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A powerful X-ray flash from a black hole sweeps through the galactic dust.

  • Writer: Sri Sairam Gautam B
    Sri Sairam Gautam B
  • Aug 11, 2021
  • 2 min read

Updated: Aug 29, 2021

NASA published a new image of the undulations in dust clouds created by an unexpected black hole X-ray burst observed in 2015.


The image, a combination of observations taken by the NASA workhorse Chandra X-ray Observatory and the optical Pan-STARRS telescope in Hawaii, shows blue concentric rings of dust around the V404 Cygni black hole (the Chandra view) on the backdrop of surrounding stars (as seen by the Pan-STARRS telescope).


The concentric circles reveal interesting information about the dust clouds between Earth and V404 Cygni, NASA officials wrote in a communique. Although the picture is two-dimensional, the rings are actually scattered in space over the 7,800 light-years that separate Earth from the black hole.


Concentric ripples in galactic dust clouds triggered by a black-hole burst

The rings reflect how the X-ray light emitted by the black hole during the burst propagated throughout the Milky Way galaxy and bounced off dust particles concentrated in clouds within it, like sound waves creating echoes. The size of the rings, therefore, corresponds to the distance between Earth and each dust cloud, with the smaller rings revealing the location of the more distant clouds and the larger rings representing those closer to our planet.


NASA explained in the statement that the so-called light echoes appear as narrow rings rather than wide rings or haloes because the X-ray burst lasted only a relatively short period of time.


The exceptionally powerful X-ray explosion was first detected on 5 June 2015 by Neil Gehrels' Swift Observatory, a NASA space telescope investigating gamma rays. Chandra subsequently observed the occurrence from July 11 to 25, 2015. However, the brightness of the event forced Chandra's operators to place the V404 Cygni system in between the telescope's detectors to prevent damage to the instrument in case of another powerful burst.


Just like a medical X-ray image reveals information about the properties of the various tissues in the body, so do the Chandra observations tell astronomers about the properties of the dust clouds, NASA said in the statement. The researchers compared the luminosity of X-ray light over a wavelength range with computational models of interstellar dust of various chemical compositions.


Since different materials absorb X-ray light in different ways, scientists were able to learn more about the composition of these clouds. The team determined that the dust probably contains a blend of graphite and silicate grains. Furthermore, when analyzing the inner rings with Chandra, the scientists found that the densities of the dust clouds are not uniform in all directions.


Several studies based on the original findings have been published since 2015.


The size of the rings reflects the distance of the dust clouds from Earth.

V404 Cygni is a binary system composed of a black hole as heavy as nine suns and a companion star roughly half the mass of the sun. The black hole draws the material from the star, which we can observe thanks to the X-rays emitted by the accretion disc of the black hole.

 
 
 

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