Scientists discover strength of black hole winds

Beau

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Came across this rather interesting article on black holes. We know so very little about them, so I thought it would be worth putting this article here. Hopefully there are some science peeps who can comment on the findings and what it may mean in the grander scheme of things, if anything.

https://earthchangesmedia.wordpress.com/2015/02/25/new-discovery-measures-strength-of-ultra-fast-black-hole-winds/

A new first time discovery has allowed astronomers to measure the strength of ultra-fast black hole winds and show that they are mighty enough to affect the fate of their host galaxies.

By looking at the speed of ambient gas spewing out from a well-known quasar, astronomers are gaining insight into how black holes and their host galaxies might have evolved at the same time.

Using the Nuclear Spectroscopic Telescope Array (NuSTAR) , researchers were able to use the X-ray spectra of an extremely luminous black hole (quasar PDS 456) to detect a nearly spherical stream of highly ionized gas streaming out of it.

The evolution of galaxies is connected to the growth of supermassive black holes in their centers. During the quasar phase, a huge luminosity is released as matter falls onto the black hole, and radiation-driven winds can transfer most of this energy back to the host galaxy.

“We know that black holes in the centers of galaxies can feed on matter, and this process can produce winds. This is thought to regulate the growth of the galaxies,” said Fiona Harrison of the California Institute of Technology, the principal investigator of NuSTAR and a co-author on a new paper about the results appearing in the Feb. 19 issue of the journal Science. “Knowing the speed, shape and size of the winds, we can figure out how powerful they are.”

Supermassive black holes blast matter into their host galaxies, including X-ray-emitting winds traveling at up to one-third the speed of light. In the new study, astronomers determined that PDS 456, an extremely luminous active black hole, or quasar, has winds that carry more energy every second than what is emitted by more than 1 trillion suns.

That’s enough of a punch to affect the entire galaxy and its ability to make stars.

“By looking at this huge spherical outflow, we can now see a mechanism to explain the correlation between black hole and galaxy formation,” said Bill Craig of Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory and the Space Science Laboratory at University of California, Berkeley.

NuSTAR and the European Space Agency’s XMM-Newton simultaneously observed PDS 456, located more than 2 billion light-years away, on five separate occasions in 2013 and 2014. The space telescopes complement each other by seeing different parts of the X-ray light spectrum: XMM-Newton sees low-energy X-rays and NuSTAR sees high-energy X-rays. Their goal was to look for iron, which is blown from the black hole winds along with other matter.

The researchers looked for scattered light signatures from iron atoms originating from the sides of the supermassive black hole.

The NuSTAR’s higher-energy X-ray data, when combined with observations from XMM-Newton, provided the key information, proving that the winds emanate not in a beam but in a nearly spherical fashion.

With the shape and extent of the winds determined, the researchers could then determine the power of the wind and the degree to which they can quench the formation of new stars.

The new report demonstrates that a supermassive black hole and the galaxy that nurtures it are connected by high-speed winds. As the black holes bulk up in size, their winds push vast amounts of matter outward through the galaxy, which ultimately stops new stars from forming.
 
I think I saw the press release a couple of days ago and didn't pay much attention. The artistic representation is pretty:
15-021-nustar.jpg

from _http://www.nasa.gov/press/2015/february/nasa-esa-telescopes-give-shape-to-furious-black-hole-winds/
Usually with these sensationalist press releases, it is worth searching for the source, but even without that, i often ask myself this question: what has been observed, and what has been postulated to be the source of that observation. For instance here they talk about "black hole wind". They observed strong winds of iron atoms. Did they observed the black hole itself? Not directly in any case. The wind could be from a super giga massive black hole or not, because it seems from afar to be only a conjecture.
For example, our sun, which is a very ordinary star in an ordinary galaxy, also produces winds of charged and uncharged matter, and yet it's not a black hole. And since we understand so little (or almost nothing) about our sun, we can only be a bit skeptical on any exotic model describing some exotic stars or galaxies or other systems. OSIT out of the head.

Added: Just found a comment from the Thunderbolt project's on the subject. Hard to tell which interpretation makes more sense, but it's still interesting nevertheless.

Added2: A professor in plasma physics told me once, not without some irony: Astrophysics is the best branch of science, you can claim anything you want and nobody can prove or disprove it. :)
 
My own personal 'Theory of Everything' is this: "Everything Sucks"

and nothing sucks more than a Black Hole.

They are even smaller than a neutron star (Nibiru) and yet they wield so much power from their central home at the centre of the Galaxy. I read somewhere that it would be about the size of an average city.

It must be the perfect place for the STS head honcho to live.
 
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