Integral spots matter a millisecond from doom

March 24, 2011

Integral spots matter a millisecond from doom

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An artist's impression of the Cygnus X-1 black hole system. Gas from a nearby supergiant star spirals down into the black hole but a small fraction is diverted by magnetic fields into jets that shoot back into space. Credit: ESA

ESA's Integral gamma-ray observatory has spotted extremely hot matter just a millisecond before it plunges into the oblivion of a black hole. But is it really doomed? These unique observations suggest that some of the matter may be making a great escape.

No one would want to be so close to a black hole. Just a few hundred kilometres away from its deadly surface, space is a maelstrom of particles and radiation. Vast storms of particles are falling to their doom at close to the , raising the temperature to millions of degrees.

Ordinarily, it takes just a millisecond for the particles to cross this final distance but hope may be at hand for a small fraction of them.

Thanks to the new Integral observations, astronomers now know that this chaotic region is threaded by magnetic fields.

This is the first time that magnetic fields have been identified so close to a black hole. Most importantly, Integral shows they are highly structured magnetic fields that are forming an escape tunnel for some of the doomed particles.

Philippe Laurent, CEA Saclay, France, and colleagues made the discovery by studying the nearby black hole, Cygnus X-1, which is ripping a to pieces and feeding on its gas.

Their evidence points to the magnetic field being strong enough to tear away particles from the black hole's gravitational clutches and funnel them outwards, creating jets of matter that shoot into space. The particles in these jets are being drawn into spiral trajectories as they climb the magnetic field to freedom and this is affecting a property of their gamma-ray light known as polarisation.

A gamma ray, like ordinary light, is a kind of wave and the orientation of the wave is known as its polarisation. When a fast particle spirals in a it produces a kind of light, known as synchrotron emission, which displays a characteristic pattern of polarisation. It is this polarisation that the team have found in the . It was a difficult observation to make.

"We had to use almost every observation Integral has ever made of Cygnus X-1 to make this detection," says Laurent.

Amassed over seven years, these repeated observations of the black hole now total over five million seconds of observing time, the equivalent of taking a single image with an exposure time of more than two months. Laurent's team added them all together to create just such an exposure.

"We still do not know exactly how the infalling matter is turned into the jets. There is a big debate among theoreticians; these observations will help them decide," says Laurent.

Jets around have been seen before by radio telescopes but such observations cannot see the black hole in sufficient detail to know exactly how close to the black hole the jets originate. That makes these new observations invaluable.

"This discovery of polarized emission from a black hole jet is a unique result demonstrating that Integral, which is covering the high-energy band in ESA's wide spectrum of scientific missions, continues to produce key results more than eight years after its launch," says Christoph Winkler, ESA Integral Project Scientist.

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PaulRadcliff
Mar 24, 2011

Rank: 1.6 / 5 (5)
These studies may prove very valuable to the future of space travel and propulsion methods. Think Dyson (the vacuum cleaner, not Freeman). Highly structured and controlled, strong magnetic fields could potentially be used to eject very high speed particles, creating thrust, potentially relativistic velocities of thrust. To keep a spacecraft form spinning in opposition to a single engine's cyclonic spiral stream of ejected material or particulate matter, two or four opposing rotational engines. Control of course corrections or steering could be easily compared to modern fighter jets, without need for wings in outer space, but perhaps needing them for atmospheric maneuvering. Science Fiction space craft
such as those seen in Babylon Five or The Last Star-fighter
spring to mind. But back to the engines- Miniature 'black holes' or synthetic rotating singularities may be possible, in the future. Use of said 'singularities' may be common in
our techie spaceflight future. How cool is that?!?
QuantaUniverseCom
Mar 24, 2011

Rank: 2 / 5 (4)
Why would any matter have to be consumed by a black hole, when the jets fly particles away at relativistic speeds, and huge magnetic fields can attract dust, gas, and matter instead of undetectable unproven gravity wave particles? Why need black holes and dark matter to support the big-bang theory? Plasma lab physics produce x-ray jets without black holes.
http://holographi...spot.com
antialias
Mar 25, 2011

Rank: 4.3 / 5 (6)
Plasma lab physics produce x-ray jets without black holes

Yes. And my lamp produces light without fusion. Therefore, by your logic, the sun doesn't exist.
SteveL
Mar 25, 2011

Rank: 4 / 5 (1)
@PaulRadcliff -- A few small issues:

1) Honking big mass ratio compared to the force of matter ejected.
2) Matter being ejected in two opposing polar directions.
3) Gravitational forces that would dissassemble the strongest substances known before they got close.
4) How exactly do you move a black hole, much less 2 or 4 of them?
5) How do you keep massive and highly gravitational black holes apart from each other?
6) In order to eject this very small proportion of matter, you have to feed the black hole mass quantities of matter - sort of like an old SNL episode.

I could go on...
RDoll
Mar 25, 2011

Rank: not rated yet
It seems that the matter would be absorbed at different rates on the spinning black hole. Perhaps where the rate of spin is slowest (at the poles) the matter is colliding with itself just moments before it is consumed and the resulting collision is thrusting the material outward to form a jet. Just a thought.
RDoll
Mar 25, 2011

Rank: not rated yet
Could the matter crossing the event horizon be accelerated beyond C and we're seeing the results. Collisions or broken matter escaping <=C at the weaker poles and rebonding as it's propelled outward?
I have precious little knowledge of these things. I'm just curious.
freakazoid
Mar 27, 2011

Rank: not rated yet
For a basic understanding of toroidals forms and black holes just search for Marko Rodin ,-)
Bigblumpkin36
Mar 27, 2011

Rank: 1 / 5 (1)
its not matter its tiger blood
PaulRadcliff
Mar 30, 2011

Rank: not rated yet
In response to Steve L, A synthetic singularity, was the core of each hypothetical engine, not a natural or even man made black hole. I did not invent this concept, now that I've had a little time pass, it was a Star Trek TNG episode where the Romulans used artificial singularities in their engine/warp core. Why not spitball a few propulsion ideas for future space craft engines? The black hole and relativistic jets propelled by super strong magnetic fields, was just a jumping off point for my imagination. Certainly, I do not have many details worked out, the most difficult being 'how do you create a controllable artificial quantum singularity, for use in a magnetically reinforced plasma core, with an open end for thrust/jet to escape, thus moving the engine and attached space craft in the opposite direction? If I did have it all figured out, and experimentally proved its usefulness as a high powered propulsion method,do you think I would share it???Unlikely. No offense.Imagination!
antialias
Mar 31, 2011

Rank: 5 / 5 (1)
Certainly, I do not have many details worked out,

A bit obvious, that. Stringing together buzzwords doesn't make scienec 8nor engineering). Please try to understand what you're talking about when you use such words as
'black hole'
'magnetic field'
'relativistic jet'
'plasma'
first.

Then it will become obvious to you that you're just talking nonsense.
Rank 4.8 /5 (12 votes)
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