a month ago
Read more »




