An international team of astronomers, including a researcher from Curtin
University, has answered a long standing question about the enigmatic jets
emitted by black holes, in findings published recently in prestigious journal
Nature.
Jets are narrow beams of matter spat out at high speed from near a central
object, like a black hole.
The team studied the radio waves and X-rays emitted by a small black hole a
few times the mass of the Sun. The black hole in question was known to be
active, but the team’s radio observations did not show any jets, and the X-ray
spectrum didn’t reveal anything unusual.
However, a few weeks later, the team took another look and this time saw
radio emissions corresponding to the sudden appearance of these jets, and even
more interestingly, lines had appeared in the X-ray spectrum – the tell-tale
signature of ordinary atoms – around the black hole.
“Intriguingly, we found the lines were not where they should be, but rather
were shifted significantly,” Dr James Miller Jones from the Curtin University
node of the International Centre for Radio Astronomy Research (ICRAR), who led
the radio observations, said.
The same effect occurs when a siren from a vehicle changes pitch as it
moves towards or away from us, as the sound wave is shortened or lengthened by
the movement.
“It led us to conclude the particles were being accelerated to fast speeds
in the jets, one directed towards Earth, and the other one in the opposite
direction,” team member Dr Simone Migliari from the University of Barcelona
said.
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