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Sagittarius A* and J144701-5919: Peering Into The Heart of Darkness
Visual Description:

  • The supermassive black hole at the center of the Milky Way is known as Sagittarius A* (or Sgr A*, for short).

  • Astronomers have known for a long time that Sgr A* is relatively quiet compared to other black holes of similar size.

  • A new theoretical model based on a very long Chandra observation of the region may explain the feeble consumption by Sgr A*.

  • The deep Chandra image also reveals other interesting features of this region including supernova remnants and mysterious filaments

Astronomers have long known that the supermassive black hole at the center of the Milky Way Galaxy, known as Sagittarius A* (or Sgr A* for short), is a particularly poor eater. The fuel for this black hole comes from powerful winds blown off dozens of massive young stars that are concentrated nearby. These stars are located a relatively large distance away from Sgr A*, where the gravity of the black hole is weak, and so their high-velocity winds are difficult for the black hole to capture and swallow. Scientists have previously calculated that Sgr A* should consume only about 1% of the fuel carried in the winds.

However, it now appears that Sgr A* consumes even less than expected - ingesting only about one percent of that one percent. Why does it consume so little? The answer may be found in a new theoretical model developed using data from a very deep exposure made by NASA's Chandra X-ray Observatory. This model considers the flow of energy between two regions around the black hole: an inner region that is close to the so-called event horizon (the boundary beyond which even light cannot escape), and an outer region that includes the black hole's fuel source — the young stars — extending up to a million times farther out. Collisions between particles in the hot inner region transfer energy to particles in the cooler outer region via a process called conduction. This, in turn, provides additional outward pressure that makes nearly all of the gas in the outer region flow away from the black hole. The model appears to explain well the extended shape of hot gas detected around Sgr A* in X-rays as well as features seen in other wavelengths.

This Chandra image of Sgr A* and the surrounding region is based on data from a series of observations lasting a total of about one million seconds, or almost two weeks. Such a deep observation has given scientists an unprecedented view of the supernova remnant near Sgr A* — known as Sgr A East — and the lobes of hot gas extending for a dozen light years on either side of the black hole. These lobes provide evidence for powerful eruptions occurring several times over the last ten thousand years.

The image also contains several mysterious X-ray filaments, some of which may be huge magnetic structures interacting with streams of energetic electrons produced by rapidly spinning neutron stars. Such features are known as pulsar wind nebulas.

The new model of Sgr A* was presented at the 215th meeting of the American Astronomical Society in January 2010 by Roman Shcherbakov and Robert Penna of Harvard University and Frederick K. Baganoff of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

Visual Description:

The image is a Chandra image of supermassive black hole Sagittarius A* in the center of the Milky Way galaxy. The image features brick red and royal blue colors with bits of purple and blue-green, as well as small white dots dispersed throughout the image. Visually, at the center of the image, there is a bright, lumpy object showing the intense X-ray radiation emanating from the Sgr A* black hole. In the surrounding area, there are a couple smaller, greenish-blue lumps layered throughout the image, feathering out to a large almost butterfly shape filling much of the screen. The image appears textured, like dozens of glow worms are paused in their wriggling. This Chandra image was made from the longest X-ray exposure of that region at the time of observation. Such a deep observation has given scientists an unprecedented view of the supernova remnant near Sgr A* — known as Sgr A East — and the lobes of hot gas extending for a dozen light years on either side of the black hole. These lobes provide evidence for powerful eruptions occurring several times over the last ten thousand years. The image also contains several mysterious X-ray filaments, some of which may be huge magnetic structures interacting with streams of energetic electrons produced by rapidly spinning neutron stars. Such features are known as pulsar wind nebulas.

 

Fast Facts for Sagittarius A*:
Credit  NASA/CXC/MIT/F.K. Baganoff et al.
Release Date  January 5, 2010
Scale  Image is 15 arcmin across.
Category  Black Holes, Milky Way Galaxy
Coordinates (J2000)  RA 17h 45m 40s | Dec -29° 00´ 28.00"
Constellation  Sagittarius
Observation Date  43 pointings from September 21, 1999 to May 18, 2009
Observation Time  11 days, 14 hours
Obs. ID  242, 1561, 2943, 2951-2954, 3392, 3393, 3549, 3663, 3665, 4683, 4684, 5360, 5950, 5951-5954, 6113, 6363, 6639, 6640-6646, 7554-7559, 9169-9174, 10556
Instrument  ACIS
Also Known As Galactic Center
Color Code  Energy: Red (2-3.3 keV), Green (3.3-4.7 keV), Blue (4.7-8 keV)
X-ray
Distance Estimate  About 26,000 light years
distance arrow
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