Black Holes

Don't let the name fool you: a black hole is anything but empty space. Rather, it is a great amount of matter packed into a very small area - think of a star ten times more massive than the Sun squeezed into a sphere approximately the diameter of New York City. The result is a gravitational field so strong that nothing, not even light, can escape. In recent years, NASA instruments have painted a new picture of these strange objects that are, to many, the most fascinating objects in space.

Swift
Intense X-ray flares thought to be caused by a black hole devouring a star. (Video)


Although the term was not coined until 1967 by Princeton physicist John Wheeler, the idea of an object in space so massive and dense that light could not escape it has been around for centuries. Most famously, black holes were predicted by Einstein's theory of general relativity, which showed that when a massive star dies, it leaves behind a small, dense remnant core. If the core's mass is more than about three times the mass of the Sun, the equations showed, the force of gravity overwhelms all other forces and produces a black hole.

Black Holes
A video about black holes.


Scientists can't directly observe black holes with telescopes that detect x-rays, light, or other forms of electromagnetic radiation. We can, however, infer the presence of black holes and study them by detecting their effect on other matter nearby. If a black hole passes through a cloud of interstellar matter, for example, it will draw matter inward in a process known as accretion. A similar process can occur if a normal star passes close to a black hole. In this case, the black hole can tear the star apart as it pulls it toward itself. As the attracted matter accelerates and heats up, it emits x-rays that radiate into space. Recent discoveries offer some tantalizing evidence that black holes have a dramatic influence on the neighborhoods around them - emitting powerful gamma ray bursts, devouring nearby stars, and spurring the growth of new stars in some areas while stalling it in others.

One Star's End is a Black Hole's Beginning

Most black holes form from the remnants of a large star that dies in a supernova explosion. (Smaller stars become dense neutron stars, which are not massive enough to trap light.) If the total mass of the star is large enough (about three times the mass of the Sun), it can be proven theoretically that no force can keep the star from collapsing under the influence of gravity. However, as the star collapses, a strange thing occurs. As the surface of the star nears an imaginary surface called the "event horizon," time on the star slows relative to the time kept by observers far away. When the surface reaches the event horizon, time stands still, and the star can collapse no more - it is a frozen collapsing object.

Black Hole Jets
Astronomers have identified a candidate for the smallest-known black hole. (Video)


Even bigger black holes can result from stellar collisions. Soon after its launch in December 2004, NASA's Swift telescope observed the powerful, fleeting flashes of light known as gamma ray bursts. Chandra and NASA's Hubble Space Telescope later collected data from the event's "afterglow," and together the observations led astronomers to conclude that the powerful explosions can result when a black hole and a neutron star collide, producing another black hole.

Babies and Giants

Although the basic formation process is understood, one perennial mystery in the science of black holes is that they appear to exist on two radically different size scales. On the one end, there are the countless black holes that are the remnants of massive stars. Peppered throughout the Universe, these "stellar mass" black holes are generally 10 to 24 times as massive as the Sun. Astronomers spot them when another star draws near enough for some of the matter surrounding it to be snared by the black hole's gravity, churning out x-rays in the process. Most stellar black holes, however, lead isolated lives and are impossible to detect. Judging from the number of stars large enough to produce such black holes, however, scientists estimate that there are as many as ten million to a billion such black holes in the Milky Way alone.

On the other end of the size spectrum are the giants known as "supermassive" black holes, which are millions, if not billions, of times as massive as the Sun. Astronomers believe that supermassive black holes lie at the center of virtually all large galaxies, even our own Milky Way. Astronomers can detect them by watching for their effects on nearby stars and gas.

Observed Mass Ranges of Compact Objects
This chart shows the relative masses of super-dense cosmic objects.


Historically, astronomers have long believed that no mid-sized black holes exist.  However, recent evidence from Chandra, XMM-Newton and Hubble strengthens the case that mid-size black holes do exist. One possible mechanism for the formation of supermassive black holes involves a chain reaction of collisions of stars in compact star clusters that results in the buildup of extremely massive stars, which then collapse to form intermediate-mass black holes. The star clusters then sink to the center of the galaxy, where the intermediate-mass black holes merge to form a supermassive black hole.

 

Recent Discoveries

Date Discovery
 October 30, 2017 Black Hole with Jets - V404 Cygni and GX 339-4
October 3, 2017 Scientists Find Elusive Giant Black Hole Pairs
August 15, 2017 Cosmic Magnifying Lens Reveals Inner Jets of Black Holes
May 31, 2017 Early Black Holes May Have Grown in Fits and Spurts
May 25, 2017 Collapsing Star Gives Birth to a Black Hole
May 11, 2017 Astronomers Pursue Renegade Supermassive Black Hole (CXO J101527.2+625911)
May 9, 2017 Merging Galaxies Have Enshrouded Black Holes
April 19, 2017 Arrhythmic Beating of a Black Hole Heart (NGC 4696)
March 23, 2017 Gravitational Wave Kicks Black Hole Out of Galactic Core
March 20, 2017 Swift Maps a Star's 'Death Spiral' into a Black Hole
March 13, 2017 Star Discovered in Closest Known Orbit Around Likely Black Hole
March 9, 2017 Hubble Dates Black Holeā€™s Last Big Meal
March 1, 2017 Temperature Swings of Black Hole Winds Measured for First Time
February 14, 2017 Black-Hole-Powered Jet Forge Fuel for Star Formation
 February 6, 2017 Black Hole Meal Sets Record for Duration and Size (XJ1500+0154)
January 9, 2017 A Black Hole of Puzzling Lightness
January 7, 2017 Black Holes Hide in Our Cosmic Backyard
January 5, 2017 Deepest X-ray Image Ever Reveals Black Hole Treasure Trove (Chandra Deep Field South)
January 5, 2017 Powerful Cosmic Double Whammy (Abell 3411 and 3412)
December 12, 2016 Spinning Black Hole Swallowing Stars Explains Superluminous Event (ASASSN-15lh)
November 9, 2016 Starvation Diet for Black Hole Dims Brilliant Galaxy (Markarian 1018)
October 5, 2016 X-Ray Telescopes Find Evidence for Wandering Black Hole (XJ1417+52)
September 15, 2016 Studies Find Echoes of Black Holes Eating Stars