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Chandra Looks Into Black Box Of Cosmic Hell

The animation shows a NOAO optical image of the spiral galaxy NGC 1637, followed by seven individual Chandra X-ray images obtained on days 4 to 633 after the outburst of the supernova (SN 1999em). The bright X-ray source located east of the center of the galaxy is the black hole candidate. Most X-ray sources vary dramatically during the period covered by the Chandra observations. (The apparent variability of the diffuse emission is an artifact caused by the different sensitivities of the individual observations.) Next, the combined X-ray image is overlaid onto the optical image, which finally fades into an expanded central view of NGC 1637 from the Hubble Space Telescope. Image credit: NASA/CXC/Penn State/S. Immler et al.
Boston - Oct 29, 2003
A series of Chandra observations of the spiral galaxy NGC 1637 has provided a dramatic view of a violent, restless nature that belies its serene optical image. Over a span of 21 months, intense neutron star and black hole X-ray sources flashed on and off, giving the galaxy the appearance of a cosmic Christmas tree.

Neutron stars are dense balls of neutrons that remain after a supernova has destroyed the rest of a massive star; black holes are even denser, more compact objects whose gravitational pull is so strong that -- within a certain distance of them -- nothing can escape, not even light.

Erratic, volatile behavior is a common characteristic of neutron stars or black holes that orbit normal companion stars. Gas ripped off the normal star falls toward the compact star where the gas is compressed and heated by gravitational fields billions of times stronger than on the surface of the Sun. This process generates powerful X-radiation that can flare up and subside in a matter of seconds.

The X-ray view is in marked contrast to the view with an optical telescope. Optically, the galaxy is a stately spiral lit by the glow of about fifty billion stars slowly evolving over millions and billions of years.

This tranquil scene is interrupted about once a century with a supernova that signals the death of a star, and, in many cases, the formation of a neutron star or black hole. It was the detection of such a supernova in 1999 that triggered the subsequent series of Chandra observations.

The supernova appears in the panels on days 4 and 49 as the faint source at the five o'clock position just below the diffuse glow in the center of the image. The supernova faded in a few months, but the Chandra observations continued on five more occasions in coordination with the Hubble Space Telescope and the Very Large Array radio telescope. This collaboration produced a valuable data set of long term radio, optical and X-ray observations of the galaxy.

Of particular note is an extremely bright (white) X-ray source that appears in all panels at the nine o'clock position. This source is located in a group of massive stars in one of the outer spiral arms of the galaxy. It is likely a black hole formed relatively recently (in the last million years or so) when a massive star exhausted its nuclear fuel, exploded as a supernova, and left behind a black hole which is now pulling in gas from a companion star.

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Integral Space Telescope Discovers Hidden Black Holes
Paris - Oct 20, 2003
Integral, ESA's powerful gamma-ray space telescope, has discovered what seems to be a new class of astronomical objects. These are binary systems, probably including a black hole or a neutron star, embedded in a thick cocoon of cold gas. They have remained invisible so far to all other telescopes. Integral was launched exactly one year ago today to study the most energetic phenomena in the universe.





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