Black hole radiation repels gas they feed on
Radiation from black holes can push away the gas they feed on, a new study has revealed, explaining why black holes go quiescent.
An international team, led by University of Sydney, has found that a black hole creates a “wind” which pushes its own “food” of dust and gas out of reach, using Gemini North telescope in Hawaii.
According to them, this is the process that turned actively feeding black holes — common in the early universe — into the quiescent ones found in galaxies today.
“It looks like they’ve found the ‘off switch’ for black holes. We’ve long suspected that a negative feedback process like this must be at work, but these observations are the first clear evidence of outflows that can starve a black hole of fuel,” lead astronomer Prof. Joss Bland-Hawthorn said.
The astronomers studied the galaxy Markarian 231, which lies 600 million light years away. Markarian 231 is a “train wreck” resulting from the collision of two galaxies. At its centre is a black hole at least 10 million times the mass of the sun, which is sucking in gas and dust from its immediate surroundings. The black hole in Markarian 231 was known to produce narrow jets but the Gemini observations have revealed a broad outflow extending in all directions for at least 8000 light years around the galaxy’s core. More than one physical process is likely to be creating the outflow. One is thought to be the X-rays and gamma rays generated around the black hole, which heat up the gas in the galaxy’s centre until it “boils over”.
Gas is streaming away from the galaxy’s centre at speeds of over 1,000 km a second. —PTI
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