X-ray echoes of a shredded star provide close-up of monster black hole

NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center Press Release

In this artist's rendering, a thick accretion disc has formed around a supermassive black hole following the tidal disruption of a star that wandered too close. Stellar debris has fallen toward the black hole and collected into a thick chaotic disc of hot gas. Flashes of X-ray light near the centre of the disc result in light echoes that allow astronomers to map the structure of the funnel-like flow, revealing for the first time strong gravity effects around a normally quiescent black hole. Illustration credits: NASA/Swift/Aurore Simonnet, Sonoma State University.
In this artist’s rendering, a thick accretion disc has formed around a supermassive black hole following the tidal disruption of a star that wandered too close. Stellar debris has fallen toward the black hole and collected into a thick chaotic disc of hot gas. Flashes of X-ray light near the centre of the disc result in light echoes that allow astronomers to map the structure of the funnel-like flow, revealing for the first time strong gravity effects around a normally quiescent black hole. Illustration credits: NASA/Swift/Aurore Simonnet, Sonoma State University.
Some 3.9 billion years ago in the heart of a distant galaxy, the intense tidal pull of a monster black hole shredded a star that passed too close. When X-rays produced in this event first reached Earth on 28 March 2011, they were detected by NASA’s Swift satellite, which notified astronomers around the world. Within days, scientists concluded that the outburst, now known as Swift J1644+57, represented both the tidal disruption of a star and the sudden flare-up of a previously inactive black hole.

Dr Erin Kara is a Hubble and Joint Space Institute Fellow working at the University of Maryland Astronomy Department and NASA Goddard Space Flight Center. She recently completed her PhD in Astronomy at the University of Cambridge. Image credit: University of Cambridge.
Dr Erin Kara is a Hubble and Joint Space Institute Fellow working at the University of Maryland Astronomy Department and NASA Goddard Space Flight Center. She recently completed her PhD in Astronomy at the University of Cambridge. Image credit: University of Cambridge.
Now astronomers using archival observations from Swift, the European Space Agency’s (ESA) XMM-Newton observatory and the Japan-led Suzaku satellite have identified the reflections of X-ray flares erupting during the event. Led by Erin Kara, a postdoctoral researcher at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland, and the University of Maryland, College Park (UMCP), the team has used these light echoes, or reverberations, to map the flow of gas near a newly awakened black hole for the first time.

“While we don’t yet understand what causes X-ray flares near the black hole, we know that when one occurs we can detect its echo a couple of minutes later, once the light has reached and illuminated parts of the flow,” Kara explained. “This technique, called X-ray reverberation mapping, has been previously used to explore stable discs around black holes, but this is the first time we’ve applied it to a newly formed disc produced by a tidal disruption.”

Stellar debris falling toward a black hole collects into a rotating structure called an accretion disc. There the gas is compressed and heated to millions of degrees before it eventually spills over the black hole’s event horizon, the point beyond which nothing can escape and astronomers cannot observe. The Swift J1644+57 accretion disc was thicker, more turbulent and more chaotic than stable discs, which have had time to settle down into an orderly routine. The researchers presented the findings in a paper published online in the journal Nature yesterday.

One surprise from the study is that high-energy X-rays arise from the inner part of the disc. Astronomers had thought most of this emission originated from a narrow jet of particles accelerated to near the speed of light. In blazars, the most luminous galaxy class powered by supermassive black holes, jets produce most of the highest-energy emission.

“We do see a jet from Swift J1644, but the X-rays are coming from a compact region near the black hole at the base of a steep funnel of inflowing gas we’re looking down into,” said co-author Lixin Dai, a postdoctoral researcher at UMCP. “The gas producing the echoes is itself flowing outward along the surface of the funnel at speeds up to half the speed of light.”

X-rays originating near the black hole excite iron ions in the whirling gas, causing them to fluoresce with a distinctive high-energy glow called iron K-line emission. As an X-ray flare brightens and fades, the gas follows in turn after a brief delay depending on its distance from the source.

“Direct light from the flare has different properties than its echo, and we can detect reverberations by monitoring how the brightness changes across different X-ray energies,” said co-author Jon Miller, a professor of astronomy at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor.

Images from NASA's Swift satellite in Ultraviolet/Optical (white, purple) and X-Ray telescopes (yellow and red) were combined to make this view of Swift J1644+57. Evidence of the flares is seen only in the X-ray image, which is a 3.4-hour exposure taken on 28 March 2011. Image credits: NASA/Swift/Stefan Immler.
Images from NASA’s Swift satellite in Ultraviolet/Optical (white, purple) and X-Ray telescopes (yellow and red) were combined to make this view of Swift J1644+57. Evidence of the flares is seen only in the X-ray image, which is a 3.4-hour exposure taken on 28 March 2011. Image credits: NASA/Swift/Stefan Immler.
Swift J1644+57 is one of only three tidal disruptions that have produced high-energy X-rays, and to date it remains the only event caught at the peak of this emission. These star shredding episodes briefly activate black holes astronomers wouldn’t otherwise know about. For every black hole now actively accreting gas and producing light, astronomers think nine others are dormant and dark. These quiescent black holes were active when the universe was younger, and they played an important role in how galaxies evolved. Tidal disruptions therefore offer a glimpse of the silent majority of supersized black holes.

“If we only look at active black holes, we might be getting a strongly biased sample,” said team member Chris Reynolds, a professor of astronomy at UMCP. “It could be that these black holes all fit within some narrow range of spins and masses. So it’s important to study the entire population to make sure we’re not biased.”

The researchers estimate the mass of the Swift J1644+57 black hole at about a million times that of the Sun but did not measure its spin. With future improvements in understanding and modelling accretion flows, the team thinks it may be possible to do so.